The Great and Powerful Oz Revealed: The Ethics and Wisdom of the Scotus Leaks in National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebilius

K. Schaffzin
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Breyer, Sonia Sotomayer, and Elena Kagan to draft the majority opinion upholding the act under Congress’s taxing power. The media seized upon this reported change of position. Conservative media outlets decried Roberts’s actions as the result of political pressure from the left. Others suggested that Chief Justice Roberts sought to promote intergovernmental harmony by upholding historic legislation that Congress had passed and the President had approved.Ms. Crawford relied on information that “two sources with specific knowledge of the deliberations” had provided to her. One important question has escaped media attention: can or should Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States discuss details of deliberations with the press, even anonymously? This essay attempts to answer that question by addressing the ethical implications of such statements from the Court, the conflict between the restrictions on judicial speech and the First Amendment rights of the Justices of the Court, and the wisdom of such extrajudicial statements. Both the ABA Model Code of Judicial Conduct and the Code of Conduct for United States Judges contain restrictions on extrajudicial speech. Specifically, those codes prohibit judges from commenting publicly on a pending or impending case. These restrictions on judicial speech would likely survive a constitutional challenge under the First Amendment because of the compelling government interest in maintaining the independence, integrity, and impartiality of the judiciary. Unfortunately, neither the Code of Conduct nor the Model Code apply to the actions of the SCOTUS informants in this instance. First, the Supreme Court is not subject to the Model Code because that code serves solely as a model on which specific jurisdictions may choose to base their own codes of conduct. The Judicial Conference of the United States did adopt a version of the Model Code, the Code of Conduct for United States Judges. That code, however, does not lust the Supreme Court among the judges to whom it is intended to apply. Moreover, the Supreme Court created the Judicial Conference and is not subject to its disciplinary authority. The second reason neither code applies to the SCOTUS leaks is because Jan Crawford’s story broke days after the Supreme Court issued its opinion in National Federation. Because the decision of the Court was not appealable, that case was no longer pending at the time the confidential information was leaked to Ms. Crawford. Thus, the actions of Ms. Crawford’s source did not violate either the Model Code or the Code of Conduct.Although the SCOTUS leaks did not violate either the Code of Conduct for United States Judges or the Model Code of Judicial Conduct, such anonymous comments to the press about the internal deliberations of the Court denigrate the independence, integrity, and impartiality of the institution. In so doing, the actions violated Canons 1, 2, and 3 of the Code of Conduct and Canons 1 and 2 of the Model Code. Moreover, the Comment to Rule 3(A)(6) cautions judges to take care in making public comments concerning a case from the judge’s own court, even if otherwise permitted by the rules, because such comments may “denigrate public confidence in the judiciary’s integrity and impartiality, which would violate Canon 2A.” Moving forward, the Court and its staff should aspire to achieve the overarching principles set forth in the canons of both the Code of Conduct and the Model Code. 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Abstract

On July 1, 2012, Jan Crawford of CBS News reported details of the confidential deliberations of the Supreme Court of the United States in National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebilius. Specifically, she revealed that Chief Justice John G. Roberts began working with Associate Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas, and Samuel A. Alito to draft an opinion striking the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (the “PPACA”) as an unconstitutional exercise of Congress’s power to regulate commerce. According to Crawford, he later had a change of heart and worked with Associate Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen G. Breyer, Sonia Sotomayer, and Elena Kagan to draft the majority opinion upholding the act under Congress’s taxing power. The media seized upon this reported change of position. Conservative media outlets decried Roberts’s actions as the result of political pressure from the left. Others suggested that Chief Justice Roberts sought to promote intergovernmental harmony by upholding historic legislation that Congress had passed and the President had approved.Ms. Crawford relied on information that “two sources with specific knowledge of the deliberations” had provided to her. One important question has escaped media attention: can or should Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States discuss details of deliberations with the press, even anonymously? This essay attempts to answer that question by addressing the ethical implications of such statements from the Court, the conflict between the restrictions on judicial speech and the First Amendment rights of the Justices of the Court, and the wisdom of such extrajudicial statements. Both the ABA Model Code of Judicial Conduct and the Code of Conduct for United States Judges contain restrictions on extrajudicial speech. Specifically, those codes prohibit judges from commenting publicly on a pending or impending case. These restrictions on judicial speech would likely survive a constitutional challenge under the First Amendment because of the compelling government interest in maintaining the independence, integrity, and impartiality of the judiciary. Unfortunately, neither the Code of Conduct nor the Model Code apply to the actions of the SCOTUS informants in this instance. First, the Supreme Court is not subject to the Model Code because that code serves solely as a model on which specific jurisdictions may choose to base their own codes of conduct. The Judicial Conference of the United States did adopt a version of the Model Code, the Code of Conduct for United States Judges. That code, however, does not lust the Supreme Court among the judges to whom it is intended to apply. Moreover, the Supreme Court created the Judicial Conference and is not subject to its disciplinary authority. The second reason neither code applies to the SCOTUS leaks is because Jan Crawford’s story broke days after the Supreme Court issued its opinion in National Federation. Because the decision of the Court was not appealable, that case was no longer pending at the time the confidential information was leaked to Ms. Crawford. Thus, the actions of Ms. Crawford’s source did not violate either the Model Code or the Code of Conduct.Although the SCOTUS leaks did not violate either the Code of Conduct for United States Judges or the Model Code of Judicial Conduct, such anonymous comments to the press about the internal deliberations of the Court denigrate the independence, integrity, and impartiality of the institution. In so doing, the actions violated Canons 1, 2, and 3 of the Code of Conduct and Canons 1 and 2 of the Model Code. Moreover, the Comment to Rule 3(A)(6) cautions judges to take care in making public comments concerning a case from the judge’s own court, even if otherwise permitted by the rules, because such comments may “denigrate public confidence in the judiciary’s integrity and impartiality, which would violate Canon 2A.” Moving forward, the Court and its staff should aspire to achieve the overarching principles set forth in the canons of both the Code of Conduct and the Model Code. The Supreme Court must return to a minimum level of discretion and decorum if it hopes to restore its reputation for independence, integrity, and impartiality. If the Supreme Court cannot strive to achieve these goals, there is little hope lesser courts will be as successful in their quests to do so.
伟大而强大的奥兹揭秘:全国独立企业联合会诉西比留斯案中斯各脱泄密事件的伦理与智慧
2012年7月1日,哥伦比亚广播公司新闻记者简·克劳福德报道了美国最高法院就“全国独立企业联合会诉塞比留斯案”的秘密审议细节。具体来说,她透露首席大法官约翰·g·罗伯茨开始与大法官安东宁·斯卡利亚、安东尼·肯尼迪、克拉伦斯·托马斯和塞缪尔·阿利托一起起草一份意见,反对《患者保护和平价医疗法案》(“PPACA”),认为这是对国会监管商业权力的违宪行使。据克劳福德说,他后来改变了主意,与大法官露丝·巴德·金斯伯格、斯蒂芬·g·布雷耶、索尼娅·索托梅耶和埃琳娜·卡根一起起草了多数意见,支持国会征税权下的法案。媒体抓住了这一报道中的立场变化。保守派媒体谴责罗伯茨的行为是迫于左翼的政治压力。其他人则认为,首席大法官罗伯茨试图通过维护国会通过、总统批准的历史性立法来促进政府间的和谐。克劳福德的依据是“两个对审议情况有具体了解的消息来源”提供给她的信息。有一个重要的问题没有引起媒体的注意:美国最高法院的大法官是否可以或应该与媒体讨论审议的细节,甚至是匿名的?本文试图回答这一问题,论述最高法院此类言论的伦理含义、对司法言论的限制与宪法第一修正案赋予最高法院法官的权利之间的冲突,以及此类法外言论的智慧。美国律师协会的《司法行为示范准则》和《美国法官行为准则》都包含对法外言论的限制。具体来说,这些法典禁止法官公开评论未决或即将发生的案件。这些对司法言论的限制可能会在宪法第一修正案的挑战下幸存下来,因为政府迫切希望保持司法的独立、正直和公正。不幸的是,《行为守则》和《示范守则》都不适用于本案中最高法院举报人的行为。第一,最高法院不受《示范法》的约束,因为该《示范法》只是作为一种范本,具体的司法管辖区可以选择以此为基础制定自己的行为守则。美国司法会议确实通过了《示范法典》的一个版本,即《美国法官行为守则》。然而,该法典并没有将最高法院纳入其拟适用的法官之列。此外,最高法院设立了司法会议,不受其纪律权力的约束。第二个原因是,这两项法规都不适用于最高法院的泄密事件,因为简·克劳福德的故事在最高法院发表《国家联邦》(National Federation)一案的意见几天后就曝光了。由于法院的决定不可上诉,在机密资料泄露给Crawford女士时,该案已不再悬而未决。因此,克劳福德女士的消息来源的行为既没有违反《示范守则》,也没有违反《行为守则》。虽然美国联邦最高法院的泄密既没有违反《美国法官行为准则》,也没有违反《司法行为示范准则》,但这种匿名向媒体发表有关法院内部审议的评论,是对该机构的独立性、完整性和公正性的诋毁。这样做违反了《行为守则》第1、2和3条以及《示范守则》第1和2条。此外,对规则3(A)(6)的评注告诫法官在就法官自己法院的案件发表公开评论时要谨慎,即使规则另有规定,因为此类评论可能“损害公众对司法机构廉正和公正的信心,这将违反规则2A”。今后,法院及其工作人员应力求实现《行为守则》和《示范守则》的准则所规定的总体原则。最高法院如果希望恢复其独立、正直和公正的声誉,就必须恢复最低限度的自由裁量权和礼仪。如果最高法院不能努力实现这些目标,那么下级法院在努力实现这些目标方面也几乎没有希望取得同样的成功。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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