As abortion ruling nears, U.S. Supreme Court erects barricades to the
public
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[June 17, 2022]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Encircled by an
ominous security fence and off-limits to the public since March 2020,
the U.S. Supreme Court is poised in the coming weeks to issue a major
ruling that could dramatically curtail abortion rights from behind
closed doors with not a single justice in sight.
No members of the public have been allowed in the courthouse since
COVID-19 pandemic precautions were implemented in March 2020. The scene
at the court has become more tense following protests and threats
against some of the nine justices prompted by the May leak of a draft
opinion indicating they are set to overturn the landmark 1973 Roe v.
Wade ruling that legalized abortion nationwide. The court has a 6-3
conservative majority.
The 8-foot (2.4 meters) tall fencing was erected in the days after the
leak as the court ramped up security measures.
While the rest of official Washington, including other government
buildings including the White House and Capitol, has reopened its doors
to the public at least partially as the pandemic ebbs, the top U.S.
judicial body remains in a form of lockdown with what appears to be
siege mentality even as it wields huge influence over public policy.
For Guido Reichstadter, an abortion-rights protester camped out in front
of the courthouse since the beginning of June, the fencing is a sign of
how out of touch the justices - or at least the six conservative ones -
are with public sentiment.
"They are trying to insulate themselves from the effects of their
actions. Why else would you put a fence up?" Reichstadter asked.
Reichstadter was arrested on June 6 for locking himself to the fence by
the neck and spent a night in jail.
"To me it sends a message that they are weak, they are afraid, they are
isolated," Reichstadter said of the fence.
Emotions have run high since the Politico news organization published
the draft abortion decision authored by conservative Justice Samuel
Alito on May 2.
Since then, protesters have rallied outside the homes of some of the
conservative justices. A California man named Nicholas Roske, carrying a
handgun, ammunition, a crow bar and pepper spray, was charged with
attempted murder after being arrested on June 8 near Justice Brett
Kavanaugh's Maryland residence.
Congress on Tuesday passed legislation to bolster
security for the nine justices, though lawmakers did not include
protections for the families of clerks and other Supreme Court employees
due to Republican opposition.
After the leak, conservative Justice Clarence Thomas, known for his
criticism of the Roe ruling, said on May 6 at a legal conference in
Atlanta that the court should not be "bullied into giving you just the
outcomes you want."
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Law enforcement officers stand guard behind a fence surrounding The
Supreme Court Building after a rally held by abortion rights
protesters during nationwide demonstrations following the leaked
Supreme Court opinion suggesting the possibility of overturning the
Roe v. Wade abortion rights decision, in Washington, U.S., May 14,
2022. REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo
Anti-abortion advocates are sympathetic to concerns about the safety
of the justices, saying they also have received threats following
the leak.
"I would say the court is protecting itself, protecting their
employees," said Kristan Hawkins, president of the group Students
for Life.
EMERGING SLOWLY
The abortion ruling will come in a case involving a
Republican-backed Mississippi law banning abortion after 15 weeks of
pregnancy that was struck down by lower courts as a violation of the
Roe precedent. The court also has 17 other cases to decide, with the
term usually completed by the end of June, including rulings that
could expand gun rights, favor Christian conservatives and limit the
power of the federal government to combat climate change, among
other issues.
The court has emerged slowly from the pandemic. It resumed in-person
oral arguments last October after holding remote arguments by
teleconference for 18 months, but let only court staff, lawyers and
some reporters into the courtroom. Since the court completed oral
arguments for the term on April 27, outsiders have been kept from
the building.
One of the many changes in court practice instituted during the
pandemic was issuing rulings only online, with no official court
session. That means justices no longer read from the bench summaries
of their rulings and dissenting opinions. It was previously an
opportunity for justices who strongly disagreed with a ruling to
passionately voice their views.
A court spokesperson did not respond to a question on why the
justices have not resumed reading announcements from the bench. The
court has not said when, or if, such sessions will resume. It has
shown no signs of live-streaming audio of opinion announcements in
the same way that audio of oral arguments has been provided.
Gabe Roth, executive director of Fix the Court, a group advocating
for court reform, said there is no reason not to livestream decision
announcements, noting it would be the equivalent of President Joe
Biden holding a news conference in which he summarized a new
executive order.
"It's infuriating they are so resistant to change, but that's kind
of what they are known for," Roth said of the court.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Will Dunham)
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