U.S. Supreme Court pick Jackson rejects Republican criticism on crime
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[March 23, 2022]
By Moira Warburton, Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Ketanji Brown
Jackson, President Joe Biden's U.S. Supreme Court nominee, on Tuesday
defended her past legal representation of Guantanamo Bay detainees and
rejected Republican accusations that she had been lenient as a judge in
child pornography cases.
On a contentious second day of her Senate Judiciary Committee
confirmation hearing that lasted about 13 hours, Jackson pledged to be
an independent jurist who would not inject her own views into rulings as
Democratic senators rallied to her defense.
Several Republican senators focused their queries on child pornography,
accusing Jackson of giving lenient sentences to offenders. Jackson
rejected this, saying that in most of these cases she delivered
sentences consistent with or higher than the recommendations of
probation officers. In each such case, she said, "I did my duty to hold
the defendants accountable."
Jackson said that as a mother herself, she has found the cases involving
sexual crimes against children particularly harrowing. "These are the
cases that wake you up at night because you're seeing the worst of
humanity," Jackson said.
Jackson also said her past legal representation of detainees at the U.S.
naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, was consistent with American values
of fairness.
Nominated by Biden in February to become the first Black woman to serve
on the nation's top judicial body, Jackson has served since last year as
a federal appellate judge after eight years as a federal district court
judge.
Her confirmation would not change the court's ideological balance - a
6-3 conservative majority - but would let Biden freshen its liberal bloc
with a 51-year-old justice who could serve for decades in the lifetime
post. Biden nominated Jackson to succeed retiring liberal Justice
Stephen Breyer.
With a simple majority needed for confirmation and the Senate divided
50-50 between the parties, she would get the job if Democrats remain
united in the vote.
FOCUS ON SENTENCING
Republican Senators Josh Hawley, Ted Cruz, Mike Lee, Tom Cotton and
Marsha Blackburn asked questions focusing on child pornography and
sexual predators. They said Jackson as a trial judge in child
pornography cases delivered sentences below recommendations in federal
sentencing guidelines.
"I'm questioning how you used your discretion in these cases," Hawley
told Jackson.
Federal judges routinely impose penalties below advisory guidelines in
cases involving defendants who do not themselves produce child
pornography, according to the U.S. Sentencing Commission, which has
urged Congress to address inconsistencies resulting in penalties
sometimes too lenient and sometimes too severe.
Sentencing experts in a March 20 letter to the committee deemed
Jackson's sentencing in such cases "squarely within the mainstream of
federal district court judges nationally."
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Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson testifies during her U.S. Senate
Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing on her nomination to the
U.S. Supreme Court, as her husband Patrick Jackson listens on
Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., March 22, 2022. REUTERS/Jonathan
Ernst
Cruz also accused Jackson of "a
record of activism and advocacy as it concerns sexual predators"
dating back to her time in law school in 1996 when she wrote a paper
discussing sexual offender registries. Jackson pushed back, saying
"those are not the sentiments I expressed."
Pedophilia has become a theme among far-right activists on social
media and of the unfounded QAnon conspiracy theory, whose followers
cast elite liberals and Democrats as a cabal of Satanist
child-sexual predators.
Cotton also blasted Jackson for reducing the sentence of a drug
trafficker she had previously sent to prison for 20 years, based on
a criminal justice reform law signed by former President Donald
Trump in 2018.
Jackson explained that the man would not have received such a long
prison term if he had been sentenced under the new law.
Cotton countered that Congress did not make the law retroactive.
"You twisted the law...so you could cut the sentence of a drug
kingpin," he said.
In response, Jackson said she disagreed with Cotton's assessment.
Jackson worked from 2005 to 2007 as a court-appointed lawyer paid by
the government to represent criminal defendants who could not afford
counsel, including four Guantanamo detainees. She later continued
representing one of the detainees in private practice.
Jackson called the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States
tragic but defended her representation of detainees captured
afterward, saying: "We couldn't let the terrorists win by changing
who we were fundamentally."
Republican senators also sought to tie Jackson to "critical race
theory", which argues American history and institutions are infused
with racial bias. Cruz tried to link Jackson to certain books
available to students at Georgetown Day School, a private school in
Washington where Jackson serves on the board. Jackson said the
theory does not come up in her work as a judge.
Jackson declined to weigh in on calls from some on the left to
expand the court's number of justices to erase its current
conservative majority, calling it "a policy question for Congress."
If confirmed, Jackson would be the 116th justice to serve on the
high court, the sixth woman and the third Black person. The court
also would have for the first time four women and two Black
justices.
(Moira Warburton, Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung; Editing by Will
Dunham, Scott Malone and Sam Holmes)
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