The committee will hold a hearing in the coming days on the matter,
Chairman Richard Durbin and the panel's 10 other Democratic members
wrote in a letter to Roberts. The hearing, they said, would focus on
"the need to restore confidence in the Supreme Court's ethical
standards."
"And if the court does not resolve this issue on its own, the
committee will consider legislation to resolve it," they told
Roberts. "But you do not need to wait for Congress to act to
undertake your own investigation into the reported conduct and to
ensure that it cannot happen again. We urge you to do so."
ProPublica reported on Thursday that Thomas accepted expensive trips
from Republican donor and real estate magnate Harlan Crow over
decades without disclosing them.
Thomas defended the trips on Friday, saying he had been advised he
was not required to report that type of "personal hospitality." But
the conservative justice said he would abide by new, tighter rules
that recently took effect.
Crow told ProPublica he had "never sought to influence Justice
Thomas on any legal or political issue."
The senators in the letter told Roberts that "you have a role to
play as well, both in investigating how such conduct could take
place at the court under your watch, and in ensuring that such
conduct does not happen again."
The report by ProPublica found that Thomas had repeatedly vacationed
with Crow, including on his private jet and superyacht in the United
States and around the globe. The news outlet said the frequency of
the gifts have "no known precedent in the modern history of the U.S.
Supreme Court."
"The report describes conduct by a sitting justice that he did not
disclose to the public and that is plainly inconsistent with the
ethical standards the American people expect of any person in a
position of public trust," the senators wrote.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh; Editing by Tim ahmann)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2022 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|