Mike Davis, founder of conservative legal advocacy group the
Article III Project, said he feared that U.S. District Judge
Reggie Walton's criticism of Trump on CNN last week could taint
the jury pools for the Republican presidential candidate's four
criminal cases in New York, Washington, D.C., Florida and
Georgia.
"A federal judge does not have the right to appear on a
nationally televised program – watched by prospective jurors –
and lambast a criminal defendant for lawfully exercising his
constitutional right to criticize a pending criminal
proceeding," Davis wrote in a complaint to the Judicial Council
of the District of Columbia Circuit.
"Judge Walton should not have made the appearance, and we
respectfully urge you to investigate and remedy this ethical
violation," he added.
Walton, reached through a law clerk, declined to comment on
Tuesday.
Walton, a senior federal judge based in Washington, D.C.
appointed by Republican former president George W. Bush, in a
March 28 CNN interview called Trump's comments about New York
Justice Juan Merchan "disconcerting."
He said it was "particularly problematic" that Trump had
targeted Merchan's daughter, and said he is concerned about the
increased number of threats that judges have faced in recent
years.
Trump on social media has verbally attacked Merchan and his
daughter, leading the New York judge on Monday to order him to
stop targeting family members of anyone involved in the trial.
Walton noted he has received numerous threats himself after
presiding over cases related to the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the
U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters trying to overturn his 2020
election defeat.
Walton is not presiding over the criminal case against Trump in
Washington for his attempts to overturn the 2020 election
results.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch in Washington and Nate Raymond in
Boston; Editing by Scott Malone and Bill Berkrot)
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