US Supreme Court's Clarence Thomas took more undisclosed travel funded
by billionaire, senator says
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[August 06, 2024]
By John Kruzel
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas took
additional undisclosed travel paid for by billionaire benefactor Harlan
Crow that the conservative justice failed to disclose, the Democratic
chair of the Senate Finance Committee said on Monday.
Thomas and his wife took round-trip air travel between Hawaii and New
Zealand in November 2010 aboard Crow's private jet, according to Senator
Ron Wyden, citing international flight records obtained by his
committee.
Thomas has come under criticism since last year from congressional
Democrats and others for failing to disclose gifts from Crow, a Texas
businessman and Republican donor, including trips on a yacht.
A Supreme Court spokesperson and an attorney for Thomas did not
immediately respond to requests for comment on Monday.
The justice previously defended his omission of Crow-funded luxury trips
from his disclosure forms by saying he believed they were "personal
hospitality" and thus exempt from disclosure requirements, and called
his nondisclosure of a real estate transaction involving Crow
inadvertent.
Wyden cited the international flight records, maintained by the U.S.
Customs and Border Protection agency, in an eight-page letter to Crow's
attorney seeking details on the businessman's relationship with Thomas.
It is part of what Wyden called his committee's investigation "into the
tax treatment of the use of Mr. Crow's superyacht and private aircraft."
Wyden first requested such information last year after the news outlet
ProPublica reported on the justice's failure to disclose luxury trips
and real estate transactions involving Crow.
"Neither Mr. Crow nor Justice Thomas have disclosed the full scale of
the Thomas's use of (Crow's yacht) Michaela Rose and private jets
courtesy of Mr. Crow, even as the Congress continues to uncover
additional international private jet travel with Mr. Crow that Justice
Thomas failed to disclose on his ethics filings," Wyden said.
Crow spokesperson Michael Zona said that Crow's attorneys had previously
addressed Wyden's inquiries, which Zona called baseless and "only
intended to harass a private citizen."
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U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Clarence Thomas poses during a
group portrait at the Supreme Court in Washington, U.S., October 7,
2022. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo
"Mr. Crow and his businesses are in good standing with the IRS. He
has always followed applicable tax law as advised by national
accounting firms who serve as his tax advisors," Zona said.
"It's concerning that Senator Wyden is abusing his committee's
powers as part of a politically motivated campaign against the
Supreme Court," Zona added.
Democrat Dick Durbin, chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, in
June said Thomas took at least three other trips funded by Crow that
the justice also failed to disclose.
Facing criticism after revelations involving Thomas and other
justices, the Supreme Court last November adopted its first code of
conduct. Congressional Democrats and other critics have said the
code does not go far enough to promote transparency, continuing to
leave decisions to recuse from cases to the justices themselves and
providing no enforcement mechanism.
White House spokesperson Andrew Bates said the information released
by Wyden strengthens the case that President Joe Biden made last
week for "common-sense reforms" to the Supreme Court.
Biden last month proposed sweeping changes, including term limits of
18 years and a binding code of conduct for the life-tenured
justices. The Democratic president said the revamp was needed to
rein in a conservative-led court that was undermining established
civil rights principles and protections. Opposition by Republicans
in Congress means the proposals have little chance of enactment.
(Reporting by John Kruzel; additional reporting by Nate Raymond in
Boston)
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