We're resending this urgent email to make sure you didn't miss it. Please take a moment to read it and chip in if you can! Hi, A new report just dropped about unethical behavior by another Supreme Court justice. This time it’s Trump-appointed Justice Neil Gorsuch caught red-handed. Just days after being sworn in on April 10, 2017, Justice Neil Gorsuch and his co-owners secretly sold a 3,000-square-foot lodge in Colorado to the head of a high-powered law firm that has had nearly two dozen cases before the Court since the property closed.1 This comes after we’ve already learned that John Roberts’ wife is being paid millions by law firms arguing before the Court and that Clarence Thomas has gotten millions in gifts and sweetheart real estate deals from a Republican megadonor. At every other branch of the U.S. government, a transaction like this would be meticulously reported, strongly discouraged, or completely prohibited. But the Supreme Court has no ethical code of conduct and refuses to adopt one.2 That’s why Demand Progress Action has mobilized more than 200,000 people to press Congress to pass the Supreme Court Ethics, Recusal, and Transparency Act, requiring the nation’s highest court to follow basic rules of disclosure and recusal.
Justice Gorsuch sold his Colorado mountain getaway to Brian Duffy, a partner at the high-powered law firm Greenberg Traurig. Duffy’s firm has been involved in 12 cases in which Gorsuch recorded an opinion, and in most of them, Gorsuch sided with Greenberg.3 Gorsuch was required by law to report the sale, but he didn’t — despite getting as much as half a million dollars from one of the nation’s most powerful attorneys. The corruption runs deep at the Supreme Court. Clarence Thomas secretly accepted luxury trips from Republican megadonor Harlan Crow for two decades and failed to report a lucrative real estate deal with him.4,5 Big D.C. law firms, many with business before the Court, paid the wife of Chief Justice John Roberts millions of dollars in commissions for her work as legal recruiter.6 The list goes on. But momentum for reform is building. The American Bar Association says the Supreme Court needs a binding code of ethics, and legislation has been introduced in Congress to do just that.7,8 With gratitude for all that you do, Sources: PAID FOR BY DEMAND PROGRESS (DemandProgress.org) and not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee. Contributions are not deductible as charitable contributions for federal income tax purposes. Join our online community on Facebook or Twitter. You can unsubscribe from this list at any time. |