Report evaluates record of high court nominee

The Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law (Lawyers’ Committee) recently released its report evaluating the full civil rights record of Supreme Court nominee Chief Judge Merrick Garland.

The report provides an examination of his record on cases concerning voting rights, employment, housing, criminal justice, education and access to justice issues.

As Garland has served on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit for 18 years, the analysis was based primarily on the opinions he has authored or joined as a judge on that court.

In addition to the report, the Lawyers’ Committee also issued a statement joined by more than 150 members of its board of directors located across the country to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, urging the Senate to fulfill its constitutional role and grant Judge Garland fair consideration and a full Senate vote.

The statement also expressed concern regarding the current stalemate at the high court.

“The Supreme Court occupies a central place in American democracy as the arbiter of some of the most complex and impactful cases that typically arise across our country,” said Lawyers’ Committee President and Executive Director Kristen Clarke. “However, the ability of the Court to effectively resolve the complex cases that come before it is
undermined when elected officials use politics as a reason to prolong the vacancy created in the wake of Justice Scalia’s death. We believe that Judge Garland possesses the exceptional competence necessary to serve on the Court and urge the Senate to move forward with hearings to give the public an opportunity to learn more about his commitment to fair interpretation of civil rights laws.”

Since its creation in 1963 at the urging of President John F. Kennedy, the Lawyers’ Committee has been devoted to the recognition and enforcement of civil rights in the United States.

“While Judge Garland does not have an extensive body of opinions in civil rights cases, his decisions have been consistent with core civil rights principles,” Clarke added.

Among the highlights in the report, the committee noted:

•  Garland’s authored opinions in civil rights cases show him to be fair but moderate and generally careful in going no further than the relevant statutes and precedent warrant.

• Most of the civil rights opinions Garland has authored are in employment cases. He has shown a tendency in those cases to side with discrimination plaintiffs in overcoming motions to dismiss. This suggests his support for the notion that cases alleging actionable discrimination should advance at least to the discovery stage.

• In other categories of civil rights cases — housing, voting, education and environmental justice — Garland does not have as many written opinions, but those he has written are consistent with his opinions in employment cases.

• Garland supports claims to the extent they are actionable under the relevant statute and binding precedent. There is no hint in Garland’s written opinions of a political agenda or an interest in advancing his personal judicial philosophy. He is guided by the statutory text and clear precedent and in cases of unsettled questions that require statutory interpretation, the statute’s remedial purpose and Congressional intent.

• With respect to the criminal justice issues currently in center focus for the Lawyers’ Committee— racial disparities in arrest, conviction and sentencing rates, clemency for nonviolent offenders, barriers to reentry, right to counsel, debtors’ prisons, etc. — Garland has not written any opinions directly on point. With respect to the scores of opinions he has written in criminal appeals, however, Garland appears to lean toward an understanding of the cases from the perspective of the prosecutor. In cases involving claims by prisoners, he has shown a willingness to carefully examine the facts of the case and allow the claims to be heard fully and fairly.

The principal mission of The Lawyers’ Committee, a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization, is to secure equal justice for all through the rule of law, targeting in particular the inequities confronting African Americans and other racial and ethnic minorities.

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