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  • 2022-05-03 (xsd:date)
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  • Has a US Supreme Court Opinion Never Been Leaked in Advance Before? (en)
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  • After Politico revealed a leaked draft U.S. Supreme Court opinion in May 2022 that voted to strike down the landmark Roe v. Wade abortion decision, many assumed this was the first such leak from the high court on a pending case: The Supreme Court is known for being secretive. Politico stated in its May 2, 2022, article that, No draft decision in the modern history of the court has been disclosed publicly while a case was still pending. Neal Katyal, former acting solicitor general, also tweeted that if the story is true, it is the the first major leak from the Supreme Court ever. However, this was not the first major leak from the U.S. Supreme Court ever, though it appeared to be the first leak of a full draft opinion on a case pending before the court in the modern era. Politico detailed how in 1972, an unbylined Washington Post story described the justices’ internal debate on Roe v. Wade as it was under deliberation. The original Roe v. Wade decision was leaked by a Supreme Court clerk to a Time Magazine reporter in January 1973, though it was only published hours before the actual decision was made public. According to The Associated Press, in the 1970s, ABC journalist Tim O’Brien had around half a dozen scoops on various rulings. His reports upset the judges, according to Barrett McGurn, the court’s former public information officer. Then-Chief Justice Warren Burger suspected someone in the court’s print shop was behind the leaks. University of Georgia Media Law Professor Jonathan Peters also described a number of instances where Supreme Court decisions had been leaked. An early example was in 1852, when the New York Tribune reported the outcome of the Pennsylvania v. Wheeling and Belmont Bridge Company case, 10 days before the decision was released. In 1857, the Tribune also published a running account of the court’s deliberations over the infamous Dred Scott case, where justices declared that Black people could not be citizens. Supreme Court leaks are rare, but they are hardly unprecedented, Peters wrote. The court, just like our other public institutions, is made up of political animals. We shouldn’t be shocked when they act that way. In an interview with Quartz on May 4, 2022, Peters described one instance in modern history where a partial draft opinion was leaked to the press, but never published. In 1981, Elizabeth Olson, a reporter for United Press International obtained what appeared to be an unsigned and undated partial copy of a dissenting draft opinion on an important sex discrimination case. Her bureau chief spiked it because he said he had no way of confirming it was accurate. In a 1981 Washington Post story: Peters also added more context to the Dred Scott case, saying that two dissenting justices released their opinions to the public before the majority opinion was released: Peters concluded that such comparisons are not perfect because he could not find a release of a full draft of a majority opinion. Jack Goldsmith, a law professor at Harvard University, wrote in The New Republic in 2012 about why Supreme Court leaks are so rare: According to another Politico report on the May 2022 leak, ​​Supreme Court historians, former law clerks and other court watchers say they cannot recall a previous instance [of disclosure of a draft opinion] before Monday’s publication of a draft opinion in the Mississippi abortion rights case. The leaked opinion is a repudiation of the 1973 Supreme Court decision that guaranteed federal constitutional protections of abortion rights, a decision that was maintained in 1992. Politico noted that judges often change their votes as draft opinions circulate, and the court's decision will not be final until it is published, which is expected to be in around two months. Given that leaks from the Supreme Court are not completely unprecedented, but the release of a full majority draft opinion on a pending case in the modern era is unprecedented, we rate this claim as a Mixture. (en)
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