July 14, 2023:
Information Clearing
House
-- "Common
Dreams
"
--In
2019, an aide to U.S. Supreme Court
Justice
Clarence Thomas pocketed cash from
multiple lawyers who have argued cases
before the high court, including ones
who recently helped gut affirmative
action and the federal government's
ability to regulate greenhouse gas
pollution.
The formerly public Venmo account of
Rajan Vasisht, who served as Thomas'
aide from July 2019 to July 2021, shows
that "he received seven payments in
November and December 2019 from lawyers
who previously served as Thomas legal
clerks," The Guardian
reported Wednesday. "The amount of
the payments is not disclosed, but the
purpose of
each payment is listed as either 'Christmas
party,' 'Thomas
Christmas Party,' 'CT Christmas
Party,' or 'CT Xmas party,' in an
apparent reference to the justice's
initials."
While it's not clear what precisely
the funds were for, the Venmo
transactions draw further attention to
the close ties between Thomas and
certain individuals who have had cases
in front of the justice. For critics,
they provide fresh evidence of the
ethical rot at the nation's top judicial
body.
"Corruption,"
tweeted the Progressive Change
Campaign Committee. "Lawyers with
business in front of the Supreme Court
helping finance Clarence Thomas'
Christmas parties? This court loses more
and more of its legitimacy every day."
Richard Painter, the chief White
House ethics lawyer during former
President George W. Bush's
administration, told The Guardian
that "it is 'not appropriate' for former
Thomas law clerks who were established
in private practice to—in effect—send
money to the Supreme Court via Venmo."
"There is no excuse for it. Thomas
could invite them to his Christmas party
and he could attend Christmas parties,
as long as they are not discussing any
cases. His Christmas party should not be
paid for by lawyers," Painter said. "A
federal government employee collecting
money from lawyers for any reason... I
don't see how that works."
According to The Guardian:
The lawyers who made the Venmo
transactions were:
Patrick Strawbridge, a partner
at Consovoy McCarthy
who recently successfully argued
that affirmative action violated the
U.S. Constitution; Kate Todd, who
served as White House deputy counsel
under Donald Trump at the time of
the payment and is now a managing
party of Ellis George Cipollone's
law office; Elbert Lin, the former
solicitor general of West Virginia
who played a key role in a Supreme
Court case that limited the
Environmental Protection Agency's
ability to regulate greenhouse gas
emissions; and Brian Schmalzbach, a
partner at McGuire Woods who has
argued multiple cases before the
Supreme Court.
Other lawyers who made payments
include Manuel Valle, a graduate of
Hillsdale College and the University
of Chicago Law School who clerked
for Thomas last year and is
currently working as a managing
associate at Sidley, and Liam Hardy,
who was working at the Department of
Justice's office of legal counsel at
the time the payment was made and
now serves as an appeals court judge
for the armed forces.
Will Consovoy,
who died earlier this year, also
made a payment. Consovoy clerked for
Thomas during the 2008-09 term and
was considered a rising star in
conservative legal circles. After
his death, The New York Times
reported that Consovoy had come away
from his time working for Thomas
"with the conviction that the court
was poised to tilt further to the
right—and that constitutional
rulings that had once been
considered out of reach by
conservatives, on issues like voting
rights, abortion, and affirmative
action, would suddenly be within
grasp."
Previous reporting by ProPublica
has revealed how billionaire real
estate tycoon and Republican megadonor
Harlan Crow has lavished Thomas with
hundreds of thousands of dollars in
gifts over the past 25 years—including
paying for
luxury vacations, Thomas'
mother's home, and Thomas'
grandnephew's private school tuition.
Crow has
relationships with several
right-wing groups involved in Supreme
Court cases since Thomas was first
confirmed to the bench in 1991. In
addition, his own real estate company,
Crow Holdings, was directly implicated
in a 2021 case before the court. As
The Lever
reported earlier this year, Thomas
voted to end the Covid-era federal
eviction moratorium after Crow Holdings
described the
lifesaving policy as a threat to its
"profit margins."
Americans for Tax Fairness has
shown that after Thomas provided a
deciding vote in the
Citizens United v. Federal Election
Commission case, the Crow family's
average annual campaign contributions
ballooned by 862%, from $163,241 before
2010 to $1.57 million since.
Furthermore,
according to Citizens for
Responsibility and Ethics in Washington,
Crow "personally took park in the
creation" of the dark money system that
blossomed in the wake of that 5-4
ruling.
On Sunday, a New York Times
article about Thomas' membership in the
Horatio Alger Association of
Distinguished Americans
exposed how the justice has
"received benefits—many of them
previously unreported—from a broader
cohort of wealthy and powerful friends"
than was previously known.
Thomas' failure to disclose handouts
from multiple benefactors in violation
of federal ethics rules has raised
questions about his judicial
independence and prompted
demands for his
resignation or impeachment. Notably,
he is far from alone when it comes to
conflicts of interest on the Supreme
Court.
Politicoreported
earlier this year that just days after
his April 2017
confirmation, Justice Neil Gorsuch
and his business partners sold a 40-acre
Colorado ranch for almost $2 million to
an individual whose name was not
initially disclosed. The buyer, Brian
Duffy, is the CEO of a law firm that has
since been involved in 22 cases before
the court.
Last month, ProPublicarevealed
that Justice Samuel Alito took an
undisclosed private jet flight to Alaska
in 2008 with Paul Singer, a billionaire
hedge fund manager with direct links to
cases that reached the court in
subsequent years. Singer also has
financial connections to right-wing
groups opposed to President Joe Biden's
student debt relief plan, which was
overturned last month with the help
of Alito, Gorsuch, and Thomas.
Democratic Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse
(R.I.) and Dick Durbin (Ill.)
announced Monday that the Senate
Judiciary Committee is scheduled to vote
on the pair's Supreme Court Ethics,
Recusal, and Transparency Act next
Thursday. The legislation seeks to
establish a code of conduct for the high
court, fortify financial disclosure
rules, and strengthen recusal
requirements for justices.
In addition to imposing robust ethics
rules, progressives have
called for other changes to
disempower the country's "rogue"
justices, including adding seats—a move
that has been made
seven times throughout U.S. history.
Despite the historical precedent and
the recent spate of devastating
decisions handed down by the Supreme
Court's reactionary majority, Biden
recently
dismissed the idea of court
expansion, arguing that it would
"politicize" the nation's top judicial
body.