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A federal judge in D.C. hit "reply all," and now there's a formal question about his decorum
A federal judge in D.C. hit "reply all," and now theres a formal question about his decorum
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Legal Issues
A federal judge in D.C. hit reply all, and now theres a formal question about his decorum
By Ann E. Marimow
August 16 at 6:45 AM
A clash between judges on two important federal courts in Washington has created an early, unusual test of new rules intended to make sure courthouses across the country are civil, harassment-free workplaces. ... And its exposed the perils of the reply-all email, even among judges-for-life.
An exchange about a climate change seminar for judges set off the controversy, after a two-sentence heads-up message about the session co-sponsored by the research and education agency of the judiciary, the Federal Judicial Center was sent. ... One judges share about the event provoked a pushback email from a colleague, who questioned the judges ethics and climate change science, and urged the judge to stick to his lane on what you are being paid to do adding that the jurisdiction assigned to you does not include saving the planet.
The correspondence that went to 45 judges and the staff who monitor their email accounts was obtained and confirmed by The Washington Post and is an uncommon exposure of private conversations among the usually discreet federal bench. ... It also poses the question about how the judiciary now will police itself.
The federal judge who flagged the event, U.S. District Judge Emmet G. Sullivan, on Aug. 1 asked the judiciarys committee that oversees judges conduct to deliver an opinion about whether the brusque reply-all from senior appeals court Judge A. Raymond Randolph was a violation and also should be a reason for Randolph to recuse himself from certain cases.
This is really remarkable. The public doesnt get to listen in on the manner in which judges talk to each other in private discussions, Stephen Gillers, a professor at New York University Law School and judicial ethics expert, said after being told about the emails The Post acquired.
Sullivan and Randolph, who both are in their 70s and have spent decades on the bench, declined to comment on the confidential inquiry.
....
Ann Marimow covers legal affairs for The Washington Post. She joined The Post in 2005 and has covered state government and politics in California, New Hampshire and Maryland. Follow https://twitter.com/amarimow
A federal judge in D.C. hit reply all, and now theres a formal question about his decorum
By Ann E. Marimow
August 16 at 6:45 AM
A clash between judges on two important federal courts in Washington has created an early, unusual test of new rules intended to make sure courthouses across the country are civil, harassment-free workplaces. ... And its exposed the perils of the reply-all email, even among judges-for-life.
An exchange about a climate change seminar for judges set off the controversy, after a two-sentence heads-up message about the session co-sponsored by the research and education agency of the judiciary, the Federal Judicial Center was sent. ... One judges share about the event provoked a pushback email from a colleague, who questioned the judges ethics and climate change science, and urged the judge to stick to his lane on what you are being paid to do adding that the jurisdiction assigned to you does not include saving the planet.
The correspondence that went to 45 judges and the staff who monitor their email accounts was obtained and confirmed by The Washington Post and is an uncommon exposure of private conversations among the usually discreet federal bench. ... It also poses the question about how the judiciary now will police itself.
The federal judge who flagged the event, U.S. District Judge Emmet G. Sullivan, on Aug. 1 asked the judiciarys committee that oversees judges conduct to deliver an opinion about whether the brusque reply-all from senior appeals court Judge A. Raymond Randolph was a violation and also should be a reason for Randolph to recuse himself from certain cases.
This is really remarkable. The public doesnt get to listen in on the manner in which judges talk to each other in private discussions, Stephen Gillers, a professor at New York University Law School and judicial ethics expert, said after being told about the emails The Post acquired.
Sullivan and Randolph, who both are in their 70s and have spent decades on the bench, declined to comment on the confidential inquiry.
....
Ann Marimow covers legal affairs for The Washington Post. She joined The Post in 2005 and has covered state government and politics in California, New Hampshire and Maryland. Follow https://twitter.com/amarimow
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A federal judge in D.C. hit "reply all," and now there's a formal question about his decorum (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Aug 2019
OP
oops. kinda funny-except serious discussion and on the issue of #climatechange.
riversedge
Aug 2019
#1
riversedge
(70,302 posts)1. oops. kinda funny-except serious discussion and on the issue of #climatechange.
Haggis for Breakfast
(6,831 posts)2. It's always fascinating to get a sneak peak behind the curtain.