Justice Elena Kagan was concerned about the ethical implications of receiving bagels and lox from her high school friends. Really.
It seems quaint to contemplate that newly reported anecdote, but it’s all the more important to do so in light of the years of lavish, unreported gifts that Justice Clarence Thomas received from GOP billionaire Harlan Crow.
The Forward reported on Tuesday:
A group of women who went to high school with Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan wanted to send her bagels and lox from Russ & Daughters, the legendary deli on the Lower East Side. But they scrapped the plan after Kagan expressed concerns about the court’s ethics rules for reporting gifts…. The idea of sending the appetizing spread was proposed in February 2021 and abandoned soon after.
As the bagel report correctly observed, the Barack Obama appointee’s concerns “are newly relevant in contrast with the scandal surrounding Justice Clarence Thomas, who failed to disclose luxury vacations and other gifts from billionaire Republican donor Harlan Crow.”
"This is not the Clarence Thomas ethics scandal. This is the Clarence Thomas ethics scandal appendage to a much larger inquiry… into a very robust billionaire funded, very secretive effort to capture and control the Supreme Court" @SenWhitehouse w/ @NicolleDWallace pic.twitter.com/rXa0P9c8jI
— Deadline White House (@DeadlineWH) May 9, 2023
The bagel report comes as the Senate is probing the Thomas/Crow connection and the broader issue of the Supreme Court lacking a binding ethics code. Against that backdrop, the Kagan anecdote is somewhat heartening; it might give peace of mind to the people affected by her work, whether one agrees with her opinions or not.








