There’s nothing Senate Republicans can do to stop Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson from being confirmed to the Supreme Court. But that doesn’t mean they’re willing to let it go without making it as ugly as possible along the way.
Everyone — yes, everyone — is entitled to a defense against criminal charges.
In his speech Tuesday afternoon on the Senate floor, Republican Tom Cotton of Arkansas took aim, once again, at Jackson’s previous work on cases involving detainees at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. “The last Judge Jackson left the Supreme Court to go to Nuremberg and prosecute the case against the Nazis,” Cotton said, referring to Justice Robert H. Jackson, who took a leave of absence from the court in 1945. “This Judge Jackson might have gone there to defend them.” With that comment, Cotton, himself a lawyer, targets a basic precept that forms our legal system.
Jackson has given the GOP senators looking to oppose her little to work with, so their determination to carry out a smear campaign means continually drawing from the same well. Although many of her Republican opponents, like Cotton, are lawyers, they are cynically counting on their voters’ either being unaware of how the law works or not caring how it works.
Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) literally says Ketanji Brown Jackson might have defended Nazis at Nuremberg:
— The Recount (@therecount) April 5, 2022
“The last Judge Jackson left the Supreme Court to go to Nuremberg and prosecute the case against the Nazis. This Judge Jackson might have gone there to defend them.” pic.twitter.com/K0eHZ56sGY
There are several things wrong with Cotton’s claim, but what really sticks in my craw is his decision to sail his argument over Jackson’s head and attack American jurisprudence. Everyone — yes, everyone — is entitled to a defense against criminal charges. Accepting anything less than that brings you halfway to the belief that trials themselves are unnecessary and burdensome.
It was the belief that everybody is deserving of defense that guided future president John Adams after the Boston Massacre. Despite being an ardent patriot, Adams served as defense counsel for the eight British soldiers charged with murder for firing into a crowd that had surrounded them. The jury acquitted six of them and convicted the remaining two of manslaughter.
Adams’ putting dedication to the law over passion and revenge became ingrained in America’s legal system after the American Revolution. That ideal has been put to the test many times, including in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Some hawks — including Cotton and Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. — are of the belief that the accused terrorists who remain in indefinite detention at Guantánamo Bay should have no legal recourse available to them.
Many other lawyers disagree, arguing that detainees being held by the U.S. on territory controlled by the U.S. military must be afforded at least some legal rights. The Supreme Court ruled in 2004 that detainees had the right to petition federal courts for writs of habeas corpus to challenge their detention. It’s in that context that Jackson, serving as a federal public defense attorney, assisted a trial lawyer on the murky law that surrounded the cases. During a brief stint in private practice, she also helped draft amicus briefs for clients arguing against indefinite detention at the Supreme Court.








