By Judge Raag Singhal
I write today to come to the defense of my colleague and close friend Judge Roy Altman. I’ll call him Roy because that’s who wrote the piece in National Review that causes today’s heavy anonymous blog comments. First, let me state the obvious. I don’t write like Roy. I wish I did, but I don’t. If I did, I hope I would have the tempered confidence to write so well about a variety of topics.
Second, Roy wrote the subject
article sometime around October 18, 2023.
I know this because we talked about it and he would have liked to have
not published it. He sat on it for two
weeks hoping someone else would write and publish a factual article that
explained why an associate professor (Grewal) at his cherished university (Yale)
should not receive tenure. That article
never came. Instead, the Yale Daily News
whitewashed an article by sophomore Sahar Tartak by removing facts negative to
Hamas in a method reminiscent of denying the Holocaust. And so, Roy went ahead and stated his view on
this very important topic. For those who
take the time to actually read what Roy wrote, he never says Grewal should be
kept from stating her views. What he did
say is she should not receive tenure and be in a position to influence
impressionable students when she is wrong on both the facts and the law.
Third, today’s blog comments call for a muzzle over recusal. But, when Justice Jackson was on the Harvard Board of Overseers immediately before her historic SCOTUS nomination—a position where she made decisions on tenure and student admissions—no one had an issue. She was at that time also an Article III federal judge. And, while she recused herself from consideration in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v Harvard College, because it involved students and policies that actually came before her in her Board position, she did not recuse herself on the companion case versus University of North Carolina, a decision that was viewed as appropriate and proper. The point is that recusal is not required when the same issue with different litigants appears before the judge. Of course, a Motion to Disqualify may be filed, and the judge may grant it but it is not required.
Two cases are worth consideration. In Texas v. Johnson, 491 U.S. 397
(1989), Justice Scalia famously wrote “The hard fact is that sometimes we must
make decisions we do not like. We make them because they are right, right in
the sense that the law and the Constitution, as we see them, compel the result.
And so great is our commitment to the process that, except in the rare case, we
do not pause to express distaste for the result, perhaps for fear of
undermining a valued principle that dictates the decision. This is one of those
rare cases.” Id. at 420-21. The
case involved flag burning and Justice Scalia had previously gone on record in
an interview saying if he could, he would jail all flag burners, but when a
flag burning case came before him, he voted with the majority to reverse the
conviction in Johnson because his personal view could never trump the U.S.
Constitution. And of course, Justice
John Paul Stevens—who spent most of his late retirement in Fort Lauderdale—was
quite clear in his dissenting opinion in Republican Party of Minnesota
v. White, 536 U.S. 765 (2002) on the topic of judicial impartiality. Justice Stevens noted the fundamental
attribute of judicial office requires countless judges to routinely make unpopular “rulings that are surely disliked by at least 50 percent of the litigants who appear before them. It is equally common for them to enforce rules that they think unwise, or that are contrary to their personal predilections.” Id. At 798. “It is the ability both to reevaluate [personal views] in the light of an adversarial presentation, and to apply the governing rule of law even when inconsistent with those views, that characterize judicial openmindedness.” Id. At 801. No doubt, Judge Altman’s reputation is one of fairness and impartiality.
At some point, truly, Roy Altman will move on from our Court as 10:34 and 10:55 seem to want and suggest. That day will be a sad one for me although I will be happy for him. He is an exceptional judge, colleague and friend.
Bravo, Judge Singhal.
ReplyDeleteWhen Judge Altman leaves us, it will be our great loss and someone else's incredible gain. Hopefully, the nation's gain when he (inevitably) becomes one of the nine.
Oh, nice. Who wants to pick a fight with TWO judges in our district?
ReplyDeleteI wrote a longer response in disagreement but deleted it before publishing for fear of consequences.
This is why judges shouldn't weigh in on politics.
I like my judges less sensitive. A few comments and we gotta get our friends to post? Sheesh.
ReplyDeleteBravo? Was Judge Altman this upset that everyone doesn’t love him on the blog we needed a post in his defense? News flash guys. Not everyone thinks you walk on water.
ReplyDeleteI suppose there are those who lack the character, or the intellectual rigor, to be able to render a decision, grounded in a set of facts and a code of standards, when that decision is contrary to their own personal preferences. Many of those folks seem to be commenting here. They should, then, never take the bench or serve as a referee in a kids’ football game or judge the bake-off at their church, synagogue or mosque.
ReplyDeleteBut they ought not assume that others, who have taken a solemn oath to do just that, are likewise incapable of separating their own wishes from the impulse of the law and the weight of the facts. Nothing in Judge Altman’s article violated any code or standard or even notion of judicial ethics. Any lawyer with a case before him who can make out a good faith argument for recusal on the basis of the article is free to try to do so. But to suggest that judges are required to take a vow of silence along with their oath of office is utterly to misunderstand the import and impact of that oath.
I think it's refreshing that Judge Altman wrote the article. Judges should be more open. But that openness come with a downside. Because he's a judge, extra-judicial articles, activities, etc., provide fodder for recusal motions and can raise other issues. And that's why I imagine most judges are tight-lipped and cautious. No one wants to deal with those inevitable headaches.
ReplyDeleteNext time I represent defendants accused of committing international war crimes I'll move to disqualify Judge Altman because he's clearly biased against terrorists!
ReplyDeleteBeautifully written by Judge Singhal. Judge Altman's article provided his commentary on facts and law, which he is certainly permitted to do. He violated no judicial canons, and, frankly, I doubt most of the folks criticizing him would have an issue if the topic did not relate to Israel.
ReplyDeleteThese FedSoc types are tough when they take away the rights of women but are a little thinned skinned it seems.
ReplyDeleteYou think Hamas preserves the rights of women?? You’re nuts.
DeleteWhat? Take a reading comp class.
Delete