Money trails lead to Bush judges
A four-month investigation reveals that dozens of federal judges
gave contributions to President Bush and top Republicans who
helped place them on the bench.
By Will Evans
10/31/06 "A
Salon/CIR exclusive" -- -- | At least two dozen
federal judges appointed by President Bush since 2001 made
political contributions to key Republicans or to the president
himself while under consideration for their judgeships,
government records show. A four-month investigation of
Bush-appointed judges by the Center for Investigative Reporting
reveals that six appellate court judges and 18 district court
judges contributed a total of more than $44,000 to politicians
who were influential in their appointments. Some gave money
directly to Bush after he officially nominated them. Other
judges contributed to Republican campaign committees while they
were under consideration for a judgeship.
Republicans who received money from judges en route to the bench
include Sens. Arlen Specter and Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania,
Sens. George Voinovich and Mike DeWine of Ohio, and Gov. George
Pataki of New York.
There are no laws or regulations prohibiting political
contributions by a candidate for a federal judgeship. But
political giving by judicial candidates has been a rarely
scrutinized activity amid the process that determines who will
receive lifelong jobs on the federal bench. Some ethics experts
and Bush-appointed judges say that political giving is
inappropriate for those seeking judicial office -- it can appear
unethical, they say, and could jeopardize the public's
confidence in the impartiality of the nation's courts. Those
concerns come as ethics and corruption scandals have roiled
Washington, and on the eve of midterm elections whose outcome
could influence the makeup of the federal judiciary -- including
the Supreme Court -- for decades to come.
The CIR investigation analyzed the campaign contribution records
of 249 judges appointed by Bush nationwide since 2001. The money
trail leading from Bush judges to influential politicians runs
particularly deep through the political battleground states of
Ohio and Pennsylvania.
Since 1990, Judge Deborah Cook, who was confirmed to the 6th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in May 2003, gave more than
$10,000 to three Ohio Republicans who were instrumental in
getting her on the bench. One was Sen. George Voinovich, who is
chairman of the Select Committee on Ethics. Another was Sen.
Mike DeWine, a member of the Judiciary Committee, which is
critical to the confirmation of federal judges. The other was
Gov. Bob Taft, who gained national notoriety after he was
convicted of ethics violations in 2005 for not reporting gifts
he received.
Cook's contributions included $1,000 to Voinovich and $1,500 to
Taft after President Bush had nominated Cook, with their
backing, in May 2001. Once on the bench, Cook continued giving,
contributing $800 to DeWine in December 2005. Political giving
while serving on the federal bench is a violation of the
official Code of Conduct for U.S. Judges. The code says that "A
judge should not ... solicit funds for or pay an assessment or
make a contribution to a political organization or candidate."
DeWine's campaign committee returned the money three weeks after
Cook made the contribution.
Another judge, Christopher Boyko, gave $2,000 to Voinovich in
August 2004 -- his first federal contribution on record since
1996 -- less than a month after Bush nominated him for the bench
upon the recommendation of Ohio's senators.
Another, Judge John Adams, cut a $1,000 check received by
Voinovich's campaign committee just two days before Voinovich
and DeWine publicly recommended him to Bush in November 2001.
"I've been supportive of the Republican Party and President
Bush," Adams said, after DeWine and Voinovich recommended him
for the judgeship, according to the Akron Beacon Journal. "I'm
sure that had some bearing on the selection." About two months
later, in January 2002, Adams gave DeWine $1,500, which was
returned to him in February. Then, less than a month after his
subsequent nomination by Bush in October 2002, Adams gave $250
more to Voinovich.
Brian Seitchik, a spokesperson for Sen. DeWine's current
reelection campaign, confirmed that the money from Cook and
Adams was returned because, at the time it was given, Adams was
a judicial candidate and Cook was a sitting judge. "The campaign
has operated out of an abundance of caution," Seitchik said,
"and we thought it was the prudent thing to do."
Adams declined to comment. Cook's chambers faxed an unattributed
one-sentence note that appeared to suggest that some of the
donations in her name, as identified by public records, were
made by her husband. Two written requests to Cook seeking
further clarification were not answered.
The president selects most federal judges with significant input
from U.S. senators of the same party. In Ohio, that process is
"totally controlled by party politics," says Tom Hagel, a
professor at the University of Dayton School of Law and a
part-time trial judge. "If you don't have the blessing of the
county and state party chairs you can stop right there," said
Hagel, whose brother is Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska.
"Believe me, they've got to get approval all the way up the
line." Hagel says campaign contributions could play into that
process, as a demonstration of "how loyal and appreciative" a
judicial candidate is. "That certainly has an appearance of
impropriety," he said. "It gives the impression that the
senators' decision-making process could be influenced by money."
In some cases from around the country, judicial candidates gave
money directly to the president's campaign. Judge Thomas
Ludington of Michigan gave Bush $1,000, after being nominated in
September 2002. Judge P. Kevin Castel of New York gave Bush
$2,000 after Bush nominated him in March 2003. Judge Paul Crotty
of New York gave $1,000 to Bush in June 2003, the same month he
met with Bush officials about the judgeship. Judge Mark Filip of
Illinois, who had volunteered as a Republican election monitor
in Florida during the disputed 2000 election, gave the president
$2,000 after Bush nominated him in April 2003.
In a statement to Salon and CIR, White House spokesman Blair C.
Jones said that "potential nominees" recommended to Bush are not
based on "any consideration" of an individual's political
contributions. He added, "We are not aware of any law or
regulation that prohibits a federal judicial candidate or
nominee from making political contributions."
In Pennsylvania, Sen. Arlen Specter has recommended dozens of
judicial candidates to the president during his career. As a
longtime member of the Judiciary Committee, and its chairman
since 2005, he has helped oversee Bush's hundreds of
appointments. Speaking by phone last week, Specter said
political contributions are "not a factor" in who gets
recommended in his home state or elsewhere. Citing the thousands
of contributors and tens of millions of dollars raised in his
2004 campaign, Specter said that "it's just not possible to know
everybody" who gives money.
However, in order to avoid any impression that the contributions
carry influence, he said, "I think once an individual becomes a
[judicial] prospect that that would be a cutoff point." In
Pennsylvania, Specter said, that point would come when
candidates apply for the job with a bipartisan selection
committee set up by him and Rick Santorum, the state's other
Republican senator. "I don't know of anybody who has made a
contribution beyond that," Specter said.
In fact, the investigation revealed at least three judges in
Pennsylvania who gave money to Specter, Santorum or President
Bush after they were formally under consideration for the jobs.
The First Amendment protects the right of Americans to make
political contributions. But there must be a balance, some
ethics scholars and judges say, between that right and the
responsibility of those seeking a judicial post to appear
impartial. With the judiciary drawing increasing scrutiny and
criticism in recent times, the American Bar Association is
overhauling its judicial code of conduct to set new recommended
ethical guidelines. The draft of the new code, to be voted on
this February, would forbid political contributions by judicial
candidates.
Political patronage certainly didn't start with the Bush
administration. (There is an adage in legal circles that a
federal judge is "a lawyer who knows a senator.") The
investigation of Bush-appointed judges also turned up a
Clinton-appointed district judge in California, Dean D.
Pregerson, who, like Judge Cook of Ohio, made a political
contribution in apparent violation of the Code of Conduct for
U.S. Judges. While serving on the bench in 2002, Pregerson gave
$1,000 to Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware, according to federal
records. (A spokesperson from Pregerson's chambers claimed that
the contribution was made by his wife.)
After being alerted to the forthcoming Salon/CIR story, the
Committee for Justice, a conservative advocacy group in
Washington with ties to Karl Rove and Santorum, looked into a
sampling of President Clinton's judicial picks, according to
Sean Rushton, the group's executive director. CFJ found 10
judges confirmed to the bench under Clinton who had given
political contributions of some kind after they were nominated,
according to information provided by Rushton.
Indeed, money and personal connections have long played into the
selection process in both parties, says political science
professor Sheldon Goldman, author of "Picking Federal Judges."
"Why pick someone who hasn't supported you over someone who
has?" Goldman asks. "It's been tradition," he said. "You reward
your friends."
The status quo, however, is disturbing to some observers. Ethics
concerns have been thrown into sharp relief in Washington, with
a string of corruption scandals staining the Republican Party in
particular. And the future shape of the nation's courts may
hinge on the midterm elections, depending on which party
controls Congress afterward. There are currently 49 vacancies on
the federal bench -- and with a justice potentially retiring
from the highest court, there is the possibility President Bush
will nominate another Supreme Court Justice before leaving
office.
Campaign finance is an area of particular concern, says Jeffrey
M. Shaman, a judicial ethics expert at DePaul University College
of Law. "We just have so many problems with contributions to
judicial campaigns, and so many problems with campaign
contributions to members of the legislature," he said. "If
someone wants to be a judge, then they should, in their sound
discretion and wisdom, voluntarily decide not to make these
contributions anymore."
More than 50 Bush-appointed judges who made campaign
contributions around the time of their nominations were
contacted with written requests for comment, as were some other
judges who gave money prior to their appointments. While many
did not respond, some responded by phone or in written
statements.
Boyko, the Ohio district judge who gave money to Voinovich after
Bush had nominated Boyko, said in a statement that he had given
the money at a Republican fundraising event attended by Bush. "I
have always expressed thanks for Senator Voinovich's trust in me
and have always publicly supported him. If I could ethically
donate today, I would. And, because of a long standing mutual
respect with Senator Voinovich, I saw no ethical improprieties
donating after the recommendation." Boyko added: "If you believe
for a minute that $240, $2,000 or $25,000 'buys' a federal
judgeship, as you clearly intimate ... your naivete astounds me.
Any such insinuations are a blatant insult to both Senators,
denigrating their integrity and character. No one 'buys' either
Senator DeWine or Senator Voinovich -- period."
Sen. Voinovich's press secretary, Garrette Silverman, said that
participation in the political process is not a consideration.
"To think that contributions would even enter the equation is
absurd when we're taking about evaluating candidates for federal
judgeships," she said.
Judge Lavenski R. Smith -- who contributed money to Republican
Sen. Tim Hutchinson of Arkansas after Hutchinson had recommended
him to Bush for a judgeship, and after Smith had publicly
acknowledged that he was undergoing an FBI background check for
a potential nomination -- said in a written statement, "The
proximity of the timing between my donations and my nomination
was largely coincidental." The $1,000 donation to Hutchinson in
2001, apparently Smith's first federal contribution since at
least 1990, came three weeks before Bush announced his
nomination.
Smith, who was confirmed to the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals in July 2002, also said, "Until nominated, potential
nominees should retain their full first amendment rights to
participate politically as ordinary citizens."
A number of Bush-appointed judges from around the country,
however, said they consider political contributions by judicial
candidates to be inappropriate.
"My thoughts are that it would probably be inappropriate for a
lawyer who is a candidate for a federal judgeship to make a
significant campaign contribution to a person having influence
over the selection process, especially if the candidate had no
prior history of making such contributions," wrote Judge Timothy
C. Batten Sr., of Georgia, who was confirmed to the bench in
March 2006. Even those who have a history of giving campaign
money, Batten continued, "should realize that public disclosure
of the contributions might ... raise unpleasant questions as to
the purpose of the contributions."
Judge Roger W. Titus of Maryland, confirmed in November 2003,
wrote: "From a personal standpoint, I do not believe that
political contributions should be made to an appointing
authority while under active consideration."
Judge Patrick J. Schiltz of Minnesota, confirmed in April 2006,
wrote: "I knew that federal judges were forbidden from making
political contributions, and I thought that, as someone
recommended or nominated for a federal judgeship, I should
follow the same practice."
It's not always senators who make recommendations to the
president for judgeships, and who receive political money that
could look bad in the eyes of the public. In New York, because
both senators are Democrats, Republican Gov. George Pataki has
had an influential role under Bush in selecting nominees for the
federal courts. Judge Richard J. Holwell, who was a law school
classmate and former lawyer of Pataki's, met with the governor's
judicial screening panel in March 2001 and was told he would be
recommended for a judgeship. The next month, Holwell gave Pataki
$10,000.
In Pennsylvania, as in Ohio, there are numerous examples of Bush
appointees giving money to influential politicians as they were
headed for the bench.
In March 2001, Judge Thomas M. Hardiman interviewed with a
selection committee set up by Specter and Santorum for
recommending judicial candidates to Bush. Between then and April
2003, when Bush nominated Hardiman for a district court seat,
Hardiman contributed a total of $2,400 to Specter, $2,000 to
Santorum and his political action committee, and gave thousands
of dollars to other Republicans. Hardiman kept sending some of
those donations even as he was interviewing with the White
House, filling out forms for the Justice Department and
undergoing his FBI background check. Hardiman was confirmed by
the Senate in October 2003. This fall, he was nominated by Bush
to be elevated to the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals -- so
he'll go before the Judiciary Committee, with Specter now in
charge, again.
Specter dismissed the importance of the money he received from
Hardiman. "He was a protégé of Santorum, not mine," Specter
said. He added that if he had known Hardiman was donating while
under consideration for the judgeship, "I would have told him
not to do it."
As a Judiciary Committee member, Specter also helped oversee the
confirmation of Judge Gene Pratter. Pratter gave Specter $1,500
between February and March 2003, and interviewed with the
Pennsylvania selection committee in "spring" 2003, according to
her Senate questionnaire. Pratter then interviewed with White
House counsel Alberto Gonzalez in July and September 2003 -- and
in September she contributed $2,000 to Bush.
The records of other federal judges appointed by Bush in
Pennsylvania reveal a similar pattern. Judge John E. Jones of
Pennsylvania gave $1,000 to Santorum after he was recommended by
the senators' committee. Judge Michael Baylson, nominated and
confirmed in 2002 after serving for decades as legal counsel and
then treasurer for Specter's campaigns and committees, gave
$2,000 to Specter after it was reported in the press that
Baylson was a likely candidate for the judgeship.
"If I had known about it," said Specter, "I would have returned
their contributions. I don't want anybody to think that it's
relevant." He added, "You ought to look at all the others who
were nominees who didn't make contributions. I don't think
anybody would believe that those contributions would influence a
decision on making anyone a judge."
But ensuring that the public won't see the money as tainting the
selection of judges may not be so simple. "All campaign
contributions are in some sense to buy influence," said William
Hodes, a professor emeritus of law at Indiana University who
helped draft the proposed ABA code. "Once you cross into the
world of judging or being a candidate for judge you take on a
new responsibility to begin living by the rules of your new
job," said Hodes, who runs a legal ethics consulting practice.
"Since sitting federal judges can't donate even a dime anyway,
my guess is that it would be very comfortable for the federal
system to say once you have had direct talks with the senator
with an eye toward [a judgeship], or if the White House has
contacted you, then you're a candidate and you have to back
off."
Even some Bush judges who gave money as they were bound for the
bench acknowledge the ethical concerns that it can raise.
"I was recommended [to the president] around August 2001," said
Judge Jones of Pennsylvania. "Is that the point that I should
have stopped making contributions? Maybe I should have." He
added, "If you know you're being recommended by the screening
panel, probably in retrospect it's better to say, 'That's it,'
and not make any contributions after that. But that's the
benefit of hindsight."
-- By Will Evans
Copyright ©2006 Salon Media Group, Inc.
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