Schadenfreude and the Judge
The dictionary defines schadenfreude as "joy at the misfortune of others." To be sure, not
something one should be proud of, but nevertheless a guilty pleasure in which
we all partake now and then.
Who among us hasn't at least
silently cheered when a bad guy gets what's coming to him, like when a politician or clergyman who loudly
preaches marital fidelity and "family values" gets outed as an
adulterer or a child molester, or when the guy who raises the
price of a life-saving drug from $17.50 a dose to $500 later gets sentenced to
prison for unrelated securities fraud. Stuff like that.
So I plead guilty to a mild case
of schadenfreude when I read about the resignation of Judge Alex
Kozinski, of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. Current count of accusers is
15, but the word is "everyone knew." He was accused of a wide range of misconduct, all of which had the central theme of humiliating his female clerks, running the gamut from feeling up stunned young women, to sharing his private porno collection alone in his chambers with one of his clerks and asking her if the images turned her on. You get the picture.
Kozinski's name is familiar
to many in the legal profession. He was criticized by a judicial panel in 2008 for maintaining a publicly
accessible website containing pornographic images, but arrogantly ignored the
message. He was outspoken and loved the camera, was revered by conservatives, and had been a very prominent person in judicial circles. Upon his recommendation, his clerks won sought-after Supreme
Court clerkships.
My only direct connection to
the judge was the opinions he wrote in a case we tried in Oregon in 1999:
My firm took on the pro bono
representation of a group of physicians who provided legal abortion services to
their patients who needed or wanted that procedure. The doctors had been
threatened by a group of anti-abortion extremists who targeted them with
old-west-style "WANTED" posters
after a nationwide pattern had been established that physicians who were so
"postered" were soon thereafter murdered. The extremists applauded
the killings and then not only published WANTED posters of our clients, they set
up a website that published personal details of the targeted docs, including the
names of family members, home addresses, etc.
After a three-week trial, the
federal jury found the posters to be a true threat, not protected by the First
Amendment. The jury imposed upon the defendants the largest monetary verdict in
the history of the State of Oregon, and the trial judge, affirming the
correctness of the verdict, entered an injunction barring further threats.
In my memoir published
earlier this year, I wrote about the appeal from that verdict:
"But two years after trial, a panel of three conservative judges of the Ninth Circuit did what we feared that particular trio would do. In a decision we thought motivated by abortion politics, not First Amendment jurisprudence, they voted to reverse the judgment and dismiss the complaint.
Kozinski wrote the appelate court's opinion. My suspicions about his disrespect for a woman's right to choose were
confirmed when he led his panel's reversal by an intellectual foray citing
First Amendment cases involving claims of incitement.
That was a straw-man argument. Our case was not about incitement. In fact, our
leader, Maria Vullo, specifically avoided that claim because of extant First
Amendment jurisprudence. Instead, we
charged the posters were a "threat," which was a civil and criminal violation of federal
law. Threats are not protected by the First Amendment. And under prevailing
Ninth Circuit law, defendants' conduct fit the threat definition.
Kozinski nevertheless,
citing incitement cases, concluded,
"If the
defendants' statements merely encouraged unrelated terrorists," to
kill the doctors, it was protected speech.
That
would be the case, he wrote, even if,
"by publishing the doctors' addresses, the
defendants made it easier for any would-be terrorists to carry out the gruesome
mission."
In that chapter of the book, I wondered aloud:
Suppose:
a) ISIS had
established a pattern of circulating WANTED posters featuring judges who had voted
to affirm convictions of ISIS adherents, and
b) The postered judges had then all been murdered, and
c) Kozinski and his two adherents had recently affirmed conviction of an ISIS adherent, and
d) ISIS thereafter plastered WANTED posters on neighboring fences and telephone poles, and on
Facebook and Instagram, supplying the three judges' names, photographs, their home
addresses, the names of their wives and children, the location of their
children's schools, the place and time of school bus stop locations, etc.,
Would
Kozinski have voted to protect that
speech? I doubted it.
The evidence is overwhelming
that a very large number of abortion providers have quit out of fear of
violence to themselves and their families. Indeed, in many areas of the country
there are no providers at all, and a woman's constitutional right of freedom to
choose has thereby been nullified by the terrorists. A decision to permit domestic jihadists to threaten the lives of
abortion providers is a decision that harms not the doctors, but the women who
would be served by them. It is the reproductive freedom of women, the right
of free choice to make decisions about their own bodies, that was totally
disrespected by the Kozinski court.
An en banc Ninth Circuit panel later rejected the Kozinski panel's
alarming views, and reinstated the trial court decision. Kozinski, of course, dissented. Not counting
the two judges on the Kozinski panel on the first appeal, the
final vote was 6-3 to reinstate the trial verdict.
Question I: Does the revelation
of Kozinski's egregious disrespect for women support my cynicism about the
motives that may have influenced his decision in the Oregon case?
Question II: Is it reasonable to inquire whether that disrespect is reflected in other Kozinski decisions as well?
Question III: Am I justified
in reveling in my schadenfreude over Kozinski's public disgrace?
I'm anything but shy. The
answer to all three questions is "Yes."

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