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Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor graduated with honors from Ivy League schools. But she may have learned some of her most memorable lessons as a young prosecutor, following police into abandoned tenements and tracking down witnesses on the grimy streets of New York. Details. | ||
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I wish I could believe the story, but Judge Sotomayor's own writings and speeches suggest that her most memorable and influential momemts were not spent with law enforcement. | |||
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This organization analyzed Judge Sotomayor's performance on the bench, regarding criminal cases: http://trac.syr.edu/tracreports/judge/213/ | |||
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Although--as someone math-deficient--I have issues with statistics and graphs, her stint as a trial judge seems encouraging. Just a thought, but it might be more useful, however, to see how she reasoned and ruled when constitutional issues were presented to her. JAS | |||
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I agree, JAS. Knowing how ANY SCOTUS candidate reasons out constitutional issues would be very helpful. I am encouraged by the statistics on her sentencing history. She was once one of us. I genuinely believe in what I do, and I like to think that my colleagues and former colleagues do, too. The fact that she took a public service job at $17,000 a year, after graduating with honors from an Ivy League school speaks volumes to me. [This message was edited by e hernandez on 07-16-09 at .] | |||
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I looked quickly to see whether any sitting Justice had state trial court prosecution experience. I could find none. Some were with attorney general offices, not comparable. Some were with U.S. Attorney offices. I doubt that she spent five years in the Manhattan District Attorney's office doing her nails and getting coffee during the early 80's. The whole story JB cited describes what I think most of us do or did when we were young lawyers in a felony prosecution office. For all we know she might have sided with Justices Roberts, Kennedy, Breyer and Alito in Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts. | |||
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Yep, I see more than a glimmer of hope in what she might bring to the High Court. Possibly, she can be a surprise--as Souter was the other way! JAS | |||
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The Supreme Court's two former prosecutors sit on opposite ends of the court's long mahogany bench, and they take very different views of the criminal justice system. Details. | |||
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I began to get a bad feeling about her nomination when VP Joe Biden assured prosecutors that she would be a strong voice for the prosecution. Sure enough, it looks like another of his predictions has proven dead wrong. If you ever watched Law & Order, you know that the Manhatten DA's Ofc. has a lot of namby pambs in their ranks. Maybe we shouldn't be so surprised. | |||
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