Supreme Court BarrU.S. attorneys general are usually offered the chance to argue before the U.S. Supreme Court at least once (usually a case that is a sure winner) during their tenure.
If
William Barr (above) is confirmed after hearings that begin today, he can boast that he has “been there, done that.” But he also might want to do it again.
Barr has actually argued three times before the high court, but only once during his first go-round as attorney general from 1991 to 1993. Twice he argued in telecom cases when he was general counsel of the company now known as Verizon: AT&T v. Iowa Utility Board in 1998, and Verizon v. FCC in 2001.
As attorney general, Barr in 1992 argued in support of law enforcement in
Brecht v. Abrahamson, a tricky habeas corpus case that involved conflicting precedents involving harmless error standards and the like. He and Wisconsin won, 5-4.
It so happened that I (Tony here) covered the argument for Legal Times. Here are some takeaways from my report in December 1992:
>> “He showed mastery of both facts and precedent … and when Justice
David Souter interrupted Barr to ask him the sort of question that would have completely derailed Barr if he were just faking it, Barr shifted gears and calmly and competently answered the question.”
>> “Barr participated in two moot courts--one of which was videotaped, and the second of which brought department lawyers into the office on the Saturday after Thanksgiving. One insider who was at both moot courts says diplomatically, ‘He got better as it went along.’”
>> “Attorneys general don't have much call to wear morning coats on other occasions, so there was a scramble to pull together appropriate formal dress.
Paul Larkin Jr., assistant to the solicitor general [now a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation,] reportedly offered up his morning coat, and it was eagerly accepted.”
>> “Barr's 10 minutes were up. A tradition was honored, and Barr's resume, as he heads back into the private sector, is a little shinier.”
Sometime soon, Barr may have another chance to borrow a morning coat, approach the lectern and polish his resume again.
More reading from our colleague Ellis Kim at the NLJ:
•
Kirkland's Bill Barr Reports $1.2M Firm Income on Disclosure for AG•
Barr Vows Mueller 'Will Be Allowed to Complete His Work'
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