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The Legal Accountability Project
Judge Ross is just the latest example of the most hypocritical double standard: judges hold others accountable for misconduct but are never held accountable themselves.
Failing to act sends a disturbing message: accountability is optional for the powerful. @alizashatzman.bsky.social @slate.com
www.npr.org/2026/06/09/n...
“What would be a fireable offense in most other workplaces is given no more than a slap on the wrist in the federal judiciary, where judges are inexplicably exempt from the anti-harassment laws they interpret," LAP’s @alizashatzman.bsky.social told @npr.org @carriejohnson.bsky.social 👇
“What would be a fireable offense in most other workplaces is given no more than a slap on the wrist in the federal judiciary, where judges are inexplicably exempt from the anti-harassment laws they interpret," LAP’s @alizashatzman.bsky.social told @npr.org @carriejohnson.bsky.social 👇
“What would be a fireable offense in most other workplaces is given no more than a slap on the wrist in the federal judiciary, where judges are inexplicably exempt from the anti-harassment laws they interpret," I told @npr.org ’s @carriejohnson.bsky.social @thelap.bsky.social
Three judges are facing misconduct allegations in three different states, putting pressure on the federal judiciary's system for policing bad behavior in its own ranks.
Judges who interpret our laws should be held to the highest ethical standards. But right now, they’re held to none. slate.trib.al/XuEgJA0
👀 My op ed in @slate.com about the outrageous lack of accountability for judges like Eleanor Ross who abuse their power and what Congress + the courts should do about it. @thelap.bsky.social 👇
LAP’s @alizashatzman.bsky.social in @slate.com on the outrageous lack of accountability for judges like Eleanor Ross who abuse their power, and, importantly, what Congress + the courts should do about it. 👇👇
“Judge Ross is the latest in a long line of examples of the most hypocritical double standard: judges hold others accountable for misconduct but are never held accountable themselves. Failing to act now sends a disturbing message: accountability is optional for the powerful,” I argue in @slate.com
“What would be a fireable offense in most other workplaces is given no more than a slap on the wrist in the federal judiciary, where judges are inexplicably exempt from the anti-harassment laws they interpret," LAP’s @alizashatzman.bsky.social told @npr.org @carriejohnson.bsky.social
The Legal Accountability Project
Carrie Johnson
The Legal Accountability Project
The Legal Accountability Project
Georgia federal Judge Eleanor Ross received a “private reprimand” for having sex with a law enforcement officer in chambers over a two-year period.
Judges who interpret our laws should be held to the highest ethical standards. But right now, they’re held to none. slate.trib.al/XuEgJA0
Slate
Judges who interpret our laws should be held to the highest ethical standards. But right now, they’re held to none. slate.trib.al/XuEgJA0
Three judges are facing misconduct allegations in three different states, putting pressure on the federal judiciary's system for policing bad behavior in its own ranks.
Three judges are facing misconduct allegations in three different states, putting pressure on the federal judiciary's system for policing bad behavior in its own ranks.
Three judges are facing misconduct allegations in three different states, putting pressure on the federal judiciary's system for policing bad behavior in its own ranks. n.pr/4ot2AhR
Georgia federal Judge Eleanor Ross received a “private reprimand” for having sex with a law enforcement officer in chambers over a two-year period.
Three judges are facing misconduct allegations in three different states, putting pressure on the federal judiciary's system for policing bad behavior in its own ranks.
Three judges are facing misconduct allegations in three different states, putting pressure on the federal judiciary's system for policing bad behavior in its own ranks.