Ketanji Brown Jackson rejects GOP accusations that her record on child pornography cases 'endangers our children'
- Ketanji Brown Jackson rejected claims that she's been lenient toward child pornography offenders.
- "Nothing could be further from the truth," the Judge said during her second day of confirmation hearings.
Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson on Tuesday forcefully rejected accusations that she's been too lenient toward child pornography offenders, as some of her Republican critics have claimed.
Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, gave Jackson an opportunity to respond to GOP Sen. Josh Hawley's charge that her legal record "endangers our children."
"As a mother and a judge who has had to deal with these cases, I was thinking that nothing could be further from the truth," Jackson said Tuesday. "These are some of the most difficult cases that a judge has to deal with because we're talking about pictures of sex abuse of children, we're talking about graphic descriptions that judges have to read and consider when they decide how to sentence in these cases."
Last week, Hawley claimed in a series of tweets that Jackson "has a pattern of letting child porn offenders off the hook for their appalling crimes." The Missouri Republican pointed to a number of child pornography cases in which Jackson imposed sentences lighter than the federal guidelines recommended. Independent fact-checkers at multiple news outlets and legal experts say Jackson's conduct was within the mainstream of federal judges and Hawley's claims misrepresent her record. National Review contributing editor Andrew McCarthy said Hawley's claims appear "meritless to the point of demagoguery."
Jackson defended her use of judicial discretion in sentencing, noting that Congress directs judges to take a variety of factors into account when determining the severity of a sentence.
"That statute doesn't say look only at the guidelines and stop. That statute doesn't say impose the highest possible penalty for this sickening and egregious crime," Jackson said. "The statute says calculate the guidelines, but also look at various aspects of this offense and impose a sentence that is 'sufficient but not greater than necessary to promote the purposes of punishment.'"
Hawley on Monday raised his concerns with Jackson's record, listing the cases that he would like her to explain her thinking. Several other Republicans on the committee, including Sen. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee, have joined in Hawley's criticisms and signaled they also expect to question Jackson on the issue.
Jackson emphasized that she understands "how significant, how damaging [and] how horrible" child pornography crimes are and tells offenders how victims can be impacted by their crimes.
"When I look in the eyes of a defendant who is weeping because I'm giving him a significant sentence, what I say to him is: 'Do you know that there is someone who has written to me, and who has told me that she has developed agoraphobia. She cannot leave her house because she thinks that everyone she meets will have seen her, will have seen her pictures on the Internet, they're out there forever, at the most vulnerable time of her life, and so she's paralyzed,'" she said.
Jackson said she shares this story with every child pornography defendant as part of her sentencing "so that they understand what they have done."
The judge added that she then imposes a "significant sentence" and "all of the additional restraints that are available in the law."
"These people are looking at 20, 30, 40 years of supervision," she said. "They can't use their computers in a normal way for decades."