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Sonia Sotomayor

Sonia Maria Sotomayor (/ˈsnjə ˌstmˈjɔːr/, Spanish: [ˈsonja sotomaˈʝoɾ];[1] born June 25, 1954)[2] is an American lawyer and jurist who serves as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. She was nominated by President Barack Obama on May 26, 2009, and has served since August 8, 2009. She is the third woman, first woman of color, the first Hispanic, and first Latina to serve on the Supreme Court.[3][a]

Sonia Sotomayor
Official portrait, 2009
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
Assumed office
August 8, 2009
Nominated byBarack Obama
Preceded byDavid Souter
Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
In office
October 7, 1998 – August 6, 2009
Nominated byBill Clinton
Preceded byJ. Daniel Mahoney
Succeeded byRaymond Lohier
Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
In office
August 12, 1992 – October 7, 1998
Nominated byGeorge H. W. Bush
Preceded byJohn M. Walker Jr.
Succeeded byVictor Marrero
Personal details
Born
Sonia Maria Sotomayor

(1954-06-25) June 25, 1954 (age 69)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Spouse
Kevin Noonan
(m. 1976; div. 1983)
Education
Signature

Sotomayor was born in the Bronx, New York City,[4] to Puerto Rican-born parents. Her father died when she was nine, and she was subsequently raised by her mother. Sotomayor graduated summa cum laude from Princeton University in 1976 and received her Juris Doctor from Yale Law School in 1979, where she was an editor at the Yale Law Journal.[4] Sotomayor worked as an assistant district attorney in New York for four and a half years before entering private practice in 1984. She played an active role on the boards of directors for the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund, the State of New York Mortgage Agency, and the New York City Campaign Finance Board.

Sotomayor was nominated to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York by President George H. W. Bush in 1991; confirmation followed in 1992. In 1997, she was nominated by President Bill Clinton to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Her appointment to the court of appeals was slowed by the Republican majority in the United States Senate because of their concerns that the position might lead to a Supreme Court nomination but she was eventually confirmed in 1998. On the Second Circuit, Sotomayor heard appeals in more than 3,000 cases and wrote about 380 opinions. Sotomayor has taught at the New York University School of Law and Columbia Law School.

In May 2009, President Barack Obama nominated Sotomayor to the Supreme Court following the retirement of Justice David Souter. Her nomination was confirmed by the Senate in August 2009 by a vote of 68–31. While on the Court, Sotomayor has supported the informal liberal bloc of justices when they divide along the commonly perceived ideological lines. During her Supreme Court tenure, Sotomayor has been identified with concern for the rights of defendants and criminal justice reform, and is known for her impassioned dissents on issues of race, ethnic, and gender identity, including in Schuette v. BAMN, Utah v. Strieff, and Trump v. Hawaii.

Early life

Sotomayor[5] was born in the New York City borough of the Bronx.[6] Her father was Juan Sotomayor (c. 1921–1964),[7] from the area of Santurce, San Juan, Puerto Rico,[8][9][10] and her mother was Celina Báez (1927–2021),[11] an orphan[12] from Santa Rosa in Lajas, a rural area on Puerto Rico's southwest coast.[10]

The two left Puerto Rico separately, met, and married during World War II after Celina served in the Women's Army Corps.[13][14] Juan Sotomayor had a third-grade education, did not speak English, and worked as a tool and die worker;[8] Celina Baez worked as a telephone operator and then a practical nurse.[7] Sonia's younger brother, Juan Sotomayor (born c. 1957), later became a physician and university professor in the Syracuse, New York, area.[15][16]

Sotomayor was raised a Catholic[3] and grew up in Puerto Rican communities in the South Bronx and East Bronx; she self-identifies as a "Nuyorican".[13] The family lived in a South Bronx tenement[17] before moving in 1957 to the well-maintained, racially and ethnically mixed, working-class Bronxdale Houses housing project[17][18][19] in Soundview (which has over time been thought as part of both the East Bronx and South Bronx).[20][21][22] In 2010, the Bronxdale Houses were renamed in her honor. Her relative proximity to Yankee Stadium led to her becoming a lifelong fan of the New York Yankees.[23] The extended family got together frequently[17] and regularly visited Puerto Rico during summers.[24]

 
Sotomayor and her parents
 
Sotomayor as a young girl

Sonia grew up with an alcoholic father and a mother who was emotionally distant; she felt closest to her grandmother, who she later said gave her a source of "protection and purpose".[12] Sonia was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes at age seven,[8] and began taking daily insulin injections.[25] Her father died of heart problems at age 42, when she was nine years old.[7][17] After this, she became fluent in English.[8] Sotomayor has said that she was first inspired by the strong-willed Nancy Drew book character, and then after her diabetes diagnosis led doctors to suggest a different career from detective, she was inspired to go into a legal career and become a judge by watching the Perry Mason television series.[8][23][25] She reflected in 1998: "I was going to college and I was going to become an attorney, and I knew that when I was ten. Ten. That's no jest."[23]

Celina Sotomayor put great stress on the value of education; she bought the Encyclopædia Britannica for her children, something unusual in the housing projects.[13] Despite the distance between the two, which became greater after her father's death and which was not fully reconciled until decades later,[12] Sotomayor has credited her mother with being her "life inspiration".[26] For grammar school, Sotomayor attended Blessed Sacrament School in Soundview,[27] where she was valedictorian and had a near-perfect attendance record.[22][28] Although underage, Sotomayor worked at a local retail store and a hospital.[29] Sotomayor passed the entrance tests for and then attended Cardinal Spellman High School in the Bronx.[3][30] At Cardinal Spellman, Sotomayor was on the forensics team and was elected to the student government.[3][30] She graduated as valedictorian in 1972.[13] Meanwhile, the Bronxdale Houses had fallen victim to increasing heroin use, crime, and the emergence of the Black Spades gang.[17] In 1970, the family found refuge by moving to Co-op City in the Northeast Bronx.[17]

College and law school

Sotomayor attended Princeton University. She has said she was admitted in part due to her achievements in high school and in part because affirmative action made up for her standardized test scores, which she described as "not comparable to her colleagues at Princeton and Yale."[31][32] She would later say that there are cultural biases built into such testing[31] and praise affirmative action for fulfilling "its purpose: to create the conditions whereby students from disadvantaged backgrounds could be brought to the starting line of a race many were unaware was even being run."[33]

Sotomayor described her time at Princeton as life-changing.[34] Initially, she felt like "a visitor landing in an alien country"[35] coming from the Bronx and Puerto Rico.[36] Princeton had few women students and fewer Latinos (about 20).[13][37] She was too intimidated to ask questions during her freshman year;[35] her writing and vocabulary skills were weak, and she lacked knowledge in the classics.[38] She put in long hours in the library and over summers, worked with a professor outside of class, and gained skills, knowledge, and confidence.[13][37][38] She became a moderate student activist[30][39] and co-chair of the Acción Puertorriqueña organization, which served as a social and political hub and sought more opportunities for Puerto Rican students.[13][40][41] She worked in the admissions office, traveling to high schools and lobbying on behalf of her best prospects.[42]

As a student activist, Sotomayor focused on faculty hiring and curriculum, since Princeton did not have a single full-time Latino professor nor any class on Latin American studies.[43][44] A meeting with university president William G. Bowen in her sophomore year saw no results,[41] leading to Sotomayor's saying in a New York Times story at the time that "Princeton is following a policy of benign neutrality and is not making substantive efforts to change."[45] Acción Puertorriqueña filed a formal letter of complaint in April 1974 with the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, saying the school discriminated in its hiring and admission practices.[40][43][45] Sotomayor wrote opinion pieces for the Daily Princetonian with the same theme.[13] The university began to hire Latino faculty,[39][43] and Sotomayor established an ongoing dialogue with Bowen.[42] Sotomayor also successfully persuaded historian Peter Winn to create a seminar on Puerto Rican history and politics.[43] Sotomayor joined the governance board of Princeton's Third World Center and served on the university's student–faculty Discipline Committee, which issued rulings on student infractions.[42][46] She also ran an after-school program for local children[39] and volunteered as an interpreter for Latino patients at Trenton Psychiatric Hospital.[13][36][47]

 
Sotomayor's 1976 Princeton yearbook photo

Academically, Sotomayor stumbled her first year at Princeton,[36] but later received almost all A's in her final two years of college.[46] Sotomayor wrote her senior thesis on Luis Muñoz Marín, the first democratically elected governor of Puerto Rico, and on the territory's struggles for economic and political self-determination.[13] The 178-page work, "La Historia Ciclica de Puerto Rico: The Impact of the Life of Luis Muñoz Marin on the Political and Economic History of Puerto Rico, 1930–1975",[48] won honorable mention for the Latin American Studies Thesis Prize.[49] As a senior, Sotomayor won the Pyne Prize, the top award for undergraduates, which reflected both strong grades and extracurricular activities.[13][30][46] In 1976, she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa[13][50] and graduated summa cum laude with an A.B. in history.[51] She was influenced by critical race theory, which would be reflected in her later speeches and writings.[52]

On August 14, 1976, just after graduating from Princeton, Sotomayor married Kevin Edward Noonan, whom she had dated since high school,[9][13] in a small chapel at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York.[3] She used the married name Sonia Sotomayor de Noonan.[53][54][55] He became a biologist and a patent lawyer.[13]

Sotomayor entered Yale Law School in the fall of 1976.[23] While she believes she again benefited from affirmative action to compensate for relatively low standardized test scores,[31][32] a former dean of admissions at Yale has said that given her record at Princeton, it probably had little effect.[42] At Yale she fit in well[18][54] although she found there were again few Latino students.[41] She was known as a hard worker but she was not considered among the star students in her class.[18][54] Yale General Counsel and professor José A. Cabranes acted as an early mentor to her to successfully transition and work within "the system".[56] She became an editor of the Yale Law Journal[9] and was also managing editor of the student-run Yale Studies in World Public Order publication (later known as the Yale Journal of International Law).[57] Sotomayor published a law review note on the effect of possible Puerto Rican statehood on the island's mineral and ocean rights.[13][30] She was a semi-finalist in the Barristers Union mock trial competition.[57] She served as the co-chair of a group for Latin, Asian, and Native American students, and continued to advocate for the hiring of more Hispanic faculty.[37][41]

Following her second year, she gained a job as a summer associate with the prominent New York law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison.[58] By her own later evaluation, her performance there was lacking.[59] She did not receive an offer for a full-time position, an experience that she later described as a "kick in the teeth" and one that would bother her for years.[58][59] In her third year, she filed a formal complaint against the established Washington, D.C., law firm of Shaw, Pittman, Potts & Trowbridge for suggesting during a recruiting dinner that she was at Yale only via affirmative action.[30][41] Sotomayor refused to be interviewed by the firm further and filed her complaint with a faculty–student tribunal, which ruled in her favor.[41][43] Her action triggered a campus-wide debate,[56] and news of the firm's subsequent December 1978 apology made The Washington Post.[53]

In 1979, Sotomayor was awarded a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School.[9] She was admitted to the New York Bar the following year.[55][60]

Early legal career

On the recommendation of Cabranes, Sotomayor was hired out of law school as an assistant district attorney under New York County District Attorney Robert Morgenthau starting in 1979.[9][56] She said at the time that she did so with conflicted emotions: "There was a tremendous amount of pressure from my community, from the third world community, at Yale. They could not understand why I was taking this job. I'm not sure I've ever resolved that problem."[61] It was a time of crisis-level crime rates and drug problems in New York, Morgenthau's staff was overburdened with cases, and like other rookie prosecutors, Sotomayor was initially fearful of appearing before judges in court.[62] Working in the trial division,[63] she handled heavy caseloads as she prosecuted everything from shoplifting and prostitution to robberies, assaults, and murders.[9][13][64] She also worked on cases involving police brutality.[65] She was not afraid to venture into tough neighborhoods or endure squalid conditions in order to interview witnesses.[64][66] In the courtroom, she was effective at cross examination and at simplifying a case in ways to which a jury could relate.[64] In 1983, she helped convict Richard Maddicks (known as the "Tarzan Murderer" who acrobatically entered apartments, robbed them, and shot residents for no reason).[62][67] She felt lower-level crimes were largely products of socioeconomic environment and poverty, but she had a different attitude about serious felonies: "No matter how liberal I am, I'm still outraged by crimes of violence. Regardless of whether I can sympathize with the causes that lead these individuals to do these crimes, the effects are outrageous."[61] Hispanic-on-Hispanic crime was of particular concern to her: "The saddest crimes for me were the ones that my own people committed against each other."[8] In general, she showed a passion for bringing law and order to the streets of New York, displaying special zeal in pursuing child pornography cases, unusual for the time.[30] She worked 15-hour days and gained a reputation for being driven and for her preparedness and fairness.[23][62][68] One of her job evaluations labelled her a "potential superstar".[66] Morgenthau later described her as "smart, hard-working, [and having] a lot of common sense,"[69] and as a "fearless and effective prosecutor."[65] She stayed a typical length of time in the post[61] and had a common reaction to the job: "After a while, you forget there are decent, law-abiding people in life."[70]

Sotomayor and Noonan divorced amicably in 1983;[66] they did not have children.[21] She has said that the pressures of her working life were a contributing factor, but not the major factor, in the breakup.[68][71] From 1983 to 1986, Sotomayor had an informal solo practice, dubbed Sotomayor & Associates, located in her Brooklyn apartment.[72] She performed legal consulting work, often for friends or family members.[72]

In 1984, she entered private practice, joining the commercial litigation practice group of Pavia & Harcourt in Manhattan as an associate.[8][73] One of 30 attorneys in the law firm,[73] she specialized in intellectual property litigation, international law, and arbitration.[8][65][74][75] She later said, "I wanted to complete myself as an attorney."[23] Although she had no civil litigation experience, the firm recruited her heavily, and she learned quickly on the job.[73] She was eager to try cases and argue in court, rather than be part of a larger law firm.[73] Her clients were mostly international corporations doing business in the United States;[30] much of her time was spent tracking down and suing counterfeiters of Fendi goods.[13][73] In some cases, Sotomayor went on-site with the police to Harlem or Chinatown to have illegitimate merchandise seized, in the latter instance pursuing a fleeing culprit while riding on a motorcycle.[13][73] She said at the time that Pavia & Harcourt's efforts were run "much like a drug operation", and the successful rounding up of thousands of counterfeit accessories in 1986 was celebrated by "Fendi Crush", a destruction-by-garbage-truck event at Tavern on the Green.[76] At other times, she dealt with dry legal issues such as grain export contract disputes.[73] In a 1986 appearance on Good Morning America that profiled women ten years after college graduation, she said that the bulk of law work was drudgery, and that while she was content with her life, she had expected greater things of herself coming out of college.[71] In 1988 she became a partner at the firm;[38][57] she was paid well but not extravagantly.[77] She left in 1992 when she became a judge.[9]

In addition to her law firm work, Sotomayor found visible public service roles.[78] She was not connected to the party bosses that typically picked people for such jobs in New York, and indeed she was registered as an independent.[78] Instead, District Attorney Morgenthau, an influential figure, served as her patron.[69][78] In 1987, Governor of New York Mario Cuomo appointed Sotomayor to the board of the State of New York Mortgage Agency, which she served on until 1992.[79] As part of one of the largest urban rebuilding efforts in American history,[79] the agency helped low-income people get home mortgages and to provide insurance coverage for housing and hospices for sufferers of AIDS.[8] Despite being the youngest member of a board composed of strong personalities, she involved herself in the details of the operation and was effective.[69][78] She was vocal in supporting the right to affordable housing, directing more funds to lower-income home owners, and in her skepticism about the effects of gentrification, although in the end she voted in favor of most of the projects.[78][79]

Sotomayor was appointed by Mayor Ed Koch in 1988 as one of the founding members of the New York City Campaign Finance Board, where she served for four years.[8][80] There she took a vigorous role[78] in the board's implementation of a voluntary scheme wherein local candidates received public matching funds in exchange for limits on contributions and spending and agreeing to greater financial disclosure.[81] Sotomayor showed no patience with candidates who failed to follow regulations and was more of a stickler for making campaigns follow those regulations than some of the other board members.[69][78] She joined in rulings that fined, audited, or reprimanded the mayoral campaigns of Koch, David Dinkins, and Rudy Giuliani.[78]

Based upon another recommendation from Cabranes,[69] Sotomayor was a member of the board of directors of the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund from 1980 to 1992.[82] There she was a top policy maker[8] who worked actively with the organization's lawyers on issues such as New York City hiring practices, police brutality, the death penalty, and voting rights.[82] The group achieved its most visible triumph when it successfully blocked a city primary election on the grounds that New York City Council boundaries diminished the power of minority voters.[82]

During 1985 and 1986, Sotomayor served on the board of the Maternity Center Association, a Manhattan-based non-profit group which focused on improving the quality of maternity care.[83][84][85]

Federal district judge

Nomination and confirmation

Sotomayor had wanted to become a judge since she was in elementary school, and in 1991 she was recommended for a spot by Democratic New York senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan.[8] Moynihan had an unusual bipartisan arrangement with his fellow New York senator, Republican Al D'Amato, whereby he would get to choose roughly one out of every four New York district court seats even though a Republican was in the White House.[34][86][87][88] Moynihan also wanted to fulfill a public promise he had made to get a Hispanic judge appointed for New York.[21] When Moynihan's staff recommended her to him, they said "Have we got a judge for you!"[8] Moynihan identified with her socio-economic and academic background and became convinced she would become the first Hispanic Supreme Court justice.[13][78] D'Amato became an enthusiastic backer of Sotomayor,[89] who was seen as politically centrist at the time.[8][21] Of the impending drop in salary from private practice, Sotomayor said: "I've never wanted to get adjusted to my income because I knew I wanted to go back to public service. And in comparison to what my mother earns and how I was raised, it's not modest at all."[8]

Sotomayor was thus nominated on November 27, 1991, by President George H. W. Bush to a seat on the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York vacated by John M. Walker Jr.[6] Senate Judiciary Committee hearings, led by a friendly Democratic majority, went smoothly for her in June 1992, with her pro bono activities winning praise from Senator Ted Kennedy and her getting unanimous approval from the committee.[8][89][90] Then a Republican senator blocked her nomination and that of three others for a while in retaliation for an unrelated block Democrats had put on another nominee.[89][91] D'Amato objected strongly;[91] some weeks later, the block was dropped, and Sotomayor was confirmed by unanimous consent[63][89] of the full United States Senate on August 11, 1992, and received her commission the next day.[6]

Sotomayor became the youngest judge in the Southern District[92] and the first Hispanic federal judge in New York State.[93] She became the first Puerto Rican woman to serve as a judge in a U.S. federal court.[94] She was one of seven women among the district's 58 judges.[8] She moved from Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn, back to the Bronx in order to live within her district.[8]

Judgeship

Sotomayor generally kept a low public profile as a district court judge.[23] She showed a willingness to take anti-government positions in a number of cases, and during her first year in the seat, she received high ratings from liberal public-interest groups.[21] Other sources and organizations regarded her as a centrist during this period.[8][21] In criminal cases, she gained a reputation for tough sentencing and was not viewed as a pro-defense judge.[95] A Syracuse University study found that in such cases, Sotomayor generally handed out longer sentences than her colleagues, especially when white-collar crime was involved.[96] Fellow district judge Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum was an influence on Sotomayor in adopting a narrow, "just the facts" approach to judicial decision-making.[56]

As a trial judge, she garnered a reputation for being well-prepared in advance of a case and moving cases along a tight schedule.[21] Lawyers before her court viewed her as plain-spoken, intelligent, demanding, and sometimes somewhat unforgiving; one said, "She does not have much patience for people trying to snow her. You can't do it."[21]

Notable rulings

On March 30, 1995, in Silverman v. Major League Baseball Player Relations Committee, Inc.,[97] Sotomayor issued a preliminary injunction against Major League Baseball, preventing it from unilaterally implementing a new collective bargaining agreement and using replacement players. Her ruling ended the 1994 baseball strike after 232 days, the day before the new season was scheduled to begin. The Second Circuit upheld Sotomayor's decision and denied the owners' request to stay the ruling.[23][98][99] The decision raised her profile,[13] won her the plaudits of baseball fans,[23] and had a lasting effect on the game.[100] In the preparatory phase of the case, Sotomayor informed the lawyers of both sides that, "I hope none of you assumed ... that my lack of knowledge of any of the intimate details of your dispute meant I was not a baseball fan. You can't grow up in the South Bronx without knowing about baseball."[101]

In Dow Jones v. Department of Justice (1995),[102] Sotomayor sided with the Wall Street Journal in its efforts to obtain and publish a photocopy of the last note left by former Deputy White House Counsel Vince Foster. Sotomayor ruled that the public had "a substantial interest"[103] in viewing the note and enjoined the U.S. Justice Department from blocking its release.

In New York Times Co. v. Tasini (1997), freelance journalists sued the New York Times Company for copyright infringement for The New York Times' inclusion in an electronic archival database (LexisNexis) of the work of freelancers it had published. Sotomayor ruled that the publisher had the right to license the freelancers' work. This decision was reversed on appeal, and the Supreme Court upheld the reversal; two dissenters (John Paul Stevens and Stephen Breyer) took Sotomayor's position.[104]

In Castle Rock Entertainment, Inc. v. Carol Publishing Group (also in 1997), Sotomayor ruled that a book of trivia from the television program Seinfeld infringed on the copyright of the show's producer and did not constitute legal fair use. The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit upheld Sotomayor's ruling.

Court of Appeals judge

Nomination and confirmation

 
Judge Sonia Sotomayor with her godson at the United States Court of Appeals signing ceremony in 1998

On June 25, 1997, Sotomayor was nominated by President Bill Clinton to a seat on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, which was vacated by J. Daniel Mahoney.[6] Her nomination was initially expected to have smooth sailing,[23][105] with the American Bar Association Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary giving her a "well qualified" professional assessment.[106] However, as The New York Times described, "[it became] embroiled in the sometimes tortured judicial politics of the Senate."[107] Some in the Republican majority believed Clinton was eager to name the first Hispanic Supreme Court justice and that an easy confirmation to the appeals court would put Sotomayor in a better position for a possible Supreme Court nomination (despite there being no vacancy at the time nor any indication the Clinton administration was considering nominating her or any Hispanic). Therefore, the Republican majority decided to slow her confirmation.[18][105][107] Radio commentator Rush Limbaugh weighed in that Sotomayor was an ultraliberal who was on a "rocket ship" to the highest court.[105]

During her September 1997 hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Sotomayor parried strong questioning from some Republican members about mandatory sentencing, gay rights, and her level of respect for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas.[90] After a long wait, she was approved by the committee in March 1998, with only two dissensions.[90][105] However, in June 1998, the influential Wall Street Journal editorial page opined that the Clinton administration intended to "get her on to the Second Circuit, then elevate her to the Supreme Court as soon as an opening occurs"; the editorial criticized two of her district court rulings and urged further delay of her confirmation.[108] The Republican block continued.[23][105]

Ranking Democratic committee member Patrick Leahy objected to Republican use of a secret hold to slow down the Sotomayor nomination, and Leahy attributed that anonymous tactic to GOP reticence about publicly opposing a female Hispanic nominee.[105][109] The prior month, Leahy had triggered a procedural delay in the confirmation of fellow Second Circuit nominee Chester J. Straub—who, although advanced by Clinton and supported by Senator Moynihan, was considered much more acceptable by Republicans—in an unsuccessful effort to force earlier consideration of the Sotomayor confirmation.[110]

During 1998, several Hispanic organizations organized a petition drive in New York State, generating hundreds of signatures from New Yorkers to try to convince New York Republican senator Al D'Amato to push the Senate leadership to bring Sotomayor's nomination to a vote.[111] D'Amato, a backer of Sotomayor to begin with and additionally concerned about being up for re-election that year,[111] helped move Republican leadership.[13] Her nomination had been pending for over a year when Majority Leader Trent Lott scheduled the vote.[107] With complete Democratic support, and support from 25 Republican senators including Judiciary chair Orrin Hatch,[107] Sotomayor was confirmed on October 2, 1998, by a 67–29 vote.[112] She received her commission on October 7.[6] The confirmation experience left Sotomayor somewhat angry; she said shortly afterwards that during the hearings, Republicans had assumed her political beliefs based on her being a Latina: "That series of questions, I think, were symbolic of a set of expectations that some people had [that] I must be liberal. It is stereotyping, and stereotyping is perhaps the most insidious of all problems in our society today."[23]

Judgeship

Over her ten years on the Second Circuit, Sotomayor heard appeals in more than 3,000 cases and wrote about 380 opinions when she was in the majority.[13] The Supreme Court reviewed five of those, reversing three and affirming two[13]—not high numbers for an appellate judge of that many years[18] and a typical percentage of reversals.[113]

Sotomayor's circuit court rulings led to her being considered a political centrist by the ABA Journal[75][114] and other sources and organizations.[75][92][114][115][116][117] Several lawyers, legal experts, and news organizations identified her as someone with liberal inclinations.[118][119][120] The Second Circuit's caseload typically skewed more toward business and securities law rather than hot-button social or constitutional issues.[18] Sotomayor tended to write narrow, practiced rulings that relied on close application of the law to the facts of a case rather than import general philosophical viewpoints.[18][121] A Congressional Research Service analysis found that Sotomayor's rulings defied easy ideological categorization, but did show an adherence to precedent and an avoidance of overstepping the circuit court's judicial role.[122] Unusually, Sotomayor read through all the supporting documents of cases under review; her lengthy rulings explored every aspect of a case and tended to feature leaden, ungainly prose.[123] Some legal experts have said that Sotomayor's attention to detail and re-examination of the facts of a case came close to overstepping the traditional role of appellate judges.[124]

Across some 150 cases involving business and civil law, Sotomayor's rulings were generally unpredictable and not consistently pro-business or anti-business.[125] Sotomayor's influence in the federal judiciary, as measured by the number of citations of her rulings by other judges and in law review articles, increased significantly during the length of her appellate judgeship and was greater than that of some other prominent federal appeals court judges.[126] Two academic studies showed that the percentage of Sotomayor's decisions that overrode policy decisions by elected branches was the same as or lower than that of other circuit judges.[127]

Sotomayor was a member of the Second Circuit Task Force on Gender, Racial and Ethnic Fairness in the Courts.[104] In October 2001, she presented the annual Judge Mario G. Olmos Memorial Lecture at UC Berkeley School of Law;[16] titled "A Latina Judge's Voice"; it was published in the Berkeley La Raza Law Journal the following spring.[128][129] In the speech, she discussed the characteristics of her Latina upbringing and culture and the history of minorities and women ascending to the federal bench.[130] She said the low number of minority women on the federal bench at that time was "shocking".[41] She then discussed at length how her own experiences as a Latina might affect her decisions as a judge.[130] In any case, her background in activism did not necessarily influence her rulings: in a study of 50 racial discrimination cases brought before her panel, 45 were rejected, with Sotomayor never filing a dissent.[41] An expanded study showed that Sotomayor decided 97 cases involving a claim of discrimination and rejected those claims nearly 90 percent of the time.[131] Another examination of Second Circuit split decisions on cases that dealt with race and discrimination showed no clear ideological pattern in Sotomayor's opinions.[132]

In the Court of Appeals seat, Sotomayor gained a reputation for vigorous and blunt behavior toward lawyers appealing before her, sometimes to the point of brusque and curt treatment or testy interruptions.[13][133] She was known for extensive preparation for oral arguments and for running a "hot bench", where judges ask lawyers plenty of questions.[133][134] Unprepared lawyers suffered the consequences, but the vigorous questioning was an aid to lawyers seeking to tailor their arguments to the judge's concerns.[134] The 2009 Almanac of the Federal Judiciary, which collected anonymous evaluations of judges by lawyers who appear before them, contained a wide range of reactions to Sotomayor.[13] Comments also diverged among lawyers willing to be named. Attorney Sheema Chaudhry said, "She's brilliant and she's qualified, but I just feel that she can be very, how do you say, temperamental."[133] Defense lawyer Gerald B. Lefcourt said, "She used her questioning to make a point, as opposed to really looking for an answer to a question she did not understand."[133] In contrast, Second Circuit Judge Richard C. Wesley said that his interactions with Sotomayor had been "totally antithetical to this perception that has gotten some traction that she is somehow confrontational."[133] Second Circuit Judge and former teacher Guido Calabresi said his tracking showed that Sotomayor's questioning patterns were no different from those of other members of the court and added, "Some lawyers just don't like to be questioned by a woman. [The criticism] was sexist, plain and simple."[133] Sotomayor's law clerks regarded her as a valuable and strong mentor, and she said that she viewed them like family.[51]

In 2005, Senate Democrats suggested Sotomayor, among others, to President George W. Bush as an acceptable nominee to fill the seat of retiring Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.[135]

Notable rulings

Abortion

In the 2002 decision Center for Reproductive Law and Policy v. Bush,[136] Sotomayor upheld the Bush administration's implementation of the Mexico City Policy, which states that "the United States will no longer contribute to separate nongovernmental organizations which perform or actively promote abortion as a method of family planning in other nations."[137] Sotomayor held that the policy did not constitute a violation of equal protection, as "the government is free to favor the anti-abortion position over the pro-choice position, and can do so with public funds."[136]

First Amendment rights

In Pappas v. Giuliani (2002),[138] Sotomayor dissented from her colleagues' ruling that the New York Police Department could terminate from his desk job an employee who sent racist materials through the mail. Sotomayor argued that the First Amendment protected speech by the employee "away from the office, on [his] own time", even if that speech was "offensive, hateful, and insulting", and that therefore the employee's First Amendment claim should have gone to trial rather than being dismissed on summary judgment.[139]

In 2005, Sotomayor wrote the opinion for United States v. Quattrone.[140] Frank Quattrone had been on trial on charges of obstructing investigations related to technology IPOs. After the first trial ended in a deadlocked jury and a mistrial, some members of the media had wanted to publish the names of the jurors deciding Quattrone's case, and a district court had issued an order barring the publication, even though their names had previously been disclosed in open court. In United States v. Quattrone, Sotomayor wrote the opinion for the Second Circuit panel striking down this order on First Amendment grounds, stating that the media should be free to publish the names of the jurors. Sotomayor held that although it was important to protect the fairness of the retrial, the district court's order was an unconstitutional prior restraint on free speech and violated the right of the press "to report freely on events that transpire in an open courtroom".[140]

In 2008, Sotomayor was on a three-judge panel in Doninger v. Niehoff[141] that unanimously affirmed, in an opinion written by Second Circuit Judge Debra Livingston, the district court's judgment that Lewis S. Mills High School did not violate the First Amendment rights of a student when it barred her from running for student government after she called the superintendent and other school officials "douchebags" in a blog post written while off-campus that encouraged students to call an administrator and "piss her off more".[141] Judge Livingston held that the district judge did not abuse her discretion in holding that the student's speech "foreseeably create[d] a risk of substantial disruption within the school environment",[142] which is the precedent in the Second Circuit for when schools may regulate off-campus speech.[141] Although Sotomayor did not write this opinion, she has been criticized by some who disagree with it.[143]

Second Amendment rights

Sotomayor was part of the three-judge Second Circuit panel that affirmed the district court's ruling in Maloney v. Cuomo (2009).[144] Maloney was arrested for possession of nunchucks, which are illegal in New York; Maloney argued that this law violated his Second Amendment right to bear arms. The Second Circuit's per curiam opinion noted that the Supreme Court has not, so far, ever held that the Second Amendment is binding against state governments. On the contrary, in Presser v. Illinois (1886), the Supreme Court held that the Second Amendment "is a limitation only upon the power of Congress and the national government, and not upon that of the state".[144] With respect to the Presser v. Illinois precedent, the panel stated that only the Supreme Court has "the prerogative of overruling its own decisions,"[145] and the recent Supreme Court case of District of Columbia v. Heller (which struck down the District's gun ban as unconstitutional) did "not invalidate this longstanding principle".[144] The panel upheld the lower court's decision dismissing Maloney's challenge to New York's law against possession of nunchucks.[146] On June 2, 2009, a Seventh Circuit panel, including the prominent and heavily cited judges Richard Posner and Frank Easterbrook, unanimously agreed with Maloney v. Cuomo, citing the case in their decision turning back a challenge to Chicago's gun laws and noting the Supreme Court precedents remain in force until altered by the Supreme Court itself.[145]

Fourth Amendment rights

In N.G. & S.G. ex rel. S.C. v. Connecticut (2004),[147] Sotomayor dissented from her colleagues' decision to uphold a series of strip searches of "troubled adolescent girls" in juvenile detention centers. While Sotomayor agreed that some of the strip searches at issue in the case were lawful, she would have held that due to "the severely intrusive nature of strip searches",[147] they should not be allowed "in the absence of individualized suspicion, of adolescents who have never been charged with a crime".[147] She argued that an "individualized suspicion" rule was more consistent with Second Circuit precedent than the majority's rule.[147]

In Leventhal v. Knapek (2001),[148] Sotomayor rejected a Fourth Amendment challenge by a U.S. Department of Transportation employee whose employer searched his office computer. She held that, "Even though [the employee] had some expectation of privacy in the contents of his office computer, the investigatory searches by the DOT did not violate his Fourth Amendment rights"[148] because here "there were reasonable grounds to believe" that the search would reveal evidence of "work-related misconduct".[148]

Alcohol in commerce

In 2004, Sotomayor was part of the judge panel that ruled in Swedenburg v. Kelly that New York's law prohibiting out-of-state wineries from shipping directly to consumers in New York was constitutional even though in-state wineries were allowed to. The case, which invoked the 21st Amendment, was appealed and attached to another case. The case reached the Supreme Court later on as Swedenburg v. Kelly and was overruled in a 5–4 decision that found the law was discriminatory and unconstitutional.[149]

Employment discrimination

Sotomayor was involved in the high-profile case Ricci v. DeStefano that initially upheld the right of the City of New Haven to throw out its test for firefighters and start over with a new test, because the city believed the test had a "disparate impact"[150] on minority firefighters. (No black firefighters qualified for promotion under the test, whereas some had qualified under tests used in previous years.) The city was concerned that minority firefighters might sue under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The city chose not to certify the test results and a lower court had previously upheld the city's right to do this. Several white firefighters and one Hispanic firefighter who had passed the test, including the lead plaintiff who has dyslexia and had put extra effort into studying, sued the City of New Haven, claiming that their rights were violated. A Second Circuit panel that included Sotomayor first issued a brief, unsigned summary order (not written by Sotomayor) affirming the lower court's ruling.[151] Sotomayor's former mentor José A. Cabranes, by now a fellow judge on the court, objected to this handling and requested that the court hear it en banc.[152] Sotomayor voted with a 7–6 majority not to rehear it and a slightly expanded ruling was issued, but a strong dissent by Cabranes led to the case reaching the Supreme Court in 2009.[152] There it was overruled in a 5–4 decision that found the white firefighters had been victims of racial discrimination when they were denied promotion.[153]

Business

In Clarett v. National Football League (2004),[154] Sotomayor upheld the National Football League's eligibility rules requiring players to wait three full seasons after high school graduation before entering the NFL draft. Maurice Clarett challenged these rules, which were part of the collective bargaining agreement between the NFL and its players, on antitrust grounds. Sotomayor held that Clarett's claim would upset the established "federal labor law favoring and governing the collective bargaining process".[155]

In Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Dabit (2005),[156] Sotomayor wrote a unanimous opinion that the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act of 1998 did not preempt class action claims in state courts by stockbrokers alleging misleading inducement to buy or sell stocks.[113] The Supreme Court handed down an 8–0 decision stating that the Act did preempt such claims, thereby overruling Sotomayor's decision.[113]

In Specht v. Netscape Communications Corp. (2001),[157] she ruled that the license agreement of Netscape's Smart Download software did not constitute a binding contract because the system did not give "sufficient notice" to the user.[158]

Civil rights

In Correctional Services Corp. v. Malesko (2000),[159] Sotomayor, writing for the court, supported the right of an individual to sue a private corporation working on behalf of the federal government for alleged violations of that individual's constitutional rights. Reversing a lower court decision, Sotomayor found that the Bivens doctrine—which allows suits against individuals working for the federal government for constitutional rights violations—could be applied to the case of a former prisoner seeking to sue the private company operating the federal halfway house facility in which he resided. The Supreme Court reversed Sotomayor's ruling in a 5–4 decision, saying that the Bivens doctrine could not be expanded to cover private entities working on behalf of the federal government. Justices Stevens, Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer dissented, siding with Sotomayor's original ruling.

In Gant v. Wallingford Board of Education (1999),[160] the parents of a black student alleged that he had been harassed due to his race and had been discriminated against when he was transferred from a first grade class to a kindergarten class without parental consent, while similarly situated white students were treated differently. Sotomayor agreed with the dismissal of the harassment claims due to lack of evidence, but would have allowed the discrimination claim to go forward. She wrote in dissent that the grade transfer was "contrary to the school's established policies" as well as its treatment of white students, which "supports the inference that race discrimination played a role".

Property rights

In Krimstock v. Kelly (2002),[161] Sotomayor wrote an opinion halting New York City's practice of seizing the motor vehicles of drivers accused of driving while intoxicated and some other crimes and holding those vehicles for "months or even years" during criminal proceedings. Noting the importance of cars to many individuals' livelihoods or daily activities, she held that it violated individuals' due process rights to hold the vehicles without permitting the owners to challenge the city's continued possession of their property.

In Brody v. Village of Port Chester (2003 and 2005),[162] a takings case, Sotomayor first ruled in 2003 for a unanimous panel that a property owner in Port Chester, New York was permitted to challenge the state's Eminent Domain Procedure Law. A district court subsequently rejected the plaintiff's claims and upon appeal the case found itself again with the Second Circuit. In 2005, Sotomayor ruled with a panel majority that the property owner's due process rights had been violated by lack of adequate notice to him of his right to challenge a village order that his land should be used for a redevelopment project. However, the panel supported the village's taking of the property for public use.[163]

In Didden v. Village of Port Chester (2006),[164] an unrelated case brought about by the same town's actions, Sotomayor joined a unanimous panel's summary order to uphold a trial court's dismissal—due to a statute of limitations lapse—of a property owner's objection to his land being condemned for a redevelopment project. The ruling further said that even without the lapse, the owner's petition would be denied due to application of the Supreme Court's recent Kelo v. City of New London ruling. The Second Circuit's reasoning drew criticism from libertarian commentators.[165][166]

Supreme Court justice

Nomination and confirmation

 
President Barack Obama meets with Judge Sonia Sotomayor and Vice President Joe Biden prior to an announcement in the East Room, May 26, 2009.

Following Barack Obama's 2008 presidential election victory, speculation arose that Sotomayor could be a leading candidate for a Supreme Court seat.[75][114][115][167] New York Senators Charles Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand wrote a joint letter to Obama urging him to appoint Sotomayor, or alternatively Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, to the Supreme Court if a vacancy should arise during his term.[168] The White House first contacted Sotomayor on April 27, 2009, about the possibility of her nomination.[169] On April 30, 2009, Justice David Souter's retirement plans leaked to the media, and Sotomayor received early attention as a possible nominee for Souter's seat to be vacated in June 2009.[170] In May 2009, however, Harvard Law Professor Laurence Tribe urged Obama not to appoint Sotomayor, writing that "she's not nearly as smart as she seems to think she is," and that "her reputation for being something of a bully could well make her liberal impulses backfire and simply add to the fire power of the Roberts/Alito/Scalia/Thomas wing of the court."[171][172][173]

On May 25, Obama informed Sotomayor of his choice; she later said, "I had my [hand] over my chest, trying to calm my beating heart, literally."[174] On May 26, 2009, Obama nominated her.[175] She became only the second jurist to be nominated to three different judicial positions by three different presidents.[176] The selection appeared to closely match Obama's presidential campaign promise that he would nominate judges who had "the heart, the empathy, to recognize what it's like to be a teenage mom. The empathy to understand what it's like to be poor, or African-American, or gay, or disabled, or old."[177]

Sotomayor's nomination won praise from Democrats and liberals, and Democrats appeared to have sufficient votes to confirm her.[178] The strongest criticism of her nomination came from conservatives and some Republican senators regarding a line she had used in similar forms in a number of her speeches, particularly in a 2001 Berkeley Law lecture:[130][178] "I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn't lived that life."[16] Sotomayor had made similar remarks in other speeches between 1994 and 2003, including one she submitted as part of her confirmation questionnaire for the Court of Appeals in 1998, but they had attracted little attention at the time.[179][180] The remark now became widely known.[181] The rhetoric quickly became inflamed, with radio commentator Rush Limbaugh and former Republican Speaker of the House of Representatives Newt Gingrich calling Sotomayor a "racist" (although the latter later backtracked from that claim),[182] while John Cornyn and other Republican senators denounced such attacks but said that Sotomayor's approach was troubling.[183][184] Backers of Sotomayor offered a variety of explanations in defense of the remark,[185] and White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs stated that Sotomayor's word choice in 2001 had been "poor".[183] Sotomayor subsequently clarified her remark through Senate Judiciary Committee chair Patrick Leahy, saying that while life experience shapes who one is, "ultimately and completely" a judge follows the law regardless of personal background.[186] Of her cases, the Second Circuit rulings in Ricci v. DeStefano received the most attention during the early nomination discussion,[187] motivated by the Republican desire to focus on the reverse racial discrimination aspect of the case.[181] In the midst of her confirmation process the Supreme Court overturned that ruling on June 29.[153] A third line of Republican attack against Sotomayor was based on her ruling in Maloney v. Cuomo and was motivated by gun ownership advocates concerned about her interpretation of Second Amendment rights.[181] Some of the fervor with which conservatives and Republicans viewed the Sotomayor nomination was due to their grievances over the history of federal judicial nomination battles going back to the 1987 Robert Bork Supreme Court nomination.[188]

A Gallup poll released a week after the nomination showed 54 percent of Americans in favor of Sotomayor's confirmation compared with 28 percent in opposition.[189] A June 12 Fox News poll showed 58 percent of the public disagreeing with her "wise Latina" remark but 67 percent saying the remark should not disqualify her from serving on the Supreme Court.[190] The American Bar Association gave her a unanimous "well qualified" assessment, its highest mark for professional qualification.[106] Following the Ricci overruling, Rasmussen Reports and CNN/Opinion Research polls showed that the public was now sharply divided, largely along partisan and ideological lines, as to whether Sotomayor should be confirmed.[191][192]

 
Sotomayor before the Senate Judiciary Committee for the first day of hearings on July 13, 2009

Sotomayor's confirmation hearings before the Senate Judiciary Committee began on July 13, 2009, during which she backed away from her "wise Latina" remark, declaring it "a rhetorical flourish that fell flat" and stating that "I do not believe that any ethnic, racial or gender group has an advantage in sound judgment."[193][194] When Republican senators confronted her regarding other remarks from her past speeches, she pointed to her judicial record and said she had never let her own life experiences or opinions influence her decisions.[195] Republican senators said that while her rulings to this point might be largely traditional, they feared her Supreme Court rulings—where there is more latitude with respect to precedent and interpretation—might be more reflective of her speeches.[196][197] Sotomayor defended her position in Ricci as following applicable precedent.[193] When asked whom she admired, she pointed to Justice Benjamin N. Cardozo.[198] In general, Sotomayor followed the hearings formula of recent past nominees by avoiding stating personal positions, declining to take positions on controversial issues likely to come before the Court, agreeing with senators from both parties, and repeatedly affirming that as a justice she would just apply the law.[199]

On July 28, 2009, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted 13–6 in favor of Sotomayor's nomination, sending it to the full Senate for a final confirmation vote. Every Democrat voted in her favor, as did one Republican, Lindsey Graham.[200][201] On August 6, 2009, Sotomayor was confirmed by the full Senate by a vote of 68–31. All Democrats present, along with the Senate's two Independents plus nine Republicans, voted for her.[202][203]

President Obama commissioned Sotomayor on the day of her confirmation,[204] and her swearing-in ceremony took place on August 8, 2009, at the Supreme Court Building. Chief Justice John Roberts administered the prescribed constitutional and judicial oaths of office, at which time she became the 111th justice (99th associate justice) of the Supreme Court.[205] Sotomayor is the first Hispanic to serve on the Supreme Court,[202][203][206][207][b] and is one of six women who have served on the Court, along with Sandra Day O'Connor (from 1981 to 2006), Ruth Bader Ginsburg (from 1993 to 2020), Elena Kagan (since 2010),[210] Amy Coney Barrett (since 2020),[211] and Ketanji Brown Jackson (since 2022).[212] Sotomayor's appointment gave the Court a record six Roman Catholic justices serving at the same time.[3][c]

Justiceship

 
The first four women Supreme Court Justices: Sandra Day O'Connor, Sotomayor, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Elena Kagan. O'Connor is not wearing a robe because she is retired from the Court.

Sotomayor cast her first vote as an associate Supreme Court justice on August 17, 2009, in a stay of execution case.[213] She was given a warm welcome onto the Court[214] and was formally invested in a September 8 ceremony.[215] Sotomayor's inaugural case in which she heard arguments was on September 9 during a special session, Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission. It involved the controversial aspect of the First Amendment and the rights of corporations in campaign finance;[216] Sotomayor dissented.[217][218] In her vigorous examination of Floyd Abrams, representing the First Amendment issues in the case, Sotomayor challenged him, questioning 19th century rulings of the Court and saying, "What you are suggesting is that the courts, who created corporations as persons, gave birth to corporations as persons, and there could be an argument made that that was the Court's error to start with ... [imbuing] a creature of State law with human characteristics."[216][219]

Sotomayor's first major written opinion was a dissent in the Berghuis v. Thompkins case dealing with Miranda rights.[217][220] As her first year neared completion, Sotomayor said she felt swamped by the intensity and heavy workload of the job.[220] During the oral arguments for National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius, Sotomayor showed her increasing familiarity with the Court and its protocols by directing the opening questions of the arguments to Donald Verrilli, the Solicitor General who was representing the government's position.[221]

In succeeding Justice Souter, Sotomayor did not change the Court's net philosophical and ideological balance.[217][218][220] While many cases are decided unanimously or with different voting coalitions, Sotomayor has continued to be a reliable member of the liberal bloc of the court when the justices divide along the commonly perceived ideological lines.[222] Specifically, her voting pattern and judicial philosophy has been in close agreement with that of Justices Breyer, Ginsburg and Kagan.[223] During her first couple of years there, Sotomayor voted with Ginsburg and Breyer 90 percent of the time, one of the highest agreement rates on the Court.[217][224] In a 2015 article titled "Ranking the Most Liberal Modern Supreme Court Justices", Alex Greer identified Sotomayor as representing a more liberal voting pattern than both Elena Kagan and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.[225] Greer placed Sotomayor as having the most liberal voting history of all the current sitting Justices, and slightly less liberal than her predecessors Thurgood Marshall and John Marshall Harlan II on the Court.[225]

Chief Justice Roberts, together with Justices Kennedy, Thomas, and Alito (and former Justice Scalia) had comprised the identifiable conservative wing of the Court.[226] Although five of the justices on the Supreme Court in 2009 self-identified as having Roman Catholic affiliation, Sotomayor's voting history identifies her singly among them with the liberal bloc of the Court. However, there is a wide divergence among Catholics in general in their approaches to the law.[3] Due to her upbringing and her past jobs and positions, Sotomayor has brought one of the more diverse sets of life experiences to the Court.[227]

There have been some deviations from the ideological pattern. In a 2013 book on the Roberts Court, author Marcia Coyle assessed Sotomayor's position on the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment as a strong guarantee of the right of a defendant to confront his or her accusers.[223] Sotomayor's judicial philosophy on the issue is seen as being in parity with Elena Kagan and, unexpectedly for Sotomayor, also in at least partial agreement with the originalist reading of Antonin Scalia when applied to the clause.

On January 20 and 21, 2013, Sotomayor administered the oath to Vice President Joe Biden for the inauguration of his second term. Sotomayor became the first Hispanic and fourth woman to administer the oath to a president or vice president.[228] On January 20, 2021, Sotomayor administered the oath of office to Kamala Harris for her inauguration as vice president, the first woman to ever hold the office.[229]

By the end of her fifth year on the Court, Sotomayor had become especially visible in oral arguments and in passionate dissents from various majority rulings, especially those involving issues of race, gender and ethnic identity.[230] Sotomayor has shown her individuality on the Court in a number of decisions. In her reading of the constitutionality of the Obama health care law favoring the poor and disabled, she sided with Ginsburg against fellow liberals Breyer and Kagan.[231] In dealing with the Chief Justice, Sotomayor had no difficulty in responding to his statement that "the way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race," by stating, "I don't borrow Chief Justice Roberts's description of what color-blindness is... Our society is too complex to use that kind of analysis."[232] In the manufacturer liability case of Williamson v. Mazda, which the Court decided unanimously, she wrote a separate concurring opinion.[233] Sotomayor's rapport with her clerks is seen as more formalistic than some of the other justices as she requires detailed and rigorous evaluations of cases she is considering with a table of contents attached.[234] When compared to Kagan directly, one of their colleagues stated, "Neither of them is a shrinking violet". Coyle, in her 2013 book on the Roberts Court, stated that: "Both women are more vocal during arguments than the justices whom they succeeded, and they have energized the moderate-liberal side of the bench."[235]

During her tenure on the Court, Sotomayor has also become recognizable as being among the Court's strongest voices in supporting the rights of the accused.[236] She has been identified by Laurence Tribe as the foremost voice on the Court calling for reforming criminal justice adjudication—in particular as it relates misconduct by police and prosecutors, abuses in prisons, concerns about how the death penalty is used, and the potential for loss of privacy—and Tribe has compared her will to reform in general to that of past Chief Justice Earl Warren.[237]

In January 2019, Bonnie Kristian of The Week wrote that an "unexpected civil libertarian alliance" was developing between Sotomayor and Neil Gorsuch "in defense of robust due process rights and skepticism of law enforcement overreach."[238]

Court staff working for Sotomayor have suggested public institutions such as colleges and libraries where she has held lectures, speeches and other events to buy her books to have available for purchase, which reportedly earned Sotomayor $3.7 million. Her court staff has also been promoting Sotomayor's commercial events aimed to sell her own memoir or children's books. Use of government staff is prohibited for such activities in other government branches.[239]

Notable rulings

 
Sotomayor in 2017

Miranda warnings

In 2011, Sotomayor wrote the majority opinion in J.D.B. v. North Carolina, in which the Supreme Court held that age is relevant when determining when a person is in police custody for Miranda purposes. J.D.B. was a 13-year-old student enrolled in special education classes whom police had suspected of committing two robberies. A police investigator visited J.D.B. at school, where he was interrogated by the investigator, a uniformed police officer, and school officials. J.D.B. subsequently confessed to his crimes and was convicted. J.D.B. was not given a Miranda warning during the interrogation, nor an opportunity to contact his legal guardian. In determining that a child's age properly informs the Miranda custody analysis, Sotomayor wrote that "to hold... that a child's age is never relevant to whether a suspect has been taken into custody— and thus to ignore the very real differences between children and adults—would be to deny children the full scope of the procedural safeguards that Miranda guarantees to adults".[240] Sotomayor's opinion cited the Court's earlier decisions in Stansbury v. California (holding that a child's age "would have affected how a reasonable person" would "perceive his or her freedom to leave") and Yarborough v. Alvarado (holding that a child's age "generates commonsense conclusions about behavior and perception"). Sotomayor also pointed out that the law recognizes that a child's judgment is not the same as an adult's, in the form of legal disqualifications on children as a class (e.g., limitations on a child's ability to marry without parental consent). Associate Justice Samuel Alito, jointed by three other justices, wrote a dissenting opinion.

Stolen Valor Act

In United States v. Alvarez (2012), the Court struck down the Stolen Valor Act (a federal law that criminalized false statements about having received a military medal) on First Amendment grounds. While a 6–3 majority of the Court agreed that the law was an unconstitutional violation of the Free Speech Clause, it could not agree on a single rationale. Sotomayor was among four justices, along with Justices Roberts, Ginsburg and Kennedy, who concluded that a statement's falsity is not enough, by itself, to exclude speech from First Amendment protection. Justices Breyer and Kagan concluded that while false statements were entitled to some protection, the act was invalid because it could have achieved its objectives in less restrictive ways. Justices Scalia, Thomas and Alito dissented.[241]

Affordable Care Act

In National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius (2012), Sotomayor was part of a 5–4 majority that upheld most of the provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (while being part of a dissent against the reliance upon the Constitution's Taxing and Spending Clause rather than Commerce Clause in arriving at the support). Legal writer Jeffrey Toobin wrote, "Sotomayor's concerns tended toward the earthbound and practical. Sometimes, during oral arguments, she would go on tangents involving detailed questions about the facts of cases that would leave her colleagues stupefied, sinking into their chairs. This time, though, she had a simple line of inquiry. States require individuals to buy automobile insurance (implicitly suggesting the unavoidable comparison to health insurance and the fairness of applying the same principle to health insurance as well)."[242] Sotomayor concluded with the incisive rhetorical flourish in the Court directed at the attorneys: "Do you think that if some states decided not to impose an insurance requirement that the federal government would be without power to legislate and require every individual to buy car insurance?" For Toobin, this distinction drawn by Sotomayor was the heart of the argument for the case in which she was part of the prevailing majority opinion.[242]

In 2014, Sotomayor dissented from a 6–3 ruling that granted Wheaton College of Illinois, a religiously affiliated university, an exemption from complying with the Affordable Care Act (ACA)'s mandate on contraception.[243] The ruling, which came the immediate wake of the Court's 5–4 decision in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby, in which the conservative bloc had prevailed, was opposed by the court's three female members: Sotomayor, Ginsburg and Kagan. Writing in dissent, Sotomayor wrote that the case was at odds with the majority's previous statements in Hobby Lobby and said, "Those who are bound by our decisions usually believe they can take us at our word ... Not today." Sotomayor stated further her opinion that the decision risked depriving "hundreds of Wheaton's employees and students of their legal entitlement to contraceptive coverage."[243]

Immigration

Sotomayor was part of a 5–3 majority in Arizona v. United States (2012), that struck down several aspects of the Arizona SB 1070 anti-illegal immigration law.[244][245]

Fourth Amendment, privacy rights, & qualified immunity

On the Court, Sotomayor has taken positions in favor of an expansive view of the Fourth Amendment protections relating to privacy rights and search and seizure.[246][247] In United States v. Jones (2012), all nine justices agreed that a warrant was likely to be required before police could place a GPS tracking device on a suspect's car. Most justices sided with a narrow opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito, but Sotomayor (in a lone concurrence) advocated a more expansive view of privacy rights in a digital age, calling for a re-assessment of the longstanding third-party doctrine: "It may be necessary to reconsider the premise that an individual has no reasonable expectation of privacy in information voluntarily disclosed to third parties."[248] The following year, federal judge Richard J. Leon cited this concurrence in his ruling that the National Security Agency's bulk collection of Americans' telephony records likely violated the Fourth Amendment.[248] Law professors Adam Winkler and Laurence Tribe were among those who said that Sotomayor's Jones concurrence had been influential in calling out the need for a new basis in understanding privacy requirements in a world, as she wrote, "in which people reveal a great deal of information about themselves to third parties in the course of carrying out mundane tasks."[248]

In Missouri v. McNeely (2013), Sotomayor wrote the majority opinion holding that a warrant is required before police take a nonconsensual blood test of a motorist suspected of drunk driving.[247] In Navarette v. California (2014), Sotomayor joined Justice Scalia's dissent from an opinion finding no Fourth Amendment violation from a traffic stop and drug seizure based solely on an anonymous tip submitted to 9-1-1.[247] Sotomayor was the lone dissenter in Mullenix v. Luna (2015), a case in which the Court held, per curiam, that an officer who fired six shots at a fleeing fugitive in a high-speed car chase was entitled to qualified immunity; Sotomayor argued that "By sanctioning a 'shoot first, think later' approach to policing, the Court renders the protections of the Fourth Amendment hollow."[247][249]

In Utah v. Strieff, a case involving the exclusionary rule, Sotomayor wrote a dissent from the Court's ruling that evidence obtained as a result of an illegal police stop could be admitted if the stopped person was later found to have an outstanding traffic warrant,[247][250] writing that it was a "remarkable proposition" that the existence of a warrant could justify a stop illegally based on police officers' "whim or hunch".[250] Echoing her earlier dissent in Heien v. North Carolina (2014), and citing the works of figures such as W. E. B. Du Bois, James Baldwin, and Ta-Nehisi Coates, Sotomayor wrote that Strieff and other Supreme Court Fourth Amendment jurisprudence sent the message "that you are not the citizen of a democracy but the subject of a carceral state, just waiting to be catalogued."[251][252]

Environmental law

Sotomayor was the sole dissenter in BP P.L.C. v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore (2021), a case that made it harder for cities and states to win lawsuits against polluters.

Abortion

In Whole Woman's Health v. Jackson (2021), a case regarding an abortion law in Texas that allows private citizens to sue abortion providers, Sotomayor wrote a sharp dissenting opinion, joined by justices Breyer and Kagan. By a 5–4 vote, the Supreme Court allowed the Texas law to stay in effect. Sotomayor concluded that "Today's fractured Court evinces no such courage. While the Court properly holds that this suit may proceed against the licensing officials, it errs gravely in foreclosing relief against state-court officials and the state attorney general. By so doing, the Court leaves all manner of constitutional rights more vulnerable than ever before, to the great detriment of our Constitution and our Republic."[253]

Other activities

 
Sotomayor with her nephews at the original Yankee Stadium in 2007

Sotomayor was an adjunct professor at New York University School of Law from 1998 to 2007.[254] There she taught trial and appellate advocacy as well as a federal appellate court seminar.[254] Beginning in 1999, she was also a lecturer in law at Columbia Law School in a paying, adjunct faculty position.[84][255] While there she created and co-taught a class called the Federal Appellate Externship each semester from 2000 until her departure; it combined classroom, moot court, and Second Circuit chambers work.[255] She became a member of the Board of Trustees of Princeton University in 2006, concluding her term in 2011.[47][256] In 2008, Sotomayor became a member of the Belizean Grove, an invitation-only women's group modeled after the men's Bohemian Grove.[257] On June 19, 2009, Sotomayor resigned from the Belizean Grove after Republican politicians voiced concerns over the group's membership policy.[258]

Sotomayor has maintained a public presence, mostly through making speeches, since joining the federal judiciary and throughout her time on the Supreme Court.[259][260] She gave over 180 speeches between 1993 and 2009, about half of which either focused on issues of ethnicity or gender or were delivered to minority or women's groups.[259] While on the Supreme Court she has been invited to give commencement addresses at a number of universities including New York University (2012),[261] Yale University (2013),[262] and the University of Puerto Rico (2014).[260][263] Her speeches have tended to give a more defined picture of her worldview than her rulings on the bench.[169] The themes of her speeches have often focused on ethnic identity and experience, the need for diversity, and America's struggle with the implications of its diverse makeup.[169] She has also presented her career achievements as an example of the success of affirmative action policies in university admissions, saying "I am the perfect affirmative action baby" in regard to her belief that her admission test scores were not comparable to those of her classmates.[31][32] During 2012 while already on the Supreme Court, Sotomayor made two appearances as herself on the children's television program Sesame Street, explaining what a vocational career is in general and then demonstrating how a judge hears a case.[264][265]

In July 2010, Sotomayor signed a contract with Alfred A. Knopf to publish a memoir about the early part of her life.[266] She received an advance of nearly $1.2 million for the work,[267] which was published in January 2013 and titled My Beloved World[58] (Mi mundo adorado in the simultaneously published Spanish edition). It focuses on her life up to 1992, with recollections of growing up in housing projects in New York and descriptions of the challenges she faced.[58] It received good reviews, with Michiko Kakutani of The New York Times describing it as "a compelling and powerfully written memoir about identity and coming of age. ... It's an eloquent and affecting testament to the triumph of brains and hard work over circumstance, of a childhood dream realized through extraordinary will and dedication."[268] She staged a book tour to promote the work,[269] and it debuted atop the New York Times Best Seller List.[270]

In 2020, Justice Sotomayor was reportedly targeted by the same gunman, an angry lawyer, who entered U.S. District Court Judge Esther Salas's home, shooting her husband and killing her son. The gunman had subsequently killed himself, after which his detailed planning notes regarding Sotomayor were found.[271]

In January 2021, Sonia Sotomayor swore in Kamala Harris as the Vice President of the United States. It was considered historic as Sotomayor is the first woman of color to serve on the Supreme Court and Harris is the first woman, African-American, and Asian-American Vice President.[272]

Awards and honors

 
Sotomayor at the 2017 John P. Frank Memorial Lecture at Arizona State University as the guest of honor

Sotomayor has received honorary law degrees from Lehman College (1999),[104] Princeton University (2001),[104] Brooklyn Law School (2001),[104] Pace University School of Law (2003),[273] Hofstra University (2006),[84] Northeastern University School of Law (2007),[274] Howard University (2010),[275] St. Lawrence University (2010),[276] Paris Nanterre University (2010),[277] New York University (2012),[261] Yale University (2013),[262] the University of Puerto Rico at Río Piedras (2014),[263] and an honorary doctorate of human letters from Manhattan College (2019).[278]

She was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society in 2002.[279] She was given the Outstanding Latino Professional Award in 2006 by the Latino/a Law Students Association.[280] In 2008, Esquire magazine included Sotomayor on its list of "The 75 Most Influential People of the 21st Century".[281] In 2013, Sotomayor won the Woodrow Wilson Award at her alma mater Princeton University.[282]

In June 2010, the Bronxdale Houses development, where Sotomayor grew up, was renamed after her. The Justice Sonia Sotomayor Houses and Justice Sonia Sotomayor Community Center comprise 28 buildings with some 3,500 residents. While many New York housing developments are named after well-known people, this was only the second to be named after a former resident.[283] In 2011, the Sonia M. Sotomayor Learning Academies, a public high school complex in Los Angeles, was named after her.[284]

In 2013, a painting featuring her, Sandra Day O'Connor, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Elena Kagan was unveiled at the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C.[285]

In May 2015 she received the Katharine Hepburn medal from Bryn Mawr College.[286]

In 2019, she was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame.[287]

Publications

Books

  • Sotomayor, Sonia (2022) Just Help! How to Build a Better World. New York: Penguin Random House. ISBN 9780593206263.
  • Sotomayor, Sonia (2019). Just Ask! Be Different, Be Brave, Be You. New York: Penguin Random House. ISBN 9780525514121.
  • Sotomayor, Sonia (2019). The Beloved World of Sonia Sotomayor. New York: Penguin Random House. ISBN 9781524771171.
  • Sotomayor, Sonia (2018). Turning Pages: My Life Story. New York: Philomel Books. ISBN 9780525514084.
  • Sotomayor, Sonia (2013). My Beloved World. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 9780307594884.

Articles

  • Sotomayor, Sonia (2017). "A Tribute to Justice Scalia" (PDF). Yale Law Journal. 126: 1609–1611.
  • Sotomayor, Sonia (1999). "La Independencia Judicial: Que Necesitamos Para Conservarla". Revista Colegio de Abogados de Puerto Rico. 60: 59.[288]
  • Sotomayor, Sonia; Gordon, Nicole A. (1996). (PDF). Suffolk University Law Review. 30: 35–51. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 19, 2009.[288]
  • Sotomayor, Sonia (1979). "Statehood and the Equal Footing Doctrine: The Case for Puerto Rican Seabed Rights" (PDF). Yale Law Journal. 88 (4): 825–849. doi:10.2307/795781. JSTOR 795781.[104]

Forewords

  • Sotomayor, Sonia (2007). "Foreword". In Terris, Daniel; Romano, Cesare P. R.; Swigart, Leigh (eds.). The International Judge: An Introduction to the Men and Women who Decide the World's Cases. Lebanon: University Press of New England. ISBN 9781584656661.

Speeches

  • Sotomayor, Sonia (2014). "A Conversation with Justice Sotomayor" (PDF). Yale Law Journal Forum. 123: 375–391.
  • Sotomayor, Sonia (2004). "A Latina Judge's Voice (Judge Mario G. Olmos Memorial Lecture)" (PDF). Berkeley la Raza Law Journal. 13: 87–93.[128]
  • Sotomayor, Sonia (2004). "Tribute to John Sexton" (PDF). NYU Annual Survey of American Law. 60: 23–26.[288]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Some sources claim that the distinction of being the first Hispanic on the Court belongs to Justice Benjamin Cardozo, a Sephardic Jew believed to be of distant Portuguese descent, who was appointed to the Court in 1932; however, his roots were uncertain, plus, the term "Hispanic" was not in use as an ethnic identifier at the time, and the Portuguese are generally excluded from its meaning.
  2. ^ Some sources claim that this distinction belongs to Justice Benjamin Cardozo, a Sephardic Jew believed to be of distant Portuguese descent, who was appointed to the Court in 1932; however, his roots were uncertain, plus, the term "Hispanic" was not in use as an ethnic identifier at the time, and the Portuguese are generally excluded from its meaning.[207][208][209]
  3. ^ The five Catholics serving at the time Sotomayor joined the Court were: John Roberts, Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Anthony Kennedy.

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sonia, sotomayor, sonia, maria, sotomayor, ɔːr, spanish, ˈsonja, sotomaˈʝoɾ, born, june, 1954, american, lawyer, jurist, serves, associate, justice, supreme, court, united, states, nominated, president, barack, obama, 2009, served, since, august, 2009, third, . Sonia Maria Sotomayor ˈ s oʊ n j e ˌ s oʊ t oʊ m aɪ ˈ j ɔːr Spanish ˈsonja sotomaˈʝoɾ 1 born June 25 1954 2 is an American lawyer and jurist who serves as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States She was nominated by President Barack Obama on May 26 2009 and has served since August 8 2009 She is the third woman first woman of color the first Hispanic and first Latina to serve on the Supreme Court 3 a Sonia SotomayorOfficial portrait 2009Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United StatesIncumbentAssumed office August 8 2009Nominated byBarack ObamaPreceded byDavid SouterJudge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second CircuitIn office October 7 1998 August 6 2009Nominated byBill ClintonPreceded byJ Daniel MahoneySucceeded byRaymond LohierJudge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New YorkIn office August 12 1992 October 7 1998Nominated byGeorge H W BushPreceded byJohn M Walker Jr Succeeded byVictor MarreroPersonal detailsBornSonia Maria Sotomayor 1954 06 25 June 25 1954 age 69 New York City New York U S SpouseKevin Noonan m 1976 div 1983 wbr EducationPrinceton University BA Yale University JD SignatureSonia Sotomayor s voice source source Sonia Sotomayor s opening statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee on her nomination to the Supreme CourtRecorded July 13 2009Sotomayor was born in the Bronx New York City 4 to Puerto Rican born parents Her father died when she was nine and she was subsequently raised by her mother Sotomayor graduated summa cum laude from Princeton University in 1976 and received her Juris Doctor from Yale Law School in 1979 where she was an editor at the Yale Law Journal 4 Sotomayor worked as an assistant district attorney in New York for four and a half years before entering private practice in 1984 She played an active role on the boards of directors for the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund the State of New York Mortgage Agency and the New York City Campaign Finance Board Sotomayor was nominated to the U S District Court for the Southern District of New York by President George H W Bush in 1991 confirmation followed in 1992 In 1997 she was nominated by President Bill Clinton to the U S Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit Her appointment to the court of appeals was slowed by the Republican majority in the United States Senate because of their concerns that the position might lead to a Supreme Court nomination but she was eventually confirmed in 1998 On the Second Circuit Sotomayor heard appeals in more than 3 000 cases and wrote about 380 opinions Sotomayor has taught at the New York University School of Law and Columbia Law School In May 2009 President Barack Obama nominated Sotomayor to the Supreme Court following the retirement of Justice David Souter Her nomination was confirmed by the Senate in August 2009 by a vote of 68 31 While on the Court Sotomayor has supported the informal liberal bloc of justices when they divide along the commonly perceived ideological lines During her Supreme Court tenure Sotomayor has been identified with concern for the rights of defendants and criminal justice reform and is known for her impassioned dissents on issues of race ethnic and gender identity including in Schuette v BAMN Utah v Strieff and Trump v Hawaii Contents 1 Early life 1 1 College and law school 2 Early legal career 3 Federal district judge 3 1 Nomination and confirmation 3 2 Judgeship 3 3 Notable rulings 4 Court of Appeals judge 4 1 Nomination and confirmation 4 2 Judgeship 4 3 Notable rulings 4 3 1 Abortion 4 3 2 First Amendment rights 4 3 3 Second Amendment rights 4 3 4 Fourth Amendment rights 4 3 5 Alcohol in commerce 4 3 6 Employment discrimination 4 3 7 Business 4 3 8 Civil rights 4 3 9 Property rights 5 Supreme Court justice 5 1 Nomination and confirmation 5 2 Justiceship 5 3 Notable rulings 5 3 1 Miranda warnings 5 3 2 Stolen Valor Act 5 3 3 Affordable Care Act 5 3 4 Immigration 5 3 5 Fourth Amendment privacy rights amp qualified immunity 5 3 6 Environmental law 5 3 7 Abortion 6 Other activities 7 Awards and honors 8 Publications 8 1 Books 8 2 Articles 8 3 Forewords 8 4 Speeches 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksEarly lifeSotomayor 5 was born in the New York City borough of the Bronx 6 Her father was Juan Sotomayor c 1921 1964 7 from the area of Santurce San Juan Puerto Rico 8 9 10 and her mother was Celina Baez 1927 2021 11 an orphan 12 from Santa Rosa in Lajas a rural area on Puerto Rico s southwest coast 10 The two left Puerto Rico separately met and married during World War II after Celina served in the Women s Army Corps 13 14 Juan Sotomayor had a third grade education did not speak English and worked as a tool and die worker 8 Celina Baez worked as a telephone operator and then a practical nurse 7 Sonia s younger brother Juan Sotomayor born c 1957 later became a physician and university professor in the Syracuse New York area 15 16 Sotomayor was raised a Catholic 3 and grew up in Puerto Rican communities in the South Bronx and East Bronx she self identifies as a Nuyorican 13 The family lived in a South Bronx tenement 17 before moving in 1957 to the well maintained racially and ethnically mixed working class Bronxdale Houses housing project 17 18 19 in Soundview which has over time been thought as part of both the East Bronx and South Bronx 20 21 22 In 2010 the Bronxdale Houses were renamed in her honor Her relative proximity to Yankee Stadium led to her becoming a lifelong fan of the New York Yankees 23 The extended family got together frequently 17 and regularly visited Puerto Rico during summers 24 nbsp Sotomayor and her parents nbsp Sotomayor as a young girlSonia grew up with an alcoholic father and a mother who was emotionally distant she felt closest to her grandmother who she later said gave her a source of protection and purpose 12 Sonia was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes at age seven 8 and began taking daily insulin injections 25 Her father died of heart problems at age 42 when she was nine years old 7 17 After this she became fluent in English 8 Sotomayor has said that she was first inspired by the strong willed Nancy Drew book character and then after her diabetes diagnosis led doctors to suggest a different career from detective she was inspired to go into a legal career and become a judge by watching the Perry Mason television series 8 23 25 She reflected in 1998 I was going to college and I was going to become an attorney and I knew that when I was ten Ten That s no jest 23 Celina Sotomayor put great stress on the value of education she bought the Encyclopaedia Britannica for her children something unusual in the housing projects 13 Despite the distance between the two which became greater after her father s death and which was not fully reconciled until decades later 12 Sotomayor has credited her mother with being her life inspiration 26 For grammar school Sotomayor attended Blessed Sacrament School in Soundview 27 where she was valedictorian and had a near perfect attendance record 22 28 Although underage Sotomayor worked at a local retail store and a hospital 29 Sotomayor passed the entrance tests for and then attended Cardinal Spellman High School in the Bronx 3 30 At Cardinal Spellman Sotomayor was on the forensics team and was elected to the student government 3 30 She graduated as valedictorian in 1972 13 Meanwhile the Bronxdale Houses had fallen victim to increasing heroin use crime and the emergence of the Black Spades gang 17 In 1970 the family found refuge by moving to Co op City in the Northeast Bronx 17 College and law school Sotomayor attended Princeton University She has said she was admitted in part due to her achievements in high school and in part because affirmative action made up for her standardized test scores which she described as not comparable to her colleagues at Princeton and Yale 31 32 She would later say that there are cultural biases built into such testing 31 and praise affirmative action for fulfilling its purpose to create the conditions whereby students from disadvantaged backgrounds could be brought to the starting line of a race many were unaware was even being run 33 Sotomayor described her time at Princeton as life changing 34 Initially she felt like a visitor landing in an alien country 35 coming from the Bronx and Puerto Rico 36 Princeton had few women students and fewer Latinos about 20 13 37 She was too intimidated to ask questions during her freshman year 35 her writing and vocabulary skills were weak and she lacked knowledge in the classics 38 She put in long hours in the library and over summers worked with a professor outside of class and gained skills knowledge and confidence 13 37 38 She became a moderate student activist 30 39 and co chair of the Accion Puertorriquena organization which served as a social and political hub and sought more opportunities for Puerto Rican students 13 40 41 She worked in the admissions office traveling to high schools and lobbying on behalf of her best prospects 42 As a student activist Sotomayor focused on faculty hiring and curriculum since Princeton did not have a single full time Latino professor nor any class on Latin American studies 43 44 A meeting with university president William G Bowen in her sophomore year saw no results 41 leading to Sotomayor s saying in a New York Times story at the time that Princeton is following a policy of benign neutrality and is not making substantive efforts to change 45 Accion Puertorriquena filed a formal letter of complaint in April 1974 with the Department of Health Education and Welfare saying the school discriminated in its hiring and admission practices 40 43 45 Sotomayor wrote opinion pieces for the Daily Princetonian with the same theme 13 The university began to hire Latino faculty 39 43 and Sotomayor established an ongoing dialogue with Bowen 42 Sotomayor also successfully persuaded historian Peter Winn to create a seminar on Puerto Rican history and politics 43 Sotomayor joined the governance board of Princeton s Third World Center and served on the university s student faculty Discipline Committee which issued rulings on student infractions 42 46 She also ran an after school program for local children 39 and volunteered as an interpreter for Latino patients at Trenton Psychiatric Hospital 13 36 47 nbsp Sotomayor s 1976 Princeton yearbook photoAcademically Sotomayor stumbled her first year at Princeton 36 but later received almost all A s in her final two years of college 46 Sotomayor wrote her senior thesis on Luis Munoz Marin the first democratically elected governor of Puerto Rico and on the territory s struggles for economic and political self determination 13 The 178 page work La Historia Ciclica de Puerto Rico The Impact of the Life of Luis Munoz Marin on the Political and Economic History of Puerto Rico 1930 1975 48 won honorable mention for the Latin American Studies Thesis Prize 49 As a senior Sotomayor won the Pyne Prize the top award for undergraduates which reflected both strong grades and extracurricular activities 13 30 46 In 1976 she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa 13 50 and graduated summa cum laude with an A B in history 51 She was influenced by critical race theory which would be reflected in her later speeches and writings 52 On August 14 1976 just after graduating from Princeton Sotomayor married Kevin Edward Noonan whom she had dated since high school 9 13 in a small chapel at St Patrick s Cathedral in New York 3 She used the married name Sonia Sotomayor de Noonan 53 54 55 He became a biologist and a patent lawyer 13 Sotomayor entered Yale Law School in the fall of 1976 23 While she believes she again benefited from affirmative action to compensate for relatively low standardized test scores 31 32 a former dean of admissions at Yale has said that given her record at Princeton it probably had little effect 42 At Yale she fit in well 18 54 although she found there were again few Latino students 41 She was known as a hard worker but she was not considered among the star students in her class 18 54 Yale General Counsel and professor Jose A Cabranes acted as an early mentor to her to successfully transition and work within the system 56 She became an editor of the Yale Law Journal 9 and was also managing editor of the student run Yale Studies in World Public Order publication later known as the Yale Journal of International Law 57 Sotomayor published a law review note on the effect of possible Puerto Rican statehood on the island s mineral and ocean rights 13 30 She was a semi finalist in the Barristers Union mock trial competition 57 She served as the co chair of a group for Latin Asian and Native American students and continued to advocate for the hiring of more Hispanic faculty 37 41 Following her second year she gained a job as a summer associate with the prominent New York law firm Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton amp Garrison 58 By her own later evaluation her performance there was lacking 59 She did not receive an offer for a full time position an experience that she later described as a kick in the teeth and one that would bother her for years 58 59 In her third year she filed a formal complaint against the established Washington D C law firm of Shaw Pittman Potts amp Trowbridge for suggesting during a recruiting dinner that she was at Yale only via affirmative action 30 41 Sotomayor refused to be interviewed by the firm further and filed her complaint with a faculty student tribunal which ruled in her favor 41 43 Her action triggered a campus wide debate 56 and news of the firm s subsequent December 1978 apology made The Washington Post 53 In 1979 Sotomayor was awarded a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School 9 She was admitted to the New York Bar the following year 55 60 Early legal careerOn the recommendation of Cabranes Sotomayor was hired out of law school as an assistant district attorney under New York County District Attorney Robert Morgenthau starting in 1979 9 56 She said at the time that she did so with conflicted emotions There was a tremendous amount of pressure from my community from the third world community at Yale They could not understand why I was taking this job I m not sure I ve ever resolved that problem 61 It was a time of crisis level crime rates and drug problems in New York Morgenthau s staff was overburdened with cases and like other rookie prosecutors Sotomayor was initially fearful of appearing before judges in court 62 Working in the trial division 63 she handled heavy caseloads as she prosecuted everything from shoplifting and prostitution to robberies assaults and murders 9 13 64 She also worked on cases involving police brutality 65 She was not afraid to venture into tough neighborhoods or endure squalid conditions in order to interview witnesses 64 66 In the courtroom she was effective at cross examination and at simplifying a case in ways to which a jury could relate 64 In 1983 she helped convict Richard Maddicks known as the Tarzan Murderer who acrobatically entered apartments robbed them and shot residents for no reason 62 67 She felt lower level crimes were largely products of socioeconomic environment and poverty but she had a different attitude about serious felonies No matter how liberal I am I m still outraged by crimes of violence Regardless of whether I can sympathize with the causes that lead these individuals to do these crimes the effects are outrageous 61 Hispanic on Hispanic crime was of particular concern to her The saddest crimes for me were the ones that my own people committed against each other 8 In general she showed a passion for bringing law and order to the streets of New York displaying special zeal in pursuing child pornography cases unusual for the time 30 She worked 15 hour days and gained a reputation for being driven and for her preparedness and fairness 23 62 68 One of her job evaluations labelled her a potential superstar 66 Morgenthau later described her as smart hard working and having a lot of common sense 69 and as a fearless and effective prosecutor 65 She stayed a typical length of time in the post 61 and had a common reaction to the job After a while you forget there are decent law abiding people in life 70 Sotomayor and Noonan divorced amicably in 1983 66 they did not have children 21 She has said that the pressures of her working life were a contributing factor but not the major factor in the breakup 68 71 From 1983 to 1986 Sotomayor had an informal solo practice dubbed Sotomayor amp Associates located in her Brooklyn apartment 72 She performed legal consulting work often for friends or family members 72 In 1984 she entered private practice joining the commercial litigation practice group of Pavia amp Harcourt in Manhattan as an associate 8 73 One of 30 attorneys in the law firm 73 she specialized in intellectual property litigation international law and arbitration 8 65 74 75 She later said I wanted to complete myself as an attorney 23 Although she had no civil litigation experience the firm recruited her heavily and she learned quickly on the job 73 She was eager to try cases and argue in court rather than be part of a larger law firm 73 Her clients were mostly international corporations doing business in the United States 30 much of her time was spent tracking down and suing counterfeiters of Fendi goods 13 73 In some cases Sotomayor went on site with the police to Harlem or Chinatown to have illegitimate merchandise seized in the latter instance pursuing a fleeing culprit while riding on a motorcycle 13 73 She said at the time that Pavia amp Harcourt s efforts were run much like a drug operation and the successful rounding up of thousands of counterfeit accessories in 1986 was celebrated by Fendi Crush a destruction by garbage truck event at Tavern on the Green 76 At other times she dealt with dry legal issues such as grain export contract disputes 73 In a 1986 appearance on Good Morning America that profiled women ten years after college graduation she said that the bulk of law work was drudgery and that while she was content with her life she had expected greater things of herself coming out of college 71 In 1988 she became a partner at the firm 38 57 she was paid well but not extravagantly 77 She left in 1992 when she became a judge 9 In addition to her law firm work Sotomayor found visible public service roles 78 She was not connected to the party bosses that typically picked people for such jobs in New York and indeed she was registered as an independent 78 Instead District Attorney Morgenthau an influential figure served as her patron 69 78 In 1987 Governor of New York Mario Cuomo appointed Sotomayor to the board of the State of New York Mortgage Agency which she served on until 1992 79 As part of one of the largest urban rebuilding efforts in American history 79 the agency helped low income people get home mortgages and to provide insurance coverage for housing and hospices for sufferers of AIDS 8 Despite being the youngest member of a board composed of strong personalities she involved herself in the details of the operation and was effective 69 78 She was vocal in supporting the right to affordable housing directing more funds to lower income home owners and in her skepticism about the effects of gentrification although in the end she voted in favor of most of the projects 78 79 Sotomayor was appointed by Mayor Ed Koch in 1988 as one of the founding members of the New York City Campaign Finance Board where she served for four years 8 80 There she took a vigorous role 78 in the board s implementation of a voluntary scheme wherein local candidates received public matching funds in exchange for limits on contributions and spending and agreeing to greater financial disclosure 81 Sotomayor showed no patience with candidates who failed to follow regulations and was more of a stickler for making campaigns follow those regulations than some of the other board members 69 78 She joined in rulings that fined audited or reprimanded the mayoral campaigns of Koch David Dinkins and Rudy Giuliani 78 Based upon another recommendation from Cabranes 69 Sotomayor was a member of the board of directors of the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund from 1980 to 1992 82 There she was a top policy maker 8 who worked actively with the organization s lawyers on issues such as New York City hiring practices police brutality the death penalty and voting rights 82 The group achieved its most visible triumph when it successfully blocked a city primary election on the grounds that New York City Council boundaries diminished the power of minority voters 82 During 1985 and 1986 Sotomayor served on the board of the Maternity Center Association a Manhattan based non profit group which focused on improving the quality of maternity care 83 84 85 Federal district judgeNomination and confirmation Sotomayor had wanted to become a judge since she was in elementary school and in 1991 she was recommended for a spot by Democratic New York senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan 8 Moynihan had an unusual bipartisan arrangement with his fellow New York senator Republican Al D Amato whereby he would get to choose roughly one out of every four New York district court seats even though a Republican was in the White House 34 86 87 88 Moynihan also wanted to fulfill a public promise he had made to get a Hispanic judge appointed for New York 21 When Moynihan s staff recommended her to him they said Have we got a judge for you 8 Moynihan identified with her socio economic and academic background and became convinced she would become the first Hispanic Supreme Court justice 13 78 D Amato became an enthusiastic backer of Sotomayor 89 who was seen as politically centrist at the time 8 21 Of the impending drop in salary from private practice Sotomayor said I ve never wanted to get adjusted to my income because I knew I wanted to go back to public service And in comparison to what my mother earns and how I was raised it s not modest at all 8 Sotomayor was thus nominated on November 27 1991 by President George H W Bush to a seat on the U S District Court for the Southern District of New York vacated by John M Walker Jr 6 Senate Judiciary Committee hearings led by a friendly Democratic majority went smoothly for her in June 1992 with her pro bono activities winning praise from Senator Ted Kennedy and her getting unanimous approval from the committee 8 89 90 Then a Republican senator blocked her nomination and that of three others for a while in retaliation for an unrelated block Democrats had put on another nominee 89 91 D Amato objected strongly 91 some weeks later the block was dropped and Sotomayor was confirmed by unanimous consent 63 89 of the full United States Senate on August 11 1992 and received her commission the next day 6 Sotomayor became the youngest judge in the Southern District 92 and the first Hispanic federal judge in New York State 93 She became the first Puerto Rican woman to serve as a judge in a U S federal court 94 She was one of seven women among the district s 58 judges 8 She moved from Carroll Gardens Brooklyn back to the Bronx in order to live within her district 8 Judgeship Sotomayor generally kept a low public profile as a district court judge 23 She showed a willingness to take anti government positions in a number of cases and during her first year in the seat she received high ratings from liberal public interest groups 21 Other sources and organizations regarded her as a centrist during this period 8 21 In criminal cases she gained a reputation for tough sentencing and was not viewed as a pro defense judge 95 A Syracuse University study found that in such cases Sotomayor generally handed out longer sentences than her colleagues especially when white collar crime was involved 96 Fellow district judge Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum was an influence on Sotomayor in adopting a narrow just the facts approach to judicial decision making 56 As a trial judge she garnered a reputation for being well prepared in advance of a case and moving cases along a tight schedule 21 Lawyers before her court viewed her as plain spoken intelligent demanding and sometimes somewhat unforgiving one said She does not have much patience for people trying to snow her You can t do it 21 Notable rulings On March 30 1995 in Silverman v Major League Baseball Player Relations Committee Inc 97 Sotomayor issued a preliminary injunction against Major League Baseball preventing it from unilaterally implementing a new collective bargaining agreement and using replacement players Her ruling ended the 1994 baseball strike after 232 days the day before the new season was scheduled to begin The Second Circuit upheld Sotomayor s decision and denied the owners request to stay the ruling 23 98 99 The decision raised her profile 13 won her the plaudits of baseball fans 23 and had a lasting effect on the game 100 In the preparatory phase of the case Sotomayor informed the lawyers of both sides that I hope none of you assumed that my lack of knowledge of any of the intimate details of your dispute meant I was not a baseball fan You can t grow up in the South Bronx without knowing about baseball 101 In Dow Jones v Department of Justice 1995 102 Sotomayor sided with the Wall Street Journal in its efforts to obtain and publish a photocopy of the last note left by former Deputy White House Counsel Vince Foster Sotomayor ruled that the public had a substantial interest 103 in viewing the note and enjoined the U S Justice Department from blocking its release In New York Times Co v Tasini 1997 freelance journalists sued the New York Times Company for copyright infringement for The New York Times inclusion in an electronic archival database LexisNexis of the work of freelancers it had published Sotomayor ruled that the publisher had the right to license the freelancers work This decision was reversed on appeal and the Supreme Court upheld the reversal two dissenters John Paul Stevens and Stephen Breyer took Sotomayor s position 104 In Castle Rock Entertainment Inc v Carol Publishing Group also in 1997 Sotomayor ruled that a book of trivia from the television program Seinfeld infringed on the copyright of the show s producer and did not constitute legal fair use The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit upheld Sotomayor s ruling Court of Appeals judgeNomination and confirmation nbsp Judge Sonia Sotomayor with her godson at the United States Court of Appeals signing ceremony in 1998On June 25 1997 Sotomayor was nominated by President Bill Clinton to a seat on the U S Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit which was vacated by J Daniel Mahoney 6 Her nomination was initially expected to have smooth sailing 23 105 with the American Bar Association Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary giving her a well qualified professional assessment 106 However as The New York Times described it became embroiled in the sometimes tortured judicial politics of the Senate 107 Some in the Republican majority believed Clinton was eager to name the first Hispanic Supreme Court justice and that an easy confirmation to the appeals court would put Sotomayor in a better position for a possible Supreme Court nomination despite there being no vacancy at the time nor any indication the Clinton administration was considering nominating her or any Hispanic Therefore the Republican majority decided to slow her confirmation 18 105 107 Radio commentator Rush Limbaugh weighed in that Sotomayor was an ultraliberal who was on a rocket ship to the highest court 105 During her September 1997 hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee Sotomayor parried strong questioning from some Republican members about mandatory sentencing gay rights and her level of respect for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas 90 After a long wait she was approved by the committee in March 1998 with only two dissensions 90 105 However in June 1998 the influential Wall Street Journal editorial page opined that the Clinton administration intended to get her on to the Second Circuit then elevate her to the Supreme Court as soon as an opening occurs the editorial criticized two of her district court rulings and urged further delay of her confirmation 108 The Republican block continued 23 105 Ranking Democratic committee member Patrick Leahy objected to Republican use of a secret hold to slow down the Sotomayor nomination and Leahy attributed that anonymous tactic to GOP reticence about publicly opposing a female Hispanic nominee 105 109 The prior month Leahy had triggered a procedural delay in the confirmation of fellow Second Circuit nominee Chester J Straub who although advanced by Clinton and supported by Senator Moynihan was considered much more acceptable by Republicans in an unsuccessful effort to force earlier consideration of the Sotomayor confirmation 110 During 1998 several Hispanic organizations organized a petition drive in New York State generating hundreds of signatures from New Yorkers to try to convince New York Republican senator Al D Amato to push the Senate leadership to bring Sotomayor s nomination to a vote 111 D Amato a backer of Sotomayor to begin with and additionally concerned about being up for re election that year 111 helped move Republican leadership 13 Her nomination had been pending for over a year when Majority Leader Trent Lott scheduled the vote 107 With complete Democratic support and support from 25 Republican senators including Judiciary chair Orrin Hatch 107 Sotomayor was confirmed on October 2 1998 by a 67 29 vote 112 She received her commission on October 7 6 The confirmation experience left Sotomayor somewhat angry she said shortly afterwards that during the hearings Republicans had assumed her political beliefs based on her being a Latina That series of questions I think were symbolic of a set of expectations that some people had that I must be liberal It is stereotyping and stereotyping is perhaps the most insidious of all problems in our society today 23 Judgeship Over her ten years on the Second Circuit Sotomayor heard appeals in more than 3 000 cases and wrote about 380 opinions when she was in the majority 13 The Supreme Court reviewed five of those reversing three and affirming two 13 not high numbers for an appellate judge of that many years 18 and a typical percentage of reversals 113 Sotomayor s circuit court rulings led to her being considered a political centrist by the ABA Journal 75 114 and other sources and organizations 75 92 114 115 116 117 Several lawyers legal experts and news organizations identified her as someone with liberal inclinations 118 119 120 The Second Circuit s caseload typically skewed more toward business and securities law rather than hot button social or constitutional issues 18 Sotomayor tended to write narrow practiced rulings that relied on close application of the law to the facts of a case rather than import general philosophical viewpoints 18 121 A Congressional Research Service analysis found that Sotomayor s rulings defied easy ideological categorization but did show an adherence to precedent and an avoidance of overstepping the circuit court s judicial role 122 Unusually Sotomayor read through all the supporting documents of cases under review her lengthy rulings explored every aspect of a case and tended to feature leaden ungainly prose 123 Some legal experts have said that Sotomayor s attention to detail and re examination of the facts of a case came close to overstepping the traditional role of appellate judges 124 Across some 150 cases involving business and civil law Sotomayor s rulings were generally unpredictable and not consistently pro business or anti business 125 Sotomayor s influence in the federal judiciary as measured by the number of citations of her rulings by other judges and in law review articles increased significantly during the length of her appellate judgeship and was greater than that of some other prominent federal appeals court judges 126 Two academic studies showed that the percentage of Sotomayor s decisions that overrode policy decisions by elected branches was the same as or lower than that of other circuit judges 127 Sotomayor was a member of the Second Circuit Task Force on Gender Racial and Ethnic Fairness in the Courts 104 In October 2001 she presented the annual Judge Mario G Olmos Memorial Lecture at UC Berkeley School of Law 16 titled A Latina Judge s Voice it was published in the Berkeley La Raza Law Journal the following spring 128 129 In the speech she discussed the characteristics of her Latina upbringing and culture and the history of minorities and women ascending to the federal bench 130 She said the low number of minority women on the federal bench at that time was shocking 41 She then discussed at length how her own experiences as a Latina might affect her decisions as a judge 130 In any case her background in activism did not necessarily influence her rulings in a study of 50 racial discrimination cases brought before her panel 45 were rejected with Sotomayor never filing a dissent 41 An expanded study showed that Sotomayor decided 97 cases involving a claim of discrimination and rejected those claims nearly 90 percent of the time 131 Another examination of Second Circuit split decisions on cases that dealt with race and discrimination showed no clear ideological pattern in Sotomayor s opinions 132 In the Court of Appeals seat Sotomayor gained a reputation for vigorous and blunt behavior toward lawyers appealing before her sometimes to the point of brusque and curt treatment or testy interruptions 13 133 She was known for extensive preparation for oral arguments and for running a hot bench where judges ask lawyers plenty of questions 133 134 Unprepared lawyers suffered the consequences but the vigorous questioning was an aid to lawyers seeking to tailor their arguments to the judge s concerns 134 The 2009 Almanac of the Federal Judiciary which collected anonymous evaluations of judges by lawyers who appear before them contained a wide range of reactions to Sotomayor 13 Comments also diverged among lawyers willing to be named Attorney Sheema Chaudhry said She s brilliant and she s qualified but I just feel that she can be very how do you say temperamental 133 Defense lawyer Gerald B Lefcourt said She used her questioning to make a point as opposed to really looking for an answer to a question she did not understand 133 In contrast Second Circuit Judge Richard C Wesley said that his interactions with Sotomayor had been totally antithetical to this perception that has gotten some traction that she is somehow confrontational 133 Second Circuit Judge and former teacher Guido Calabresi said his tracking showed that Sotomayor s questioning patterns were no different from those of other members of the court and added Some lawyers just don t like to be questioned by a woman The criticism was sexist plain and simple 133 Sotomayor s law clerks regarded her as a valuable and strong mentor and she said that she viewed them like family 51 In 2005 Senate Democrats suggested Sotomayor among others to President George W Bush as an acceptable nominee to fill the seat of retiring Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O Connor 135 Notable rulings Abortion In the 2002 decision Center for Reproductive Law and Policy v Bush 136 Sotomayor upheld the Bush administration s implementation of the Mexico City Policy which states that the United States will no longer contribute to separate nongovernmental organizations which perform or actively promote abortion as a method of family planning in other nations 137 Sotomayor held that the policy did not constitute a violation of equal protection as the government is free to favor the anti abortion position over the pro choice position and can do so with public funds 136 First Amendment rights In Pappas v Giuliani 2002 138 Sotomayor dissented from her colleagues ruling that the New York Police Department could terminate from his desk job an employee who sent racist materials through the mail Sotomayor argued that the First Amendment protected speech by the employee away from the office on his own time even if that speech was offensive hateful and insulting and that therefore the employee s First Amendment claim should have gone to trial rather than being dismissed on summary judgment 139 In 2005 Sotomayor wrote the opinion for United States v Quattrone 140 Frank Quattrone had been on trial on charges of obstructing investigations related to technology IPOs After the first trial ended in a deadlocked jury and a mistrial some members of the media had wanted to publish the names of the jurors deciding Quattrone s case and a district court had issued an order barring the publication even though their names had previously been disclosed in open court In United States v Quattrone Sotomayor wrote the opinion for the Second Circuit panel striking down this order on First Amendment grounds stating that the media should be free to publish the names of the jurors Sotomayor held that although it was important to protect the fairness of the retrial the district court s order was an unconstitutional prior restraint on free speech and violated the right of the press to report freely on events that transpire in an open courtroom 140 In 2008 Sotomayor was on a three judge panel in Doninger v Niehoff 141 that unanimously affirmed in an opinion written by Second Circuit Judge Debra Livingston the district court s judgment that Lewis S Mills High School did not violate the First Amendment rights of a student when it barred her from running for student government after she called the superintendent and other school officials douchebags in a blog post written while off campus that encouraged students to call an administrator and piss her off more 141 Judge Livingston held that the district judge did not abuse her discretion in holding that the student s speech foreseeably create d a risk of substantial disruption within the school environment 142 which is the precedent in the Second Circuit for when schools may regulate off campus speech 141 Although Sotomayor did not write this opinion she has been criticized by some who disagree with it 143 Second Amendment rights Sotomayor was part of the three judge Second Circuit panel that affirmed the district court s ruling in Maloney v Cuomo 2009 144 Maloney was arrested for possession of nunchucks which are illegal in New York Maloney argued that this law violated his Second Amendment right to bear arms The Second Circuit s per curiam opinion noted that the Supreme Court has not so far ever held that the Second Amendment is binding against state governments On the contrary in Presser v Illinois 1886 the Supreme Court held that the Second Amendment is a limitation only upon the power of Congress and the national government and not upon that of the state 144 With respect to the Presser v Illinois precedent the panel stated that only the Supreme Court has the prerogative of overruling its own decisions 145 and the recent Supreme Court case of District of Columbia v Heller which struck down the District s gun ban as unconstitutional did not invalidate this longstanding principle 144 The panel upheld the lower court s decision dismissing Maloney s challenge to New York s law against possession of nunchucks 146 On June 2 2009 a Seventh Circuit panel including the prominent and heavily cited judges Richard Posner and Frank Easterbrook unanimously agreed with Maloney v Cuomo citing the case in their decision turning back a challenge to Chicago s gun laws and noting the Supreme Court precedents remain in force until altered by the Supreme Court itself 145 Fourth Amendment rights In N G amp S G ex rel S C v Connecticut 2004 147 Sotomayor dissented from her colleagues decision to uphold a series of strip searches of troubled adolescent girls in juvenile detention centers While Sotomayor agreed that some of the strip searches at issue in the case were lawful she would have held that due to the severely intrusive nature of strip searches 147 they should not be allowed in the absence of individualized suspicion of adolescents who have never been charged with a crime 147 She argued that an individualized suspicion rule was more consistent with Second Circuit precedent than the majority s rule 147 In Leventhal v Knapek 2001 148 Sotomayor rejected a Fourth Amendment challenge by a U S Department of Transportation employee whose employer searched his office computer She held that Even though the employee had some expectation of privacy in the contents of his office computer the investigatory searches by the DOT did not violate his Fourth Amendment rights 148 because here there were reasonable grounds to believe that the search would reveal evidence of work related misconduct 148 Alcohol in commerce In 2004 Sotomayor was part of the judge panel that ruled in Swedenburg v Kelly that New York s law prohibiting out of state wineries from shipping directly to consumers in New York was constitutional even though in state wineries were allowed to The case which invoked the 21st Amendment was appealed and attached to another case The case reached the Supreme Court later on as Swedenburg v Kelly and was overruled in a 5 4 decision that found the law was discriminatory and unconstitutional 149 Employment discrimination Sotomayor was involved in the high profile case Ricci v DeStefano that initially upheld the right of the City of New Haven to throw out its test for firefighters and start over with a new test because the city believed the test had a disparate impact 150 on minority firefighters No black firefighters qualified for promotion under the test whereas some had qualified under tests used in previous years The city was concerned that minority firefighters might sue under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 The city chose not to certify the test results and a lower court had previously upheld the city s right to do this Several white firefighters and one Hispanic firefighter who had passed the test including the lead plaintiff who has dyslexia and had put extra effort into studying sued the City of New Haven claiming that their rights were violated A Second Circuit panel that included Sotomayor first issued a brief unsigned summary order not written by Sotomayor affirming the lower court s ruling 151 Sotomayor s former mentor Jose A Cabranes by now a fellow judge on the court objected to this handling and requested that the court hear it en banc 152 Sotomayor voted with a 7 6 majority not to rehear it and a slightly expanded ruling was issued but a strong dissent by Cabranes led to the case reaching the Supreme Court in 2009 152 There it was overruled in a 5 4 decision that found the white firefighters had been victims of racial discrimination when they were denied promotion 153 Business In Clarett v National Football League 2004 154 Sotomayor upheld the National Football League s eligibility rules requiring players to wait three full seasons after high school graduation before entering the NFL draft Maurice Clarett challenged these rules which were part of the collective bargaining agreement between the NFL and its players on antitrust grounds Sotomayor held that Clarett s claim would upset the established federal labor law favoring and governing the collective bargaining process 155 In Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner amp Smith Inc v Dabit 2005 156 Sotomayor wrote a unanimous opinion that the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act of 1998 did not preempt class action claims in state courts by stockbrokers alleging misleading inducement to buy or sell stocks 113 The Supreme Court handed down an 8 0 decision stating that the Act did preempt such claims thereby overruling Sotomayor s decision 113 In Specht v Netscape Communications Corp 2001 157 she ruled that the license agreement of Netscape s Smart Download software did not constitute a binding contract because the system did not give sufficient notice to the user 158 Civil rights In Correctional Services Corp v Malesko 2000 159 Sotomayor writing for the court supported the right of an individual to sue a private corporation working on behalf of the federal government for alleged violations of that individual s constitutional rights Reversing a lower court decision Sotomayor found that the Bivens doctrine which allows suits against individuals working for the federal government for constitutional rights violations could be applied to the case of a former prisoner seeking to sue the private company operating the federal halfway house facility in which he resided The Supreme Court reversed Sotomayor s ruling in a 5 4 decision saying that the Bivens doctrine could not be expanded to cover private entities working on behalf of the federal government Justices Stevens Souter Ginsburg and Breyer dissented siding with Sotomayor s original ruling In Gant v Wallingford Board of Education 1999 160 the parents of a black student alleged that he had been harassed due to his race and had been discriminated against when he was transferred from a first grade class to a kindergarten class without parental consent while similarly situated white students were treated differently Sotomayor agreed with the dismissal of the harassment claims due to lack of evidence but would have allowed the discrimination claim to go forward She wrote in dissent that the grade transfer was contrary to the school s established policies as well as its treatment of white students which supports the inference that race discrimination played a role Property rights In Krimstock v Kelly 2002 161 Sotomayor wrote an opinion halting New York City s practice of seizing the motor vehicles of drivers accused of driving while intoxicated and some other crimes and holding those vehicles for months or even years during criminal proceedings Noting the importance of cars to many individuals livelihoods or daily activities she held that it violated individuals due process rights to hold the vehicles without permitting the owners to challenge the city s continued possession of their property In Brody v Village of Port Chester 2003 and 2005 162 a takings case Sotomayor first ruled in 2003 for a unanimous panel that a property owner in Port Chester New York was permitted to challenge the state s Eminent Domain Procedure Law A district court subsequently rejected the plaintiff s claims and upon appeal the case found itself again with the Second Circuit In 2005 Sotomayor ruled with a panel majority that the property owner s due process rights had been violated by lack of adequate notice to him of his right to challenge a village order that his land should be used for a redevelopment project However the panel supported the village s taking of the property for public use 163 In Didden v Village of Port Chester 2006 164 an unrelated case brought about by the same town s actions Sotomayor joined a unanimous panel s summary order to uphold a trial court s dismissal due to a statute of limitations lapse of a property owner s objection to his land being condemned for a redevelopment project The ruling further said that even without the lapse the owner s petition would be denied due to application of the Supreme Court s recent Kelo v City of New London ruling The Second Circuit s reasoning drew criticism from libertarian commentators 165 166 Supreme Court justiceNomination and confirmation Main article Sonia Sotomayor Supreme Court nomination nbsp President Barack Obama meets with Judge Sonia Sotomayor and Vice President Joe Biden prior to an announcement in the East Room May 26 2009 Following Barack Obama s 2008 presidential election victory speculation arose that Sotomayor could be a leading candidate for a Supreme Court seat 75 114 115 167 New York Senators Charles Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand wrote a joint letter to Obama urging him to appoint Sotomayor or alternatively Interior Secretary Ken Salazar to the Supreme Court if a vacancy should arise during his term 168 The White House first contacted Sotomayor on April 27 2009 about the possibility of her nomination 169 On April 30 2009 Justice David Souter s retirement plans leaked to the media and Sotomayor received early attention as a possible nominee for Souter s seat to be vacated in June 2009 170 In May 2009 however Harvard Law Professor Laurence Tribe urged Obama not to appoint Sotomayor writing that she s not nearly as smart as she seems to think she is and that her reputation for being something of a bully could well make her liberal impulses backfire and simply add to the fire power of the Roberts Alito Scalia Thomas wing of the court 171 172 173 On May 25 Obama informed Sotomayor of his choice she later said I had my hand over my chest trying to calm my beating heart literally 174 On May 26 2009 Obama nominated her 175 She became only the second jurist to be nominated to three different judicial positions by three different presidents 176 The selection appeared to closely match Obama s presidential campaign promise that he would nominate judges who had the heart the empathy to recognize what it s like to be a teenage mom The empathy to understand what it s like to be poor or African American or gay or disabled or old 177 Sotomayor s nomination won praise from Democrats and liberals and Democrats appeared to have sufficient votes to confirm her 178 The strongest criticism of her nomination came from conservatives and some Republican senators regarding a line she had used in similar forms in a number of her speeches particularly in a 2001 Berkeley Law lecture 130 178 I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn t lived that life 16 Sotomayor had made similar remarks in other speeches between 1994 and 2003 including one she submitted as part of her confirmation questionnaire for the Court of Appeals in 1998 but they had attracted little attention at the time 179 180 The remark now became widely known 181 The rhetoric quickly became inflamed with radio commentator Rush Limbaugh and former Republican Speaker of the House of Representatives Newt Gingrich calling Sotomayor a racist although the latter later backtracked from that claim 182 while John Cornyn and other Republican senators denounced such attacks but said that Sotomayor s approach was troubling 183 184 Backers of Sotomayor offered a variety of explanations in defense of the remark 185 and White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs stated that Sotomayor s word choice in 2001 had been poor 183 Sotomayor subsequently clarified her remark through Senate Judiciary Committee chair Patrick Leahy saying that while life experience shapes who one is ultimately and completely a judge follows the law regardless of personal background 186 Of her cases the Second Circuit rulings in Ricci v DeStefano received the most attention during the early nomination discussion 187 motivated by the Republican desire to focus on the reverse racial discrimination aspect of the case 181 In the midst of her confirmation process the Supreme Court overturned that ruling on June 29 153 A third line of Republican attack against Sotomayor was based on her ruling in Maloney v Cuomo and was motivated by gun ownership advocates concerned about her interpretation of Second Amendment rights 181 Some of the fervor with which conservatives and Republicans viewed the Sotomayor nomination was due to their grievances over the history of federal judicial nomination battles going back to the 1987 Robert Bork Supreme Court nomination 188 A Gallup poll released a week after the nomination showed 54 percent of Americans in favor of Sotomayor s confirmation compared with 28 percent in opposition 189 A June 12 Fox News poll showed 58 percent of the public disagreeing with her wise Latina remark but 67 percent saying the remark should not disqualify her from serving on the Supreme Court 190 The American Bar Association gave her a unanimous well qualified assessment its highest mark for professional qualification 106 Following the Ricci overruling Rasmussen Reports and CNN Opinion Research polls showed that the public was now sharply divided largely along partisan and ideological lines as to whether Sotomayor should be confirmed 191 192 nbsp Sotomayor before the Senate Judiciary Committee for the first day of hearings on July 13 2009Sotomayor s confirmation hearings before the Senate Judiciary Committee began on July 13 2009 during which she backed away from her wise Latina remark declaring it a rhetorical flourish that fell flat and stating that I do not believe that any ethnic racial or gender group has an advantage in sound judgment 193 194 When Republican senators confronted her regarding other remarks from her past speeches she pointed to her judicial record and said she had never let her own life experiences or opinions influence her decisions 195 Republican senators said that while her rulings to this point might be largely traditional they feared her Supreme Court rulings where there is more latitude with respect to precedent and interpretation might be more reflective of her speeches 196 197 Sotomayor defended her position in Ricci as following applicable precedent 193 When asked whom she admired she pointed to Justice Benjamin N Cardozo 198 In general Sotomayor followed the hearings formula of recent past nominees by avoiding stating personal positions declining to take positions on controversial issues likely to come before the Court agreeing with senators from both parties and repeatedly affirming that as a justice she would just apply the law 199 On July 28 2009 the Senate Judiciary Committee voted 13 6 in favor of Sotomayor s nomination sending it to the full Senate for a final confirmation vote Every Democrat voted in her favor as did one Republican Lindsey Graham 200 201 On August 6 2009 Sotomayor was confirmed by the full Senate by a vote of 68 31 All Democrats present along with the Senate s two Independents plus nine Republicans voted for her 202 203 President Obama commissioned Sotomayor on the day of her confirmation 204 and her swearing in ceremony took place on August 8 2009 at the Supreme Court Building Chief Justice John Roberts administered the prescribed constitutional and judicial oaths of office at which time she became the 111th justice 99th associate justice of the Supreme Court 205 Sotomayor is the first Hispanic to serve on the Supreme Court 202 203 206 207 b and is one of six women who have served on the Court along with Sandra Day O Connor from 1981 to 2006 Ruth Bader Ginsburg from 1993 to 2020 Elena Kagan since 2010 210 Amy Coney Barrett since 2020 211 and Ketanji Brown Jackson since 2022 212 Sotomayor s appointment gave the Court a record six Roman Catholic justices serving at the same time 3 c Justiceship nbsp The first four women Supreme Court Justices Sandra Day O Connor Sotomayor Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Elena Kagan O Connor is not wearing a robe because she is retired from the Court Sotomayor cast her first vote as an associate Supreme Court justice on August 17 2009 in a stay of execution case 213 She was given a warm welcome onto the Court 214 and was formally invested in a September 8 ceremony 215 Sotomayor s inaugural case in which she heard arguments was on September 9 during a special session Citizens United v Federal Election Commission It involved the controversial aspect of the First Amendment and the rights of corporations in campaign finance 216 Sotomayor dissented 217 218 In her vigorous examination of Floyd Abrams representing the First Amendment issues in the case Sotomayor challenged him questioning 19th century rulings of the Court and saying What you are suggesting is that the courts who created corporations as persons gave birth to corporations as persons and there could be an argument made that that was the Court s error to start with imbuing a creature of State law with human characteristics 216 219 Sotomayor s first major written opinion was a dissent in the Berghuis v Thompkins case dealing with Miranda rights 217 220 As her first year neared completion Sotomayor said she felt swamped by the intensity and heavy workload of the job 220 During the oral arguments for National Federation of Independent Business v Sebelius Sotomayor showed her increasing familiarity with the Court and its protocols by directing the opening questions of the arguments to Donald Verrilli the Solicitor General who was representing the government s position 221 In succeeding Justice Souter Sotomayor did not change the Court s net philosophical and ideological balance 217 218 220 While many cases are decided unanimously or with different voting coalitions Sotomayor has continued to be a reliable member of the liberal bloc of the court when the justices divide along the commonly perceived ideological lines 222 Specifically her voting pattern and judicial philosophy has been in close agreement with that of Justices Breyer Ginsburg and Kagan 223 During her first couple of years there Sotomayor voted with Ginsburg and Breyer 90 percent of the time one of the highest agreement rates on the Court 217 224 In a 2015 article titled Ranking the Most Liberal Modern Supreme Court Justices Alex Greer identified Sotomayor as representing a more liberal voting pattern than both Elena Kagan and Ruth Bader Ginsburg 225 Greer placed Sotomayor as having the most liberal voting history of all the current sitting Justices and slightly less liberal than her predecessors Thurgood Marshall and John Marshall Harlan II on the Court 225 Chief Justice Roberts together with Justices Kennedy Thomas and Alito and former Justice Scalia had comprised the identifiable conservative wing of the Court 226 Although five of the justices on the Supreme Court in 2009 self identified as having Roman Catholic affiliation Sotomayor s voting history identifies her singly among them with the liberal bloc of the Court However there is a wide divergence among Catholics in general in their approaches to the law 3 Due to her upbringing and her past jobs and positions Sotomayor has brought one of the more diverse sets of life experiences to the Court 227 There have been some deviations from the ideological pattern In a 2013 book on the Roberts Court author Marcia Coyle assessed Sotomayor s position on the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment as a strong guarantee of the right of a defendant to confront his or her accusers 223 Sotomayor s judicial philosophy on the issue is seen as being in parity with Elena Kagan and unexpectedly for Sotomayor also in at least partial agreement with the originalist reading of Antonin Scalia when applied to the clause On January 20 and 21 2013 Sotomayor administered the oath to Vice President Joe Biden for the inauguration of his second term Sotomayor became the first Hispanic and fourth woman to administer the oath to a president or vice president 228 On January 20 2021 Sotomayor administered the oath of office to Kamala Harris for her inauguration as vice president the first woman to ever hold the office 229 By the end of her fifth year on the Court Sotomayor had become especially visible in oral arguments and in passionate dissents from various majority rulings especially those involving issues of race gender and ethnic identity 230 Sotomayor has shown her individuality on the Court in a number of decisions In her reading of the constitutionality of the Obama health care law favoring the poor and disabled she sided with Ginsburg against fellow liberals Breyer and Kagan 231 In dealing with the Chief Justice Sotomayor had no difficulty in responding to his statement that the way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race by stating I don t borrow Chief Justice Roberts s description of what color blindness is Our society is too complex to use that kind of analysis 232 In the manufacturer liability case of Williamson v Mazda which the Court decided unanimously she wrote a separate concurring opinion 233 Sotomayor s rapport with her clerks is seen as more formalistic than some of the other justices as she requires detailed and rigorous evaluations of cases she is considering with a table of contents attached 234 When compared to Kagan directly one of their colleagues stated Neither of them is a shrinking violet Coyle in her 2013 book on the Roberts Court stated that Both women are more vocal during arguments than the justices whom they succeeded and they have energized the moderate liberal side of the bench 235 During her tenure on the Court Sotomayor has also become recognizable as being among the Court s strongest voices in supporting the rights of the accused 236 She has been identified by Laurence Tribe as the foremost voice on the Court calling for reforming criminal justice adjudication in particular as it relates misconduct by police and prosecutors abuses in prisons concerns about how the death penalty is used and the potential for loss of privacy and Tribe has compared her will to reform in general to that of past Chief Justice Earl Warren 237 In January 2019 Bonnie Kristian of The Week wrote that an unexpected civil libertarian alliance was developing between Sotomayor and Neil Gorsuch in defense of robust due process rights and skepticism of law enforcement overreach 238 Court staff working for Sotomayor have suggested public institutions such as colleges and libraries where she has held lectures speeches and other events to buy her books to have available for purchase which reportedly earned Sotomayor 3 7 million Her court staff has also been promoting Sotomayor s commercial events aimed to sell her own memoir or children s books Use of government staff is prohibited for such activities in other government branches 239 Notable rulings nbsp Sotomayor in 2017Miranda warnings In 2011 Sotomayor wrote the majority opinion in J D B v North Carolina in which the Supreme Court held that age is relevant when determining when a person is in police custody for Miranda purposes J D B was a 13 year old student enrolled in special education classes whom police had suspected of committing two robberies A police investigator visited J D B at school where he was interrogated by the investigator a uniformed police officer and school officials J D B subsequently confessed to his crimes and was convicted J D B was not given a Miranda warning during the interrogation nor an opportunity to contact his legal guardian In determining that a child s age properly informs the Miranda custody analysis Sotomayor wrote that to hold that a child s age is never relevant to whether a suspect has been taken into custody and thus to ignore the very real differences between children and adults would be to deny children the full scope of the procedural safeguards that Miranda guarantees to adults 240 Sotomayor s opinion cited the Court s earlier decisions in Stansbury v California holding that a child s age would have affected how a reasonable person would perceive his or her freedom to leave and Yarborough v Alvarado holding that a child s age generates commonsense conclusions about behavior and perception Sotomayor also pointed out that the law recognizes that a child s judgment is not the same as an adult s in the form of legal disqualifications on children as a class e g limitations on a child s ability to marry without parental consent Associate Justice Samuel Alito jointed by three other justices wrote a dissenting opinion Stolen Valor Act In United States v Alvarez 2012 the Court struck down the Stolen Valor Act a federal law that criminalized false statements about having received a military medal on First Amendment grounds While a 6 3 majority of the Court agreed that the law was an unconstitutional violation of the Free Speech Clause it could not agree on a single rationale Sotomayor was among four justices along with Justices Roberts Ginsburg and Kennedy who concluded that a statement s falsity is not enough by itself to exclude speech from First Amendment protection Justices Breyer and Kagan concluded that while false statements were entitled to some protection the act was invalid because it could have achieved its objectives in less restrictive ways Justices Scalia Thomas and Alito dissented 241 Affordable Care Act In National Federation of Independent Business v Sebelius 2012 Sotomayor was part of a 5 4 majority that upheld most of the provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act while being part of a dissent against the reliance upon the Constitution s Taxing and Spending Clause rather than Commerce Clause in arriving at the support Legal writer Jeffrey Toobin wrote Sotomayor s concerns tended toward the earthbound and practical Sometimes during oral arguments she would go on tangents involving detailed questions about the facts of cases that would leave her colleagues stupefied sinking into their chairs This time though she had a simple line of inquiry States require individuals to buy automobile insurance implicitly suggesting the unavoidable comparison to health insurance and the fairness of applying the same principle to health insurance as well 242 Sotomayor concluded with the incisive rhetorical flourish in the Court directed at the attorneys Do you think that if some states decided not to impose an insurance requirement that the federal government would be without power to legislate and require every individual to buy car insurance For Toobin this distinction drawn by Sotomayor was the heart of the argument for the case in which she was part of the prevailing majority opinion 242 In 2014 Sotomayor dissented from a 6 3 ruling that granted Wheaton College of Illinois a religiously affiliated university an exemption from complying with the Affordable Care Act ACA s mandate on contraception 243 The ruling which came the immediate wake of the Court s 5 4 decision in Burwell v Hobby Lobby in which the conservative bloc had prevailed was opposed by the court s three female members Sotomayor Ginsburg and Kagan Writing in dissent Sotomayor wrote that the case was at odds with the majority s previous statements in Hobby Lobby and said Those who are bound by our decisions usually believe they can take us at our word Not today Sotomayor stated further her opinion that the decision risked depriving hundreds of Wheaton s employees and students of their legal entitlement to contraceptive coverage 243 Immigration Sotomayor was part of a 5 3 majority in Arizona v United States 2012 that struck down several aspects of the Arizona SB 1070 anti illegal immigration law 244 245 Fourth Amendment privacy rights amp qualified immunity On the Court Sotomayor has taken positions in favor of an expansive view of the Fourth Amendment protections relating to privacy rights and search and seizure 246 247 In United States v Jones 2012 all nine justices agreed that a warrant was likely to be required before police could place a GPS tracking device on a suspect s car Most justices sided with a narrow opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito but Sotomayor in a lone concurrence advocated a more expansive view of privacy rights in a digital age calling for a re assessment of the longstanding third party doctrine It may be necessary to reconsider the premise that an individual has no reasonable expectation of privacy in information voluntarily disclosed to third parties 248 The following year federal judge Richard J Leon cited this concurrence in his ruling that the National Security Agency s bulk collection of Americans telephony records likely violated the Fourth Amendment 248 Law professors Adam Winkler and Laurence Tribe were among those who said that Sotomayor s Jones concurrence had been influential in calling out the need for a new basis in understanding privacy requirements in a world as she wrote in which people reveal a great deal of information about themselves to third parties in the course of carrying out mundane tasks 248 In Missouri v McNeely 2013 Sotomayor wrote the majority opinion holding that a warrant is required before police take a nonconsensual blood test of a motorist suspected of drunk driving 247 In Navarette v California 2014 Sotomayor joined Justice Scalia s dissent from an opinion finding no Fourth Amendment violation from a traffic stop and drug seizure based solely on an anonymous tip submitted to 9 1 1 247 Sotomayor was the lone dissenter in Mullenix v Luna 2015 a case in which the Court held per curiam that an officer who fired six shots at a fleeing fugitive in a high speed car chase was entitled to qualified immunity Sotomayor argued that By sanctioning a shoot first think later approach to policing the Court renders the protections of the Fourth Amendment hollow 247 249 In Utah v Strieff a case involving the exclusionary rule Sotomayor wrote a dissent from the Court s ruling that evidence obtained as a result of an illegal police stop could be admitted if the stopped person was later found to have an outstanding traffic warrant 247 250 writing that it was a remarkable proposition that the existence of a warrant could justify a stop illegally based on police officers whim or hunch 250 Echoing her earlier dissent in Heien v North Carolina 2014 and citing the works of figures such as W E B Du Bois James Baldwin and Ta Nehisi Coates Sotomayor wrote that Strieff and other Supreme Court Fourth Amendment jurisprudence sent the message that you are not the citizen of a democracy but the subject of a carceral state just waiting to be catalogued 251 252 Environmental law Sotomayor was the sole dissenter in BP P L C v Mayor and City Council of Baltimore 2021 a case that made it harder for cities and states to win lawsuits against polluters Abortion In Whole Woman s Health v Jackson 2021 a case regarding an abortion law in Texas that allows private citizens to sue abortion providers Sotomayor wrote a sharp dissenting opinion joined by justices Breyer and Kagan By a 5 4 vote the Supreme Court allowed the Texas law to stay in effect Sotomayor concluded that Today s fractured Court evinces no such courage While the Court properly holds that this suit may proceed against the licensing officials it errs gravely in foreclosing relief against state court officials and the state attorney general By so doing the Court leaves all manner of constitutional rights more vulnerable than ever before to the great detriment of our Constitution and our Republic 253 Other activities nbsp Sotomayor with her nephews at the original Yankee Stadium in 2007Sotomayor was an adjunct professor at New York University School of Law from 1998 to 2007 254 There she taught trial and appellate advocacy as well as a federal appellate court seminar 254 Beginning in 1999 she was also a lecturer in law at Columbia Law School in a paying adjunct faculty position 84 255 While there she created and co taught a class called the Federal Appellate Externship each semester from 2000 until her departure it combined classroom moot court and Second Circuit chambers work 255 She became a member of the Board of Trustees of Princeton University in 2006 concluding her term in 2011 47 256 In 2008 Sotomayor became a member of the Belizean Grove an invitation only women s group modeled after the men s Bohemian Grove 257 On June 19 2009 Sotomayor resigned from the Belizean Grove after Republican politicians voiced concerns over the group s membership policy 258 Sotomayor has maintained a public presence mostly through making speeches since joining the federal judiciary and throughout her time on the Supreme Court 259 260 She gave over 180 speeches between 1993 and 2009 about half of which either focused on issues of ethnicity or gender or were delivered to minority or women s groups 259 While on the Supreme Court she has been invited to give commencement addresses at a number of universities including New York University 2012 261 Yale University 2013 262 and the University of Puerto Rico 2014 260 263 Her speeches have tended to give a more defined picture of her worldview than her rulings on the bench 169 The themes of her speeches have often focused on ethnic identity and experience the need for diversity and America s struggle with the implications of its diverse makeup 169 She has also presented her career achievements as an example of the success of affirmative action policies in university admissions saying I am the perfect affirmative action baby in regard to her belief that her admission test scores were not comparable to those of her classmates 31 32 During 2012 while already on the Supreme Court Sotomayor made two appearances as herself on the children s television program Sesame Street explaining what a vocational career is in general and then demonstrating how a judge hears a case 264 265 In July 2010 Sotomayor signed a contract with Alfred A Knopf to publish a memoir about the early part of her life 266 She received an advance of nearly 1 2 million for the work 267 which was published in January 2013 and titled My Beloved World 58 Mi mundo adorado in the simultaneously published Spanish edition It focuses on her life up to 1992 with recollections of growing up in housing projects in New York and descriptions of the challenges she faced 58 It received good reviews with Michiko Kakutani of The New York Times describing it as a compelling and powerfully written memoir about identity and coming of age It s an eloquent and affecting testament to the triumph of brains and hard work over circumstance of a childhood dream realized through extraordinary will and dedication 268 She staged a book tour to promote the work 269 and it debuted atop the New York Times Best Seller List 270 In 2020 Justice Sotomayor was reportedly targeted by the same gunman an angry lawyer who entered U S District Court Judge Esther Salas s home shooting her husband and killing her son The gunman had subsequently killed himself after which his detailed planning notes regarding Sotomayor were found 271 In January 2021 Sonia Sotomayor swore in Kamala Harris as the Vice President of the United States It was considered historic as Sotomayor is the first woman of color to serve on the Supreme Court and Harris is the first woman African American and Asian American Vice President 272 Awards and honors nbsp Sotomayor at the 2017 John P Frank Memorial Lecture at Arizona State University as the guest of honorSotomayor has received honorary law degrees from Lehman College 1999 104 Princeton University 2001 104 Brooklyn Law School 2001 104 Pace University School of Law 2003 273 Hofstra University 2006 84 Northeastern University School of Law 2007 274 Howard University 2010 275 St Lawrence University 2010 276 Paris Nanterre University 2010 277 New York University 2012 261 Yale University 2013 262 the University of Puerto Rico at Rio Piedras 2014 263 and an honorary doctorate of human letters from Manhattan College 2019 278 She was elected a member of the American Philosophical Society in 2002 279 She was given the Outstanding Latino Professional Award in 2006 by the Latino a Law Students Association 280 In 2008 Esquire magazine included Sotomayor on its list of The 75 Most Influential People of the 21st Century 281 In 2013 Sotomayor won the Woodrow Wilson Award at her alma mater Princeton University 282 In June 2010 the Bronxdale Houses development where Sotomayor grew up was renamed after her The Justice Sonia Sotomayor Houses and Justice Sonia Sotomayor Community Center comprise 28 buildings with some 3 500 residents While many New York housing developments are named after well known people this was only the second to be named after a former resident 283 In 2011 the Sonia M Sotomayor Learning Academies a public high school complex in Los Angeles was named after her 284 In 2013 a painting featuring her Sandra Day O Connor Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Elena Kagan was unveiled at the Smithsonian s National Portrait Gallery in Washington D C 285 In May 2015 she received the Katharine Hepburn medal from Bryn Mawr College 286 In 2019 she was inducted into the National Women s Hall of Fame 287 PublicationsBooks Sotomayor Sonia 2022 Just Help How to Build a Better World New York Penguin Random House ISBN 9780593206263 Sotomayor Sonia 2019 Just Ask Be Different Be Brave Be You New York Penguin Random House ISBN 9780525514121 Sotomayor Sonia 2019 The Beloved World of Sonia Sotomayor New York Penguin Random House ISBN 9781524771171 Sotomayor Sonia 2018 Turning Pages My Life Story New York Philomel Books ISBN 9780525514084 Sotomayor Sonia 2013 My Beloved World New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 9780307594884 Articles Sotomayor Sonia 2017 A Tribute to Justice Scalia PDF Yale Law Journal 126 1609 1611 Sotomayor Sonia 1999 La Independencia Judicial Que Necesitamos Para Conservarla Revista Colegio de Abogados de Puerto Rico 60 59 288 Sotomayor Sonia Gordon Nicole A 1996 Returning Majesty to the Law and Politics A Modern Approach PDF Suffolk University Law Review 30 35 51 Archived from the original PDF on June 19 2009 288 Sotomayor Sonia 1979 Statehood and the Equal Footing Doctrine The Case for Puerto Rican Seabed Rights PDF Yale Law Journal 88 4 825 849 doi 10 2307 795781 JSTOR 795781 104 Forewords Sotomayor Sonia 2007 Foreword In Terris Daniel Romano Cesare P R Swigart Leigh eds The International Judge An Introduction to the Men and Women who Decide the World s Cases Lebanon University Press of New England ISBN 9781584656661 Speeches Sotomayor Sonia 2014 A Conversation with Justice Sotomayor PDF Yale Law Journal Forum 123 375 391 Sotomayor Sonia 2004 A Latina Judge s Voice Judge Mario G Olmos Memorial Lecture PDF Berkeley la Raza Law Journal 13 87 93 128 Sotomayor Sonia 2004 Tribute to John Sexton PDF NYU Annual Survey of American Law 60 23 26 288 See also nbsp Hispanic and Latino Americans portal nbsp Puerto Rico portal nbsp Biography portalBarack Obama Supreme Court candidates Bill Clinton judicial appointment controversies Demographics of the Supreme Court of the United States George W Bush judicial appointment controversies History of women in Puerto Rico List of Hispanic and Latino American jurists List of justices of the Supreme Court of the United States List of law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States Seat 3 List of Puerto Ricans List of Roman Catholic United States Supreme Court justices List of United States Supreme Court justices by time in office Nuyorican Puerto Ricans in the United StatesNotes Some sources claim that the distinction of being the first Hispanic on the Court belongs to Justice Benjamin Cardozo a Sephardic Jew believed to be of distant Portuguese descent who was appointed to the Court in 1932 however his roots were uncertain plus the term Hispanic was not in use as an ethnic identifier at the time and the Portuguese are generally excluded from its meaning Some sources claim that this distinction belongs to Justice Benjamin Cardozo a Sephardic Jew believed to be of distant Portuguese descent who was appointed to the Court in 1932 however his roots were uncertain plus the term Hispanic was not in use as an ethnic identifier at the time and the Portuguese are generally excluded from its meaning 207 208 209 The five Catholics serving at the time Sotomayor joined the Court were John Roberts Antonin Scalia Clarence Thomas Samuel Alito and Anthony Kennedy References Bowers Andy May 26 2009 How To Pronounce Sotomayor Slate Archived from the original on March 14 2021 Sonia Sotomayor Oyez Legal Information Institute Cornell University Chicago Kent College of Law Archived from the original on October 14 2009 Retrieved June 23 2018 a b c d e f g Goodstein Laurie May 30 2009 Sotomayor Would Be Sixth Catholic Justice but the Pigeonholing Ends There The New York Times Archived from the original on November 12 2011 Retrieved May 31 2009 a b Current Members www supremecourt gov Archived from the original on July 22 2018 Retrieved October 25 2021 Sotomayor has used Maria as a middle name in the past but seems to have discontinued its use See Princeton yearbook image Archived March 3 2016 at the Wayback Machine In her 2009 questionnaire response to the Senate Judiciary Committee considering her nomination she listed Sonia Sotomayor as her current name and Sonia Maria Sotomayor Sonia Sotomayor de Noonan Sonia Maria Sotomayor Noonan and Sonia Noonan as former names See United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary Questionnaire for Judicial Nominees reprinted in proceedings of Senate Hearing no 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