
Supreme judge John Roberts, who spoke at a moment when the threats against judges are on the rise, warned on Saturday that the heated words of the chosen officers can lead to threats or acts of violence by others.
Without identifying someone in particular, Roberts clearly referred to the Republican President Donald Trump and the democratic chairman of the Senate, Chuck Schumer from New York, when he said he had forced himself to spend public numbers in both parties in recent years.
“It is involved in the political dispute that a judge who does his job is part of the problem,” said Roberts at a meeting of lawyers and judges in Charlotte, North Carolina. “And the danger is of course that someone could take it up. And of course we had serious threats of violence and murder of judges just because they did their work. I think the political people on both sides of the gang have to take this into account.”
Roberts appeared on the day after the issue of the final decisions of his term on the 4th US Court of Appeals by the US Court of Court of Appeals Court, including a great victory for Trump, who limits the ability of the judges to use court commands with a nationwide range to block his agenda. C-Span had Roberts’ conversation with judge Albert Diaz, the highest judge of the 4th judge.
Roberts first worked with Trump’s comments in 2018 when Roberts reacted to Trump’s description A judge who rejected his migrant asylum policy as a “Obama judge”. In March, Roberts rejected Keep the indictment rights shortly after Trump, shortly after Trump required The distance of a person who ruled against his deportation plans.
In 2020, according to comments, Robert’s Schumer called that Roberts was described as inappropriate and threatening after the senator will pay the price of votes in a strenuous abortion in Louisiana, nominated by Trump nominated judge Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch. Schumer later said he shouldn’t have used these words.
Two years later, the police arrested when the court overturned the constitutional protection for abortion shortly before the overturn of Roe over the overturning of Roe against Wades, an armed man in front of Kavanaugh’s house in Vorstadt Washington. In April Nicholas John Roske okay to be guilty Try to kill Kavanaugh.