By Daniel Wiessner
ALBANY, N.Y., Feb 4 (Reuters) - Members of the New York
State Senate Judiciary Committee on Monday grilled Court of
Appeals nominee Jenny Rivera about her lack of judicial
experience and her ability to remain objective as a judge.
Rivera, 52, was nominated last month by Gov. Andrew Cuomo to
fill the vacancy left by Judge Carmen Beauchamp Ciparick, who
retired at the end of 2012. Rivera has served on the faculty of
CUNY for 15 years and has written extensively on social justice
issues during her academic tenure.
During a confirmation hearing at the state Capitol in
Albany, several Republican members of the Judiciary Committee
expressed concerns that Rivera did not understand the nuts and
bolts of everyday legal practice.
"The study and practice of law are night and day," Sen. John
Bonacic, an Orange County Republican and the chair of the
committee, said to Rivera. "Your work seems much more
theoretical than practical.
Throughout the hearing, Rivera repeatedly defended her
record, saying that during her career she had worked with people
from "all different backgrounds and perspectives."
"I'm confident this would guide me to the most legally sound
decisions, even in the most complex cases," she told the Senate
panel.
The committee, which is comprised of both Republicans and
Democrats, will vote on Rivera's confirmation on Tuesday. The
full Senate is expected to vote next week.
Rivera has served on the faculty of CUNY Law since 1997,
except for a 17-month stint as a deputy attorney general for
civil rights under Cuomo, who was then the attorney general.
At CUNY, Rivera teaches administrative law, civil procedure,
wills and trusts and lawyering.
Before becoming a professor, she worked as an administrative
law judge with the state Division of Human Rights and was a
member of the New York City Commission on Human Rights. From
1993 to 1994, she clerked for Supreme Court Justice Sonia
Sotomayor when she was a judge in the Southern District.
In the 1980s, Rivera did stints at the Legal Aid Society and
the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund.
ACADEMICS VS JUDGES
If confirmed, she would become the court's second Hispanic
judge, following Ciparick. She would join a small minority of
judges who had no experience on the bench before ascending to
the state's top court, including former Chief Judge Judith Kaye
and sitting Judge Robert Smith.
During Monday's hearing, Bonacic said that the committee had
reviewed Rivera's academic writings, which focused almost
exclusively on women's rights, discrimination and other social
issues. While he said her passion for social justice was noble,
he questioned her ability to remain objective if confirmed.
Rivera distinguished between the work of academics, whom she
said are expected to challenge current understanding of the law,
and the work of judges, saying she could remain neutral if
confirmed to the court.
"The role of a scholar is to think out of the box," she
said. "The role of a judge is to follow the law."
At one point, Sen. John DeFrancisco read from a 2007 paper
penned by Rivera entitled, "An Equal Protection Standard for
National Origin Subclassification," and said that some of her
writing was confusing.
DeFrancisco went on to suggest that Rivera may not be able
to rule objectively in an equal protection case, and asked her
whether she would like to see the Court of Appeals "move in a
more progressive manner."
Rivera replied that as a judge, she would "follow
jurisprudence" and repeated that the role of a judge was
distinct from that of an academic.
Judges must "recognize that when they put on the robes,
those litigants are real people standing in front you ... and
that it is not an abstraction," she said.
On Monday, New York State Bar Association President Seymour
James, state Trial Lawyers Association Michael Jaffe and CUNY
Law Dean Michelle Anderson, briefly testified on Rivera's
behalf.
During the hearing, several Democratic senators on the
committee praised her work in public service and academia.
Sen. Brad Hoylman, a Manhattan Democrat, said he was
impressed that Rivera, who graduated from Princeton University
and NYU Law School, decided to pursue a career in public service
and academia instead of joining a private firm. He singled out
her work with CUNY Law's Center on Latino and Latina Rights and
Equality, which she founded in 2008.
"You have not just been in the ivory tower, you've had some
real practical, public service experience," he said.
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