WBASNY Applauds Hon. Ketanji Brown Jackson on Her Monumental Achievement of Becoming the 116th Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court

WBASNY Applauds Hon. Ketanji Brown Jackson on Her Monumental Achievement of Becoming the 116th Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court

(New York, NY, Friday, April 8, 2022) – The Women’s Bar Association of the State of New York (“WBASNY”) celebrates the monumental achievement of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson on being confirmed to become the 116th Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court. This historically defining moment will have an immense impact on equality, society, and our Country.

Hon. Ketanji Brown Jackson will be the first female African American Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court when she replaces retiring Associate Justice Stephen G. Breyer.  She enters this appointment having had a distinguished and accomplished career.  Ketanji Brown Jackson has served on the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, and the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.  Prior to joining the bench, Judge Brown Jackson was a law clerk at all three levels of the federal Judiciary, including as Associate Justice Stephen G. Breyer’s law clerk.   Hon. Brown Jackson has also served as Vice Chair of the United States Sentencing Commission.  During her time on the United States Sentencing Commission, it retroactively amended the Sentencing Guidelines to reduce the sentence range for crack cocaine offenses and enacted a two offence-level reduction for drug crimes.   In addition, she served as an Assistant Federal Public Defender in the appeals division of the Office of the Federal Public Defender in the District of Columbia and also worked as a lawyer in private practice.

Upon hearing of the confirmation, President Dawn Reid-Green commented that “Hon. Ketanji Brown Jackson will bring not only a superior legal mind to the bench, but also much needed diversity to the United States Supreme Court.  She is, and will continue to be, a role model for all girls and young women, especially those of color.  Throughout the confirmation hearing proceedings, she conducted herself with grace and civility, and displayed a temperament and demeanor of a jurist qualified to sit on the bench in the highest court.  Martin Luther King, Jr.  spoke of the chains of discrimination.  With this appointment, another chain has been broken, and our country takes a giant step towards racial equality.”

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The Women’s Bar Association of the State of New York (WBASNY) is the professional membership organization of choice for more than 4,000 attorneys throughout New York State, and the largest statewide women’s bar association in the country.  For four decades, WBASNY has been a singularly important resource for women lawyers, with professional networking, continuing legal education programming, leadership training, and advocacy for the rights of women, children, and families.  Through involvement with WBASNY’s 20 regional chapters and its 40-plus substantive law committees, WBASNY’s members collaborate with one another on a variety of issues and perform public and community service, in furtherance of its mission to promote the advancement of the status of women in society and women in the legal profession; to promote the fair and equal administration of justice; and to act as a unified voice for its members with respect to issues of statewide, national and international significance to women generally and women attorneys in particular. WBASNY holds United Nations NGO status with the U.N.’s Department of Public Information, and Special Consultative status in association with the U.N. Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC). WBASNY is also a founding member of the National Conference of Women’s Bar Associations.