Left: President Joe Biden gives remarks on student debt relief at Delaware State University on October 21, 2022, in Dover, Delaware. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images). Right: Sarah Merriam answers questions during her confirmation hearing on May 25, 2022 (CSPAN).
A judge sitting on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit has been bullying and berating law clerks, according to a complaint filed by a nonprofit that seeks to vindicate judicial employees” rights.
In a complaint filed earlier this month, the Legal Accountability Project (LAP) alleges U.S. Circuit Judge Sarah A.L. Merriam, a Joe Biden appointee, is something of a serial offender when it comes to mistreating law clerks who work in her chambers.
The complaint comes in response to allegations that previous efforts to address the judge’s behavior have yielded insufficient results.
The controversy dates back several years, to a 2023 decision issued by the 2nd Circuit. In October 2022, a complainant requested dispute resolution over allegations of “abusive and harassing conduct in the Judge’s treatment of chambers staff.”
Chief U.S. Circuit Judge Debra Ann Livingston, a George W Bush appointee, conducted the initial inquiry, which involved two court officials interviewing “current and former chambers staff, including the Complainant, to inquire about the workplace environment.”
“These interviews revealed that the workplace conduct concerns raised in the complaint were shared by other law clerks who, while recounting that they had learned a lot from the Judge, agreed that the Judge’s management style could be overly harsh,” Livingston wrote.
Insofar as the complaint concerned workplace conduct, the matter was “concluded based on voluntary corrective action,” the December 2023 ruling says. Notably, the complaint also included several ethics claims – all of which were summarily dismissed.
Now, the nonprofit “received troubling corroborated information from several former clerks alleging that Judge Merriam continues to mistreat clerks,” according to a press release.
The group says the allegations are unprecedented.
“To the best of LAP’s knowledge, LAP’s complaint is the first instance in which a federal judge has been publicly reprimanded by the court for mistreating law clerks, only to engender a second misconduct complaint for continuing to mistreat clerks in violation of the federal judiciary’s own workplace policies,” the press release reads.
The group says the mistreatment of law clerks is nothing new. The federal judiciary’s own 2023 workplace climate survey suggests as many as 106 federal judges – or one in 17 judges – mistreated their law clerks that year, although some of those complaints could have come from clerks working for the same judge.
Still, the group notes that while 106 allegations were raised by law clerks anonymously responding to the survey, only three formal complaints were filed with judicial misconduct authorities in 2023.
“LAP is filing this complaint because it can afford to take the risk that law clerks cannot. LAP has strength in numbers that a law clerk standing alone does not have,” Aliza Shatzman, president and founder of the Legal Accountability Project, said. “We’ve spent the past several years encouraging every mistreated clerk who reaches out to LAP to file a complaint. Yet clerks tell us routinely that they have not and will not file complaints, because they do not believe their concerns will be taken seriously nor robustly, impartially investigated.”
The group argues self-policing “clearly cannot” suffice to deal with law clerk mistreatment “given the situation in Judge Merriam’s chambers and in other chambers currently under investigation.”
While the precise contours of the complaint are not public as of this writing, LAP’s founder offered some details.
“She is a bully, in all the ways one might bully their employees: yelling, berating clerks, sending all-caps unhinged emails,” Shatzman said in comments provided to National Public Radio.
The group says bringing the Merriam complaint is part of their mission “to ensure positive judicial clerkship experiences, support mistreated clerks, and fight for safe judiciary work environments.”
To hear LAP tell it, the judiciary itself is largely unwilling to address the problem or consider giving law clerks workplace protections under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
“It would be a stain on the judiciary to shield Judge Merriam from accountability under these circumstances,” the complaint concludes.
