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US judge defends lavish trips as ‘personal hospitality’

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US Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas de-fended himself on Friday over accusations that he accepted years of luxury travel trips from a Repub-lican billionaire, saying that it was “personal hospi-tality” that did not need to be registered.

Staunch conservative Thomas was a guest of mega-donor Harlan Crow for yachting in New Zea-land, private jet flights across the globe and regular stays at Crow’s properties in the United States, the ProPublica news outlet reported.

Thomas, 74, the longest-serving justice on the court, went on one trip to Indonesia that would alone have cost $500,000, it calculated.

In a statement, Thomas said that judicial col-leagues had previously “advised that this sort of personal hospitality from close personal friends, who did not have business before the Court, was not reportable.”

The guidelines were currently being changed “and, it is, of course, my intent to follow this guid-ance in the future,” he added.

ProPublica, citing interviews and photographs and other documents, detailed how Thomas had joined Crow for trips to an exclusive all-male wil-derness resort in California and at Crow’s private houses in Texas and New York state over 20 years.

Crow has made more than $10 million in dona-tions to Republican political groups, ProPublica said, including half a million dollars to a conservative lobbying group founded by Thomas’ wife Ginni Thomas.

The ProPublica revelations prompted outrage from some judges and Democrat politicians, while legal reform groups called for fundamental changes in how the Supreme Court is run.—AFP

 

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