Register for E-mail alerts. Comment on articles. Sign up today, it's easy.
Close
The Washington Times Online Edition

Sotomayor battled bias in D.C.

Judge Sonia Sotomayor, President Obama’s first pick for the Supreme Court, got some real-world experience fighting discrimination before she ever heard a case as a judge.

As a law student at Yale, she turned down a high-profile job with the powerful Washington law firm Shaw, Pittman, Potts and Trowbridge to protest questions during the recruitment process about her Hispanic heritage, according to a report in The Washington Post from 1978. The daughter of Puerto Rican immigrants, Judge Sotomayor would be the first Hispanic to serve on the high court if confirmed.

A student-faculty tribunal found that during a recruitment dinner one of the Washington firm’s lawyers discriminated against her by asking whether she had been “culturally deprived” by her heritage.

Mr. Obama introduced Judge Sotomayor as a candidate with the “common touch” and “experience” he is seeking for the nation’s highest court but did not mention the 1978 incident. Ms. Sotomayor has served on the U.S Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit since 1998.

According to the contemporary news account of the tribunal’s findings, a Shaw, Pittman lawyer asked Judge Sotomayor: “‘Do law firms do a disservice by hiring minority students who the firms know do not have the necessary credentials and will then fire in three to four years? Would [you] have been admitted to the law school if [you] were not a Puerto Rican? [Were you] culturally deprived?”

One of the firm’s founding partners apologized to Judge Sotomayor at the time. The firm was bought three years ago and merged into Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP.

Comments
blog comments powered by Disqus
About the Author
Tom LoBianco

Tom LoBianco

Tom LoBianco has covered energy and environmental policy, including the climate change bill making its way through Congress. From 2007 to 2008, he covered Maryland politics from the Times’s Annapolis bureau. Tom hold’s a master’s degree in political science from Northeastern University and a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Maryland, College Park. He spent two and a ...

You Might Also Like
  • ** FILE ** In this May 8, 2012, file photo, President Barack Obama speaks in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

    Obama camp hits Romney over class size

  • **FILE** Jeffrey Neely, the central figure in a General Services Administration spending scandal, sits at the witness table as the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform investigates wasteful spending and excesses by GSA during a 2010 Las Vegas conference, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Monday, April 16, 2012. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

    Key figure in lavish Vegas junket leaves GSA

  • Former President Bill Clinton (AP photo)

    In campaign twist, Romney camp plays Clinton card against Obama

  • Celebrities In The News
  • ** FILE ** In this file photo from 2008, Keira Knightley is the title character, an 18th-century aristocrat ahead of her time, in "The Duchess."

    Keira Knightley: Engaged to Klaxons’ keyboardist

  • ** FILE ** In this March 15, 2000, file photo, master flatpicker Doc Watson, talks about his long and successful musical career at his home in Deep Gap, N.C. Watson was in critical condition Thursday, May 24, 2012, at a North Carolina hospital after falling at his home in Deep Gap earlier this week. (AP Photo/Karen Tam, File)

    Doc Watson: Folk musician in critical condition at N.C. hospital

  • ** FILE ** In this Nov. 9, 2011, file photo, singer Gregg Allman arrives at the 45th Annual CMA Awards in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini, file)

    Gregg Allman: Engaged to 24-year-old girlfriend

  • Happening Now