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Grassley calls for Judge Jackson records amid GOP scrutiny over child porn sentencing; White House pushes back

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Sen. Chuck Grassley is calling for records related to Judge Kentanji Brown Jackson’s sentencing of child sex offenders ahead of her Supreme Court confirmation hearing …
Sen. Chuck Grassley is calling for records related to Judge Kentanji Brown Jackson’s sentencing of child sex offenders ahead of her Supreme Court confirmation hearing next week, amid Republican claims she was overly lenient to child pornographers — a charge that the White House is branding a «debunked» and «desperate» conspiracy theory. «Judge Jackson’s history of sentencing below guidelines, particularly in cases involving child exploitation, raises legitimate questions about her views on penalties for these crimes,» Grassley, ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said in a statement on Saturday. «This is exactly why I asked for her Sentencing Commission records – the same types of records the committee traditionally reviews when vetting a Supreme Court nominee,» he said. Grassley said the records from the Sentencing Commission were being withheld and said that a full review could not properly be conducted without them. «Unfortunately, somebody somewhere doesn’t want us to see that information. How can this be a thorough review if this information is withheld?» Grassley said. «And why aren’t Democrats interested in allowing the committee to have this information to conduct a thorough review?» Grassley’s call comes after Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., this week used a lengthy Twitter thread to accuse Jackson, who President Biden nominated to fill the seat of outgoing Justice Stephen Breyer, of «a pattern of letting child porn offenders off the hook for their appalling crimes, both as a judge and as a policymaker.» Hawley laid out evidence for what he said was a consistent theme of Jackson both calling for more lenient treatment of some sex offenders and deviating from federal sentencing guidelines in favor of child sex offenders. In particular he said that, when serving on the U.S. Sentencing Commission, Jackson «advocated for drastic change» in a report on mandatory minimums for those engaged in child pornography. It’s a series of claims that led to pushback from media fact checkers — which Hawley himself has issued a response to — and blistering criticism from the White House. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki on Friday called Hawley’s push «a last-ditch, eve-of-hearing desperation attack on her record on sentencing in sexual offense cases.

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