- New details from court transcripts reveal details from Jackson’s sentencing
- At issue are eight out of 14 child sex crime cases that came before Jackson
- Republicans have seized on them claiming that she is lenient on sex offenders
- Jackson’s confirmation seems assured with support of at least one GOP senator
Newly revealed transcripts have shed light on controversial child pornography sentences handed down by Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson during her time as a US district judge.
At issue are eight child porn cases that Jackson oversaw as a DC district judge between 2013 and 2021, which Senate Republicans seized on in recent hearings to paint the nominee as soft on sex offenders.
The transcripts, described by the New York Post in a report on Saturday, show that Jackson disregarded prosecutors’ sentencing recommendations even in some cases involving sickening abuse images of ‘infants and toddlers’ and in one case apologized to the defendant for handing down prison time.
DEFENDANT | CASE NUMBER | SENTENCING GUIDELINE | PROSECUTOR RECOMMENDATION | PROBATION RECOMMENDATION | JACKSON’S SENTENCE |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wesley Hawkins | 13-cr-244 | 97-121 months | 24 months | 18 months | 3 months |
Andre Hammond | 14-cr-00184 | 94-120 months | 108 months | 120 months | 94 months |
Daniel Savage | 15-cr-95 | 37-46 months | 49 months | 36 months | 37 months |
Neil Stewart | 16-cr-67 | 97-121 months | 97 months | 42 months | 57 months |
Christopher Michael Downs | 18-cr-391 | 70-87 months | 70 months | 60 months | 60 months |
Jeremy Sears | 19-cr-21 | 97-121 months | 108 months | 120 months | 71 months |
Ryan Cooper | 19-cr-382 | 151-188 months | 72 months | 60 months | 60 months |
Adam Chazin | 21-cr-076 | 78-97 months | 78-97 months | 28 months | 28 months |
The most infamous of the eight cases in question involves the 2013 sentencing of Wesley Hawkins, who was 18 when he was busted posting videos to YouTube of boys as young as 11 being raped by adult men.
Jackson, citing his young age, sentenced Hawkins to just three months in prison, as opposed to the 24 months recommended by prosecutors.
‘I am not persuaded that two years in prison is necessary,’ she said at the time, according to the new transcripts, citing Hawkins’ ‘future potential’.
‘This is a truly difficult situation,’ she told Hawkins, according to the transcript. ‘I appreciate that your family is in the audience. I feel so sorry for them and for you and for the anguish that this has caused all of you.’
Explaining her lenient sentence for Hawkins, Jackson explained that the more than 600 images of child sexual abuse ‘don’t signal an especially heinous or egregious child pornography offense.’
At recent hearings, Jackson explained that she believes sentencing guidelines in child pornography cases are outdated, because they derive from a time before the internet, when offenders would have to receive each image of child sexual abuse through the mail.
Jackson said the structure of the sentencing guideline is ‘not doing the work of differentiating who is a more serious offender in the way that it used to.’
In another controversial case, Jackson in 2020 sentenced Christopher Michael Downs to 60 months in prison after he was busted distributing images and videos of infants being sexually abused, and boasting of molesting his 13-year-old cousin.
Prosecutors had asked for 70 months in prison, but the court’s probation office had recommended 60 months.
Transcripts show that Jackson herself admitted that the felon was at ‘risk of reoffending’.
However, she declined to enhance his prison time based on the amount of porn he distributed, arguing such enhancements were ‘outdated’ and ‘substantially flawed.’
Downs is scheduled for release in December after getting credit for time served prior to his trial.
In another case, Jackson in April 2021 sentenced child porn peddler Ryan Manning Cooper to 60 months in prison, less than the 72 months sought by prosecutors but in line with the 60-month recommendation of the probation office.
Though prosecutors described Cooper’s crimes as on the more egregious or extreme spectrum’ of child porn, Jackson disputed that they were ‘especially egregious.’
Among the 600 images that prosecutors say Cooper traded with other pedophiles were explicit images depicting bondage of infants and toddlers, and a pre-pubescent boy being raped by an adult male.
‘I’m really reluctant to get into the nature of the porn,’ Jackson said in court, the transcripts show. ‘I don’t find persuasive the government’s arguments concerning why they think that this is a particularly egregious child pornography offense, which means I struggled to find a good reason to impose a sentence that is more severe in this case.’
Jackson’s confirmation to the Supreme Court seems assured, with all 50 Senate Democrats backing her nomination, and Republican Susan Collins of Maine also saying she will vote to confirm.
Democrats need just 50 votes to secure the confirmation, with Vice President Kamala Harris as the tie-breaker in the evenly divided Senate.
The transcripts were not released to the Senate Judiciary Committee ahead of Jackson’s recent confirmation hearings, leading to furious Republican criticism that the White House ‘intentionally’ engaged in a ‘cover up’.
Republican Judiciary member Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina tweeted: ‘The Senate should be provided all relevant information before voting on this nomination.’
‘When we first highlighted her record on child porn cases, the White House leaked information to their friends in the media and Democrats on the Judiciary Committee,’ GOP Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri told Fox.
‘They hid it from the public despite knowing Judge Jackson gives lenient sentences to criminals. The White House is still refusing to be transparent about Judge Jackson’s record.’
Graham and Hawley are two Republican members who were most harsh on Jackson, specifically regarding her sentencing history of child porn offenders.
In visibly emotional testimony during the hearings, Jackson defended her sentencing record and furiously denied criticism that she was soft on child porn offenders.
‘As a mother and a judge who has had to deal with these cases, I was thinking that nothing could be further from the truth,’ Jackson replied.