Recent Responses to COVID-19 by the Judicial Conference of the United States and Select Courts Within the Federal Judiciary (December 2020)




INSIGHTi

Recent Responses to COVID-19 by the
Judicial Conference of the United States and
Select Courts Within the Federal Judiciary
(December 2020)

December 23, 2020
This Insight provides information related to recent responses to Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
by the Judicial Conference of the United States, the United States Supreme Court, and other select courts
within the federal judiciary. The responses discussed below have occurred since September 1, 2020. A
previous Insight provides information about responses that occurred in June and July of 2020. Another
Insight
provides information about some of the initial responses to COVID-19 by the federal judiciary.
This Insight is not intended to provide a comprehensive overview of policies and practices adopted by
each federal court or judicial entity in response to COVID-19. The information provided in this Insight
may be superseded by new information from that which is described below.
Judicial Conference of the United States
The Judicial Conference of the United States is a 26-member policymaking body for the federal court
system. The Conference, comprised of the Chief Justice of the United States and other federal judges,
meets twice each year to “consider administrative and policy issues affecting the court system, and to
make recommendations to Congress concerning legislation involving the Judicial Branch.”
The Conference held its regularly scheduled biannual meeting by teleconference on September 15, 2020
because of travel limitations caused by the COVID-19 pandemic (the Conference also held its March
2020 session by teleconference). During its September meeting, the Conference received a report on
changes to court operations in response to COVID-19. The pandemic report “focused on actions taken
since the Judicial Conference’s last meeting in March 2020 when courts were beginning to leave
courthouses and establish remote work environments.”
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United States Supreme Court
The U.S. Supreme Court, which began its current term on October 5, 2020, announced on September 16,
2020, that it would hear all oral arguments scheduled for its October session by teleconference. The Court
stated that “in keeping with public health guidance in response to COVID-19, the Justices and counsel
will all participate remotely.” The Court also noted that its building remains closed to the public until
further notice.
The Court subsequently announced it would also hold its November and December sessions by
teleconference, as well as its upcoming January session. During the teleconference sessions used to hear
oral arguments, the Court provides a live audio feed to a media pool. The pool participants have “in turn
provide[d] a simultaneous feed for oral arguments to livestream on various media platforms for live
public access.”
The Court itself has continued, during the COVID-19 pandemic, to post on its website the
audio recordings
and transcripts of oral arguments held by teleconference (the Court also provided such
materials during past terms when holding in-person oral arguments).
U.S. Circuit Courts
In response to COVID-19, at least some federal appellate courts have also opted to continue conducting
oral arguments by video-conference or teleconference. For example, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Fourth Circuit
(comprised of Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia)
announced on September 21, 2020, that it was suspending in-person oral arguments during its October
argument session. The court stated that the three-judge panel sitting for each case would determine
whether a case would be scheduled for argument by video-conference or teleconference, considered by
submission on the briefs, or continued to a later argument session.
The Fourth Circuit subsequently announced that in-person oral arguments for its December and January
argument sessions
are also suspended (no such session was scheduled for November).
Examples of other federal appellate courts that have suspended in-person oral arguments in response to
the COVID-19 pandemic and opted for audio or video conferencing include the D.C. Circuit (which
issued a new standing order on September 4, 2020, related to oral arguments); the Ninth Circuit (which
also released the results of a survey on the “positives and negatives” of video and audio conferencing
during the pandemic); and the Seventh Circuit (which announced on November 10, 2020, that the court
would use video and audio conferencing for oral arguments scheduled through April 30, 2021).
U.S. District Courts
In response to the challenges that the COVID-19 pandemic presents to the conduct of jury trials, federal
district court judges have “reinvented” the jury trial “so that it is not only a fair forum for the
administration of justice, but also a safe experience for everyone in the courtroom, including defendants
and jurors.” Some of the changes that judges have implemented include “reconfiguring courtrooms and
jury deliberation spaces to allow at least six-feet of social distancing … the strategic placement of
plexiglass barriers, vetting prospective jurors for health vulnerabilities . . . reliance on technology to
present evidence, and the constant cleaning of furniture and surfaces.”
Additionally, by October, all but a few of the U.S. district courts had “returned to the use of grand
juries—the groups of citizens who meet behind closed doors to judge the strength of a prosecutor’s
evidence.” For example, the U.S. district court for New Mexico, with concerns over case backlog and the
potential risks associated with “keeping defendants in unsafe conditions while in custody,” resumed grand
jury proceedings on May 6, 2020. The court implemented several new policies, including using large jury
assembly rooms in an effort to provide for safe social distancing.


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More recently, however, in response to a national increase in COVID-19 cases, some U.S. district courts
have again suspended jury trials (as well as grand jury proceedings). Specifically, the “surge in new court
orders
in [November] mark[ed] a significant pause in efforts by federal courts to resume full operations.”
Examples of U.S. district courts that recently issued orders or notices that suspended jury trials and/or
grand jury proceedings include those in Connecticut; Maryland; Minnesota; New Jersey; New Mexico;
and the Southern District of New York.

Author Information

Barry J. McMillion

Analyst in American National Government




Disclaimer
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