[House Hearing, 119 Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]






                                


 
       FISCAL ACCOUNTABILITY AND OVERSIGHT OF THE FEDERAL COURTS

=======================================================================

                                HEARING

                               BEFORE THE

                  SUBCOMMITTEE ON COURTS, INTELLECTUAL
                 PROPERTY, ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, AND
                              THE INTERNET

                                 OF THE

                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY

                     U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

                    ONE HUNDRED NINETEENTH CONGRESS

                             FIRST SESSION

                               __________

                         TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2025

                               __________

                           Serial No. 119-25

                               __________

         Printed for the use of the Committee on the Judiciary
         
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               Available via: http://judiciary.house.gov
               
              U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE                    
60-778                     WASHINGTON : 2025                
  
               
               
                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY

                        JIM JORDAN, Ohio, Chair

DARRELL ISSA, California             JAMIE RASKIN, Maryland, Ranking 
ANDY BIGGS, Arizona                      Member
TOM McCLINTOCK, California           JERROLD NADLER, New York
THOMAS P. TIFFANY, Wisconsin         ZOE LOFGREN, California
THOMAS MASSIE, Kentucky              STEVE COHEN, Tennessee
CHIP ROY, Texas                      HENRY C. ``HANK'' JOHNSON, Jr., 
SCOTT FITZGERALD, Wisconsin              Georgia
BEN CLINE, Virginia                  ERIC SWALWELL, California
LANCE GOODEN, Texas                  TED LIEU, California
JEFFERSON VAN DREW, New Jersey       PRAMILA JAYAPAL, Washington
TROY E. NEHLS, Texas                 J. LUIS CORREA, California
BARRY MOORE, Alabama                 MARY GAY SCANLON, Pennsylvania
KEVIN KILEY, California              JOE NEGUSE, Colorado
HARRIET M. HAGEMAN, Wyoming          LUCY McBATH, Georgia
LAUREL M. LEE, Florida               DEBORAH K. ROSS, North Carolina
WESLEY HUNT, Texas                   BECCA BALINT, Vermont
RUSSELL FRY, South Carolina          JESUS G. ``CHUY'' GARCIA, Illinois
GLENN GROTHMAN, Wisconsin            SYDNEY KAMLAGER-DOVE, California
BRAD KNOTT, North Carolina           JARED MOSKOWITZ, Florida
MARK HARRIS, North Carolina          DANIEL S. GOLDMAN, New York
ROBERT F. ONDER, Jr., Missouri       JASMINE CROCKETT, Texas
DEREK SCHMIDT, Kansas
BRANDON GILL, Texas
MICHAEL BAUMGARTNER, Washington
                                 ------                                

             SUBCOMMITTEE ON COURTS, INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY,
               ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, AND THE INTERNET

                    DARRELL ISSA, California, Chair

THOMAS MASSIE, Kentucky              HENRY C. ``HANK'' JOHNSON, Jr., 
SCOTT FITZGERALD, Wisconsin              Georgia, Ranking Member
BEN CLINE, Virginia                  ZOE LOFGREN, California
LANCE GOODEN, Texas                  TED LIEU, California
KEVIN KILEY, California              JOE NEGUSE, Colorado
LAUREL LEE, Florida                  DEBORAH ROSS, North Carolina
RUSSELL FRY, South Carolina          ERIC SWALWELL, California
MICHAEL BAUMGARTNER, Washington      SYDNEY KAMLAGER-DOVE, California

               CHRISTOPHER HIXON, Majority Staff Director
                  JULIE TAGEN, Minority Staff Director
                            C O N T E N T S

                              ----------                              

                         Tuesday, June 24, 2025

                           OPENING STATEMENTS

                                                                   Page
The Honorable Darrell Issa, Chair of the Subcommittee on Courts, 
  Intellectual Property, Artificial Intelligence, and the 
  Internet from the State of California..........................     1
The Honorable Henry C. ``Hank'' Johnson, Ranking Member of the 
  Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, Artificial 
  Intelligence, and the Internet from the State of Georgia.......     3
The Honorable Jamie Raskin, Ranking Member of the Committee on 
  the Judiciary from the State of Maryland.......................     4

                               WITNESSES

The Hon. Amy J. St. Eve, Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, 
  Seventh Circuit; Chair, Budget Committee, Judicial Conference 
  of the United States
  Oral Testimony.................................................     7
  Prepared Testimony.............................................     9
The Hon. Michael Y. Scudder, Jr., Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of 
  Appeals, Seventh Circuit; Chair, Information Technology 
  Committee, Judicial Conference of the United States
  Oral Testimony.................................................    23
  Prepared Testimony.............................................    25

          LETTERS, STATEMENTS, ETC. SUBMITTED FOR THE HEARING

All materials submitted for the record by the Subcommittee on 
  Courts, Intellectual Property, Artificial Intelligence, and the 
  Internet are listed below......................................    54

An article entitled, ``Johnson stresses Congress's power over 
  courts: `Desperate times call for desperate measures,' '' Mar. 
  25, 2025, The Hill, submitted by the Honorable Joe Neguse, a 
  Member of the Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, 
  Artificial Intelligence, and the Internet from the State of 
  Colorado, for the record
Materials submitted by the Honorable Darrell Issa, Chair of the 
  Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, Artificial 
  Intelligence, and the Internet from the State of California, 
  for the record
    An article entitled, ``Schumer Telling Brett Kavanaugh He'll 
        `Pay the Price' for Roe Resurfaces,'' Jun. 8, 2022, 
        Newsweek
    A quote from the House Republican Leadership News Conference 
        from Speaker Johnson, ``We're Not Defunding Courts,'' 
        Apr. 1, 2025,
        C-SPAN
Materials submitted by the Honorable Sydney Kamlager-Dove, a 
  Member of the Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, 
  Artificial Intelligence, and the Internet from the State of 
  California, for the record
    An article entitled, ``Public Defenders Do More For January 6 
        Suspects Than Trump Ever Will,'' Mar. 20, 2023, The 
        National Memo
    A Constitution Annotated entitled, ``Sixth Amendment--Sixth 
        Amendment Explained,'' Analysis and Interpretation of the 
        U.S. Constitution, Library of Congress
    A Court Syllabus entitled, ``Gideon v. Wainwright, 
        Corrections Director,'' Mar. 18, 1963, Supreme Court of 
        Florida
    An article entitled, ``Federal Defender Services: Serving the 
        System Or the Client?'' Winter 1995, Law and Contemporary 
        Problems

                                APPENDIX

A statement from Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in 
  Washington, Debra Perlin, Vice President for Policy, and 
  Christie Wentworth, Senior Policy Counsel, submitted by the 
  Honorable Henry C. ``Hank'' Johnson, Ranking Member of the 
  Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, Artificial 
  Intelligence, and the Internet from the State of Georgia, for 
  the record

                 QUESTIONS AND RESPONSES FOR THE RECORD

Questions for the Hon. Michael Y. Scudder, Jr., Circuit Judge, 
  U.S. Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit, Chair, Information 
  Technology Committee, Judicial Conference of the United States, 
  submitted by the Honorable Scott Fitzgerald, a Member of the 
  Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, Artificial 
  Intelligence, and the Internet from the State of Wisconsin, and 
  the Honorable Darrell Issa, Chair of the Subcommittee on 
  Courts, Intellectual Property, Artificial Intelligence, and the 
  Internet from the State of California, for the record
Questions for the Hon. Amy J. St. Eve, Circuit Judge, U.S. Court 
  of Appeals, Seventh Circuit, Chair, Budget Committee, Judicial 
  Conference of the United States, submitted by the Honorable 
  Scott Fitzgerald, a Member of the Subcommittee on Courts, 
  Intellectual Property, Artificial Intelligence, and the 
  Internet from the State of Wisconsin, and the Honorable Darrell 
  Issa, Chair of the Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual 
  Property, Artificial Intelligence, and the Internet from the 
  State of California, for the record
Responses to questions from the Hon. Michael Y. Scudder, Jr., 
  Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit, Chair, 
  Information Technology Committee, Judicial Conference of the 
  United States; and responses to questions from the Hon. Amy J. 
  St. Eve, Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit, 
  Chair, Budget Committee, Judicial Conference of the United 
  States, submitted by the Honorable Scott Fitzgerald, a Member 
  of the Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, 
  Artificial Intelligence, and the Internet from the State of 
  Wisconsin, and the Honorable Darrell Issa, Chair of the 
  Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, Artificial 
  Intelligence, and the Internet from the State of California, 
  for the record


       FISCAL ACCOUNTABILITY AND OVERSIGHT OF THE FEDERAL COURTS

                              ----------                              


                         Tuesday, June 24, 2025

                        House of Representatives

           Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and

               Artificial Intelligence, and the Internet

                       Committee on the Judiciary

                             Washington, DC

    The Committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10:07 a.m., in 
Room 2141, Rayburn House Office Building, the Hon. Darrell Issa 
[Chair of the Subcommittee] presiding.
    Members present: Representatives Issa, Massie, Fitzgerald, 
Cline, Fry, Johnson, Raskin, Lofgren, Neguse, Ross, Swalwell, 
Jordan, and Kamlager-Dove.
    Mr. Issa. The Subcommittee will come to order. Without 
objection, the Chair is authorized to declare a recess at any 
time. Welcome to today's hearing on oversight of the Federal 
Courts.
    I will now recognize for a longer opening statement than I 
thought.
    As we speak now, a Federal judge in Boston has decided that 
the U.S. Supreme Court staying his nationwide injunction, in 
fact, doesn't apply because he has issued a second injunction 
with the same plaintiffs, accomplishing, effectively, the same 
thing. His earlier order said that these individuals were not 
to be deported back to South Sudan. They have not been. In 
fact, under that base order, the Supreme Court has said they 
could be, and yet, they find themselves halfway in between, 
when, in fact, the U.S. Supreme Court has acted.
    There is no greater definition of an absence of good 
behavior than, in fact, for a seated Article III judge to defy 
the strict letter of the Supreme Court, the intent, but, 
rather, say, ``But I can issue a second order.''
    What I find particularly bad about that is it is not the 
first time we have seen judges do it. In other areas, we have 
seen judges circumvent the clear intent of random selection for 
cases, including patent. We have seen this happen again and 
again, and we have seen the Supreme Court act, only to find 
that they must act again.
    Today, I call on the U.S. Supreme Court to act within 
minutes to stay the second order, lest--and by the way, to 
prohibit--a third, fourth, and fifth order in advance. The 
Supreme Court cannot be effective if they have to effectively 
keep up with the speed of a judge signing things coming off a 
computer--probably written with ChatGPT. That is where we are 
today.
    My original statement did say that today we are conducting 
oversight of the Federal Courts, which is a routine part of our 
jurisdiction, and it is. The Federal Courts are a critical part 
of the Constitution system, and this Committee, on a bipartisan 
basis, has promoted the expansion of the court repeatedly under 
both Republican and Democrat Chairs. We continue to do so.
    This Subcommittee regularly attends Judicial Conference 
meetings and deals directly with the Conference. Additionally, 
we are given the privilege of access to members of the Supreme 
Court to both express our opinions and to learn from them.
    All of this is as our Founders intended. When we were 
founded, the Court was not in a separate building across the 
way, but, in fact, nestled between the House and the Senate in 
a way in which Members of both bodies, typically, might have 
lunch with them. It is unfortunate that we have grown so far 
apart, because, in fact, we serve no purpose except to create 
laws which must be enforced. The Executive Branch attempts to 
enforce them, but only the Court can determine the faithful 
execution by that other branch.
    So, as we speak of activist judges, we also speak of the 
need to expand the court to eliminate a backlog that now 
exceeds 600 cases on average per judge.
    I want to take a moment to thank both our witnesses here 
today and the dozens of Federal judges who could go off into 
retirement at full pay, but stay and continue to work in senior 
status. Those judges have provided us with great service. They 
not only have stepped aside from their lifetime appointment, so 
that another can be appointed, helping us deal with a shortage, 
but they have continued to work. That combination is the only 
reason that the court has managed to continue to function. It 
will not function for long with the increased tempo unless we 
do our job.
    So, I call on all my Members today to give real thought to 
quickly expanding the court, but at the same time, just as 
today, to continue to do our oversight, to continue to come as 
close as we can to the Founders' original intent--an intent 
that nestled the Members of the Supreme Court right next to the 
House and Senate, in a way in which the communication as to 
original intent, the communication, as to the Court sought, the 
communication to what judges that then would ride Circuit would 
even see--all of that, in fact, is our obligation.
    So, I have no doubt that there will be other subjects 
besides the Rogue Ruling Act, which we have sent to the Senate, 
today, but it is not the only thing we will discuss. I want 
every Member of both the Republican and Democratic side to 
consider this as an important hearing to vet all questions. We, 
fortunately, have a distinguished panel that should be able to 
answer most, but not all questions.
    In consultation with the Ranking Members of the Full 
Committee and the Subcommittee, I am using my discretion today 
to say we will not be swearing in the witnesses, as is the 
requirement of the Committee, because it is our tradition not 
to swear in constitutional offices that come before us, unless, 
in fact, they are witnesses in an otherwise more specific 
discovery.
    With that, it is my honor and privilege to yield to the 
Ranking Member of the Subcommittee, Mr. Johnson, for his 
opening statement.
    Mr. Johnson. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    I'm honored, Judge St. Eve and Judge Scudder, that you were 
able to travel to D.C. to testify before us today. I'm 
especially grateful because the Administrative Office of the 
Courts was already called on by the majority to present 
themselves for a hearing earlier this year. While it is an 
honor to have the Administrative Office before us, I wonder at 
the necessity of having you all here again so soon.
    The judges, lawyers, and former judges in this room have a 
very different perspective on the United States court system 
than most of our constituents back home. For most Americans, 
the few times they walk into a courtroom is one of the more 
anxiety-inducing, stressful times of their lives, and whether 
that stress is as minor as a traffic ticket, as heart-wrenching 
as a divorce case, or as potentially life-changing as a harmful 
product dispute, most of us don't end up in front of a judge 
unless something has gone wrong.
    At least we know we have protection for when we do have to 
go to court. Americans are guaranteed a speedy trial, a fair 
trial, and the right to counsel if you cannot afford one. 
Congress also allocates funds that the judiciary needs to make 
those constitutional guarantees come true.
    Even with those rights protected, when Americans stand in a 
courtroom on one of the worst days of their lives, some of us 
find ourselves standing in a building that is falling apart; no 
attorney available to represent us; and waiting for hours to 
have our day in court, because of judicial backlogs.
    Under the leadership of MAGA Republicans and the Trump 
Administration, it is harder than ever for the judiciary to 
serve the American people. Last Congress, we had a deal to 
allocate the Judicial Conference's request for more judges over 
a 10-year period, starting with the next unknown President. The 
Republicans broke their word to ensure that Federal judges 
would be allocated only if Trump won.
    Cyberattacks on sensitive judiciary systems are on the 
rise, but the Trump Administration is taking apart our 
cybersecurity infrastructure that keeps us safe.
    Even our buildings aren't safe from Donald Trump. Our 
courthouses are crumbling, but he is ending the leases for 
courthouses and buildings that are in use for the American 
people.
    One might think that programs are guaranteed under the 
Constitution would be an exception, but that doesn't appear to 
be the case, either. When Congress passed the CR in December, 
the Federal defender services budget was frozen at the level 
from the year before, leaving the program at a critical 
shortfall.
    The Sixth Amendment guarantees the right to an attorney in 
criminal proceedings, and under Federal statute, courts are 
required to appoint counsel from Federal public and community 
defender organizations or from a panel of private attorneys 
established by the court.
    Without counsel provided by the courts, thousands of 
Americans accused of Federal crimes would go unrepresented. 
Without funding, the Federal defenders won't be able to provide 
counsel. Without the Federal defenders, prosecutions can't go 
forward under the Constitution. You see, everything breaks down 
when the Federal defenders are not able to do their jobs, and 
that is the cliff the judiciary is headed toward without the 
requisite funding.
    Finally, personal attacks on individual judges have driven 
increasing threats to Federal judges over the past 10 years, 
and especially the last six months. I refuse to accept the idea 
that we have become a country where judges, judicial staff, and 
their families can be threatened, intimidated, or killed just 
for doing their jobs.
    Americans, no matter where we fall politically, no matter 
who we vote for, deserve to be able to walk into a courtroom 
and know that the person sitting on the bench will adjudicate 
the case fairly, with no design toward making one political 
party or another happy out of fear for their safety.
    That starts with funding judicial security. Let's not play 
around with judges' lives to make a political point. This 
Committee can be where we divorce Federal funding from the 
politics of the moment, where we can all agree to fund the 
judiciary, so that judges can continue deciding cases free from 
political pressure; where we can say that, no matter what our 
politics, the third branch is--I'm not going to use the term 
``co-equal''--I'm going to say it is equally important. The 
third branch is equally important to the other branches and 
should not be interfered with.
    I look forward to hearing from our witnesses as to what 
resources they need to continue their work.
    I yield back the remainder of my time.
    Mr. Issa. I thank the gentleman.
    The Chair of the Full Committee has been called away to a 
deposition. When he returns, he will, undoubtedly, read his 
opening statement.
    With that, I would like to recognize the Ranking Member of 
the Full Committee for his opening statement, the gentleman 
from Maryland.
    Mr. Raskin. Thank you kindly, Chair Issa. I appreciate 
that. I welcome Judge St. Eve and Judge Scudder.
    The hearing is on fiscal responsibility in the courts, 
which makes matters pretty simple for me. We should make sure 
we give the Federal Courts all the resources that you need to 
carry out your constitutional duties without having to fear for 
the safety of your judges or their families, court personnel 
and members of the public who are in Federal courthouses.
    We should, thus, set a legislative record today about the 
need for the Judicial Branch. We should not attempt to see if 
Congress can use our power of the purse to coerce judges into 
ruling this way or that way on a particular case. That is an 
attack on judicial independence, the power of the courts to say 
what the law is, as the Court put it in Marbury v. Madison in 
1803.
    Funding is essential to the independence of the courts. 
Hamilton began Federalist 79 by acknowledging this 
relationship. Quote:

        Next to permanency in office, nothing can contribute more to 
        the independence of the judges that a fixed provision for their 
        support.

He said,

        In the general course of human nature, a power over a man's 
        subsistence amounts to a power over his will.

Alas, power over the judicial will is exactly what President 
Trump has sought since he took office. Judges who decide in his 
favor are ``brilliant, faithful judges,'' and those who decide 
against him are ``communist, radical-Left judges,'' even if 
they were appointed by a fellow Republican President.
    In March, Trump called for the impeachment of a Federal 
judge who ruled against his administration on a fundamental 
constitutional question, a judge who had been nominated to the 
bench first by President George W. Bush. Quote:

        This judge, like many of the crooked judges I am forced to 
        appear before, should be impeached.

Trump posted on social media.
    Meanwhile, his allies in Congress have repeatedly fought to 
change the way that the courts work, just to benefit him 
personally and his administration, such as when they tried to 
make all State cases against him and his associates removable 
to Federal court and to prevent judges from being able to issue 
injunctions that apply beyond the specific parties to a case.
    Last month, this Committee passed a provision stripping the 
power of judicial contempt in certain cases that would allow 
Trump to ignore adverse Federal court decisions, even though 
eight in ten Americans think the President should have to obey 
the orders of the courts. That is, indeed, the whole premise of 
judicial review, as articulated in Marbury v. Madison in 1803.
    The MAGA siege on the Judicial Branch has not just been 
limited to antijudicial legislation. Every major resource that 
the courts need to act as an independent branch of government 
is less achievable because of Trump's program. Trump's ad 
hominem rhetoric against individual judges has helped fuel an 
increase in threats to judicial security. His lieutenants at 
DOGE have sharply limited the buildings available to the 
judiciary, even as our courthouses are falling apart.
    American cybersecurity, including our court IT systems, is 
weaker under Trump after he neutered the subagency within the 
Homeland Security Department responsible for keeping us secure 
from online attack.
    The Republican leadership took a bipartisan deal to get the 
judiciary more Federal judges, and then, twisted it to their 
own ends. I'm exempting here my friend Mr. Issa from that 
description. Some of our colleagues have suggested the only way 
the judiciary will get the funding it needs is if judges change 
how they rule on decisions important to Trump.
    Punchbowl News recently reported about the controversy over 
threats to judges. When asked about increased funding for 
judicial security, in light of the skyrocketing threats to 
Federal judges, my friend Chair Jordan told a reporter, ``I 
don't know that there's going to be a lot of people excited 
about giving them an increase.'' Another colleague reportedly 
suggested the judiciary, quote, ``should stop screwing 
everything up if they want more security funding.''
    Checks and balances only work under the Constitution when 
the three branches of our government respect each other's 
essential independence of action and decision. To withhold the 
means of guaranteeing the safety of a judge or their family is 
to compromise that independence. A judge who receives 
deliveries at her home reminds her that the people threatening 
her online know where she and her children live may be less 
able to think clearly and rule objectively on the merits of the 
case, if they fear that their family is in danger.
    That is not an academic point, but an urgently practical 
one. Threats to Federal judges skyrocketed over the last six 
months, as President Trump escalated his personal threats in a 
rhetoric against Federal judges and courts. According to the 
U.S. Marshals Service, 197 judges were threatened from early 
March to late May this year, more than double the number of 
judges that had been threatened in the prior five months.
    Judicial security should not be and has never been a 
partisan issue. When Justice Kavanaugh was targeted in 2022, 
Chair Jordan rightly said, ``We don't want any violence here, 
but let's not have a double standard.'' I agree with that. We 
must oppose all violence and all threats of violence against 
the Federal judiciary from whatever quarter they arise. We must 
give Judicial Branch institutions all the security funding they 
need wholly without regard to which judges are being protected 
and which cases they may be handling.
    Political control over judges is a hallmark of monarchical 
and authoritarian regimes. Indeed, King George's attacks on 
judicial independence were part of the bill of particulars set 
forth in complaint against him by Thomas Jefferson in the 
Declaration of Independence. Quote:

        He has made judges dependent on his will alone for the tenure 
        of their offices and the amount and the payment of their 
        salaries.

Jefferson wrote.
    It would be a dangerous breach of our constitutional values 
to withhold critical security funding for the judiciary in an 
effort to change the way judges decide their cases. I'm certain 
we cannot, and we will not do that today.
    I look forward to hearing from our witnesses, and I yield 
back to you, Mr. Chair, the remainder of my time.
    Mr. Issa. I thank the gentleman. Without objection, all 
other opening statements will be included in the record.
    It is now my pleasure to introduce our witnesses.
    First, the Hon. Michael Y. Scudder. Judge Scudder serves on 
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. He received 
his commission in May 2018. Judge Scudder also serves as the 
Chair of the Information Technology Committee for the Judicial 
Conferences of the United States. Prior to joining the Seventh 
Circuit, he worked in private practice and served in the White 
House, the Department of Justice, and as an Assistant U.S. 
Attorney in the Southern District of New York.
    Welcome.
    Second, we have the Hon. Amy St. Eve. Judge St. Eve serves 
on the U.S. Court of Appeals also for the Seventh Circuit. She 
received her commission in May 2018. Judge St. Eve also serves 
as Chair of the Budget Committee for the Judicial Conference of 
the United States. Prior to joining the Seventh Circuit, she 
served as the District Court Judge in the Northern District of 
Illinois, in private practice, and as an Assistant U.S. 
Attorney in the Northern District of Illinois.
    I welcome both of our witnesses.
    As I said earlier, I will dispense with the swearing in and 
ask each of you to give us your opening statements.
    I will go in the order I like to go. Judge St. Eve, if you 
would proceed.

               STATEMENT OF THE HON. AMY ST. EVE

    Judge St. Eve. Thank you. Good morning, Chair Issa, Ranking 
Member Johnson, Ranking Member Raskin, and the Members of the 
Subcommittee.
    My name is Amy St. Eve, and I am a judge on the Seventh 
Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago.
    On behalf of the Judicial Conference Committee on the 
Budget, which I Chair, I am pleased to appear before you to 
discuss the fiscal posture of the Federal Judiciary and our 
priorities and needs of our programs and staffing in Fiscal 
Year 2026. Thank you for the opportunity to do so.
    An effective and efficient judiciary is foundational to our 
system of government. Adequate and consistent funding is 
absolutely critical to conduct our constitutional and statutory 
responsibilities, and we are reliant on Congress to help ensure 
that those resources are in place.
    The Branch's Fiscal Year 2026 funding request must be 
looked at in the context of the recently enacted full-year 
Continuing Resolution for Fiscal Year 2025. In that CR, every 
component of the Branch was held to its Fiscal Year 2024 
enacted funding level, regardless of changing requirements, and 
for most of our accounts, this is the second straight year of a 
freeze.
    Among the impacts of the full-year CR are the deferral of 
dozens of judicial security projects at a time when threats 
against judges and the judicial process are increasing; the 
suspension of almost three months of payments to private 
attorneys who have provided constitutionally required 
representation to indigent defendants; and the continuation of 
a hiring freeze in the Federal defender organization, and a 
year-over-year reduction in the allotments made to courts and 
probation and pretrial services offices to serve and protect 
your constituents.
    While the judiciary's Fiscal Year 2026 request of $9.4 
billion may seem large, these resources are needed to rebuild 
critical functions that were not sufficiently funded in either 
Fiscal Year 2024 or 2025, and to address new and potentially 
significant workload being generated for the courts by the law 
enforcement initiatives of the Executive Branch.
    Our request includes $6.9 billion for the courts and 
probation and pretrial services offices. More than 85 percent 
of this requested increase in this area reflects just standard 
adjustments to maintain current services, while the remainder 
funding is critical for new investments in staffing, space, and 
IT.
    The defenders' services request totals $1.8 billion. Well 
over half of the requested increase is needed just to mitigate 
the effects of the suspension of payments to private attorneys 
that was necessitated by the Fiscal Year 2025 CR. The remainder 
will support current service levels and allow a resumption of 
hiring in the Federal defenders' offices.
    We are also requesting almost $900 million for our court 
security program to address a complex and evolving threat 
environment. The request fully funds contractual obligations to 
our court security officers and helps recapitalize systems and 
equipment, which bud-get was slashed due to two straight years 
of funding freezes in this account. The request also continues 
the expansion of our vulnerability management program, which 
implemented the Daniel Anderl Act and was created after the 
murder of the son of Judge Esther Salas.
    Finally, our request includes the $19 million that we 
project will be needed to fully fund the juror's requirements 
for the year.
    As we ask Congress to make this substantial investment in 
the judiciary, I want to assure you that we take very seriously 
our commitment to fiscal accountability and the responsible 
stewardship of our funds. My Committee has an entire 
Subcommittee dedicated to finding opportunities to achieve 
efficiencies, adapting innovative business practices, and 
reducing or limiting costs without negatively impacting the 
quality of judicial services. At any given time, we have 
numerous cost containment initiatives that are in various 
stages of implementation, and these are described in more 
detail in my written statement.
    Again, thank you for the opportunity to appear today and 
for your support of the judiciary. I understand that the Fiscal 
Year 2026 we have put forward is a large one and that this is a 
challenging budget environment, but it is necessary to support 
the fair, efficient, and secure administration of justice in 
this country.
    I would be pleased to answer your questions.
    [The prepared statement of Judge St. Eve follows:]
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    Mr. Issa. Thank you. I am pleased I didn't even have to 
say, ``Five minutes.'' You got it right spot-on.
    Judge St. Eve. I have a whole new appreciation of the red 
light here.
    Mr. Issa. You know, we could add one to the court, if you 
would like it.
    [Laughter.]
    Judge Scudder.

            STATEMENT OF THE HON. MICHAEL Y. SCUDDER

    Judge Scudder. Good morning, Chair Issa, Ranking Member 
Johnson, the Members of the Subcommittee, and Ranking Member 
Raskin.
    My name is Michael Scudder and I, too, serve on the U.S. 
Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in Chicago.
    I appear before you today on behalf of the Judicial 
Conference Committee on Information Technology, which I Chair, 
to discuss cybersecurity threats to the Judicial Branch and our 
responses and ongoing priorities. Thank you for this 
opportunity.
    Technology touches nearly everything the judiciary does. 
Case filings arrive electronically. We manage our dockets 
electronically; draft and issue orders and opinions 
electronically; communicate with colleagues and staff 
electronically and depend on a range of systems for our 
administrative functions, like H.R. and financial management. 
No doubt, much the same is true here on Capitol Hill and all 
throughout the Executive Branch and private sector.
    Advances in technology have helped us in countless ways and 
are replete with future promises. We are striving to seize 
those opportunities by modernizing our systems and evaluating 
value-added, responsible uses for artificial intelligence, but 
we all know that technology brings with it risks. It is this 
point I want to underscore for you.
    Cyber risk is very real for the Federal judiciary. 
Malicious individuals and groups look to exploit 
vulnerabilities in our environment for their own benefit and to 
destabilize confidence in our branch. In recent years, we have 
experienced serious breaches of our case management and 
electronic case filing system. More recently, we witness a 
ransomware attack on a Federal public defender's office. These 
events resulted in the loss of sensitive information and delays 
in judicial processes.
    We have responded by working closely with the Executive 
Branch, including the FBI, to identify the responsible actors 
and to better understand their intentions. Our Executive Branch 
partners, including CISA within DHS and the National Cyber 
Director, have also helped identify ways in which we can 
strengthen our cybersecurity posture.
    Please know that we are doing everything possible to better 
secure our systems and the confidential information they 
contain, including sealed filings on very sensitive criminal, 
national security, and commercial matters.
    We expect the threats will only increase in their 
persistence and sophistication in the coming years. At regular 
intervals in recent years--and indeed, just last month--we have 
offered this, and other Committees classified briefings on 
these cyber risks and breaches, and you have our commitment to 
keeping you informed as we move forward.
    The judiciary has responded to the reality of unrelenting 
cyber risk by making cybersecurity one of our Branch's top 
priorities. In the wake of our first breaches, our former 
Director established an IT Security Task Force to make 
recommendations on short- and long-term objectives. The IT 
Committee received those recommendations and has been hard at 
work implementing them, while also putting in place a 
comprehensive IT modernization and cybersecurity strategy. We 
are three years into implementing that strategy and are making 
sound progress--all under the leadership of our Branch's first 
Chief Information Officer. Our current Director, Judge Robert 
Conrad, has kept cybersecurity an absolute top and urgent 
priority for our Branch.
    All of this takes up resources, and Congress has been a 
strong supporter of our IT budgetary needs in recent years. As 
I thank you for your past support, allow me to ask for it once 
again. The judiciary's Fiscal Year 2026 funding request 
includes $74 million for multiyear plan funding. The funding 
will allow us to continue making progress toward modernizing 
the judiciary's IT systems and strengthening our security.
    Again, thank you for the opportunity to appear here today, 
for your understanding and support of our pressing IT and 
cybersecurity needs, and I welcome your questions.
    [The prepared statement of Judge Scudder follows:]
    [GRAPHIC NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]

    
    Mr. Cline. Thank you, Mr. Chair. I thank our witnesses for 
being here.
    Judge St. Eve, the Judiciary is requesting another 
significant funding increase in Fiscal Year 2026. Can you 
justify this expansion and why the inflation and flat or 
declining case load trends?
    Judge St. Eve. Yes, certainly. We are requesting $9.4 
billion for 2026 and that increase is driven by multiple 
factors. For one, our Judicial Security Fund has been frozen 
since 2023, and we have significant needs in judicial security. 
Our Judicial Security Fund funds our Court Security Officers 
who are really the front-line officers that keep the 
courthouses safe. It funds our vulnerability management program 
which helps get judges' personally identifying information off 
the internet. It funds equipment and at the courthouse the 
magnetometers, the videos, and it also funds the courthouse 
hardening project that we have been doing around the country. 
That has been frozen since 2023.
    Inflation has certainly impacted on those. In particular, 
the Judicial Security Fund, we have had to put aside some of 
the equipment updates in order to pay for the Court Security 
Officers and the vulnerability management program. We have put 
a priority on that. Courthouses around the country, some 
equipment is on a 10-year cycle where it should be replaced, 
and that equipment is now on an 18-year cycle because we 
haven't been able to replace it. A chunk of the money will go 
toward that.
    Mr. Cline. Can you tell me how security funding, both 
physical and cyber, is audited?
    Judge St. Eve. Yes. We have a rigorous internal audit 
process at the Administrative Office where there are accounting 
firms that do cyclical accounting of each of the Districts and 
Circuits throughout the country. There are also internal audits 
that are done at the Administrative Office.
    Mr. Cline. I know that appropriations have increased in 
recent years for new courthouse construction and renovations, 
even as GAO reports continue to raise concerns about unused 
space and unclear prioritization metrics. Meanwhile, in my own 
district, I have heard reports that one Federal courthouse 
lacked heat during the winter and the process to get that fixed 
through GSA was long and difficult. I raised concerns about 
whether basic facility needs are being sidelined while funding 
goes toward more politically visible construction projects.
    Can you explain how the Judicial Conference prioritizes 
courthouse spending, especially between new construction and 
urgently needed repairs and what safeguards are in place to 
ensure that these decisions are based on objective needs rather 
than politics or aesthetics?
    Judge St. Eve. We have a rigorous process for new 
construction where we work with GSA and there is a priority 
list based on a series of factors where we determine which 
places and which courthouses need new construction. We work 
with GSA on projects at existing courthouses and that has been 
a challenge for us. The GSA has lost about 60 percent of its 
workforce. I can tell you in Chicago all our project managers 
were laid off, so we don't have any GSA project managers. I 
have examples from around the country that I could tell you 
that the layoff of GSA employees has resulted in us not getting 
the services that we used to, yet we are still paying the same 
rent to GSA.
    Mr. Cline. Judge Scudder, Congress has heard concerns about 
IT and cybersecurity funding being treated as a budgetary black 
box, essentially hard to audit and often folded into broader 
security categories.
    Can you provide examples of how these funds are being 
prioritized and transparently reported?
    Judge Scudder. Thank you for the question. In our budget 
submission, there are some details on that, and we regularly 
meet with appropriator staff and Members of the Appropriation 
Committee. Within the Branch, we are devoting our IT and cyber 
resources to a series of priorities that are all about 
modernizing our systems to better enhance our security.
    Mr. Cline. Using AI?
    Judge Scudder. In part. It is cutting-edge technology. Our 
Director established a task force recently. The task force is 
looking hard at AI. AI brings with it enormous promise, as you 
know. It brings with it certain risks as well. I think the 
Chief Justice captured that sentiment very well in his 2023 
year-end report where he said that any use of AI requires 
caution and humility. We are looking hard at it.
    Mr. Cline. My time has expired. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Mr. Issa. I thank the gentleman. I now recognize the 
gentleman from Georgia, Mr. Johnson.
    Mr. Johnson. Thank you. It is notable that our third 
equally important branch of government, the Judicial Branch, 
has submitted a budget request totaling $9.4 billion for Fiscal 
Year 2026. I will note that this Committee, in its Big Ugly 
Bill that passed out a couple of months ago allocated $45 
billion for the construction of new detention facility beds in 
private, for-profit detention facilities under contract to the 
U.S. Government to detain immigrants, $45-$9.7 billion and we 
would question that very modest request. It is astounding.
    Judge St. Eve, as you know, this is not the Appropriations 
Committee. We on the House Judiciary Committee have no control 
over funding, but how the Judiciary functions from whether 
Americans get a speedy trial to whether a judge is afraid for 
his or her safety is predicated on sufficient resources for the 
Judicial Branch.
    Could you explain for us what having the courts adequately 
funded means for the constitutional functions of the Judicial 
Branch and conversely, how frozen funding can snowball into 
bigger problems for the rule of law?
    Judge St. Eve. Having sufficient funding is essential for 
us to carry out our constitutional duties. The courts have to 
be funded for the judges to do their work and carry out their 
duties. I am going to focus on what you touched on earlier, 
Ranking Member Johnson, the defender services. They are part of 
the Judiciary's budget. Under the Sixth Amendment of the 
Constitution, all defendants charged with a crime are entitled 
to representation. Over 90 percent of criminal defendants have 
appointed counsel. It is less than 10 percent of criminal 
defendants who can pay for their own counsel. Those 
appointments and lawyers come from the defender services, as 
well as from court-appointed attorneys under the Criminal 
Justice Act, or CJA attorneys.
    Because of the CR in 2025, the defender services have been 
under a hiring freeze for 23 of the last 27 months. They are 
working at approximately 93 percent of their work measurement 
formula. The CJA attorneys we are very concerned about because 
we rely on them for appointment of when the Federal defenders 
can't cover it for one reason or another. We anticipate that as 
of now it is July 7th or July 11th. Previously, we thought we 
would have enough money until July 23rd, but that got moved up. 
Our fund is going to run out of money to reimburse the CJA-
appointed attorneys in just a couple of weeks.
    Mr. Johnson. This is an imminent threat to the ability for 
the courts to operate in a constitutional way and I know that 
this Chief Executive doesn't care about the Constitution.
    Let me ask you, Judge Scudder, during Judge St. Eve's 
testimony before the House Appropriations Subcommittee, she 
spoke of technology as a cost-saving measure, specifically 
encouraging more use of electronic research and sharing of 
library materials and facilitating virtual meetings.
    Could you briefly explain to us how investing in functional 
IT systems will help the Judiciary with its resources in the 
long term? I apologize for interrupting Judge St. Eve.
    Judge Scudder. Yes. We invest a lot of resources in IT to 
help make our work more efficient. Some of what may be embedded 
in your questions are efficiency upticks that we realize 
through enhancements in different applications like legal 
research. In response to Representative Cline's question, this 
is where AI on the horizon presents efficiency opportunities 
for our courts.
    The broader point that your question gets at is we, just 
like Congress, just like the Executive Branch, and just like 
the private sector, we needed to regularly invest in our 
systems to keep them modernized. When a system becomes outdated 
or is operating against a very antique infrastructure to it, 
the catch-up cost is enormous and the cyber risk that is often 
injected by allowing IT to become outdated creates real risks 
to us.
    We are organized a very sound strategy that we received a 
lot of input on. Our plan is good. We need the resources, and 
we need to stay organized and focused within our own Branch in 
achieving our objectives.
    Mr. Johnson. Thank you, Judge, and I yield back.
    Mr. Issa. I thank the gentleman. We now recognize the 
gentlelady from California, Ms. Lofgren.
    Ms. Lofgren. Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you both, 
Judges, and witnesses, it is good to listen to you and we thank 
you for your service to our country in the Judicial Branch.
    I have got to say, I am concerned that we are witnessing 
what I think is really a dangerous pattern for calling for the 
impeachment of Federal judges simply because a person doesn't 
agree with their ruling. These threats of impeachment don't 
have to do with misconduct. They are just about punishing 
judges when a member does not agree with the decision.
    Judge St. Eve, the last time the Administrative Office 
testified before this Committee, I raised concerns about the 
misuse of impeachment as a political weapon and having been--I 
am the only Member of Congress that was involved in all four 
modern impeachments. First, as a staffer during the Nixon 
impeachment and as a Member later. I am well aware that 
impeachment is a very serious process. It must be exercised 
with the most complete seriousness. It is really a 
constitutional failsafe meant to address serious misconduct, 
not to remove judges for doing their jobs under Article 3. 
There was a reason why the Founders gave lifetime tenure to 
judges, so that they would be free to follow the facts and 
follow the law without fear of intimidation and the threat of 
unwarranted impeachment really does undercut what our Founders 
had in mind in a carefully crafted checks and balance system.
    I am just wondering and either one of you can answer if you 
know, since the last testimony before this Committee, the 
number of Articles of Impeachment against Federal judges has 
risen to seven against six Federal judges. To your knowledge, 
has the Judicial Conference referred to any of these judges to 
the House for impeachment?
    Judge St. Eve. To my knowledge, no. That is outside of the 
scope of the budget what I was prepared to testify to today, 
but I know that we do strongly disagree with calls for 
impeachment based solely on a judge's ruling and would repeat 
the words of Chief Justice Roberts from his year-end report 
that the normal Appellate review process exists for that 
purpose.
    Ms. Lofgren. This is correct. I have been on this Committee 
my entire tenure in Congress and we have had judges impeached 
for misconduct. As a matter of fact, I was one of the 
impeachment managers for one of the misconduct cases. The 
Judicial Conference never referred to this number of judges in 
a six-month period. I can say that for a fact since I have been 
on the Committee.
    It seems to me that even without a conviction, being 
impeached can do damage to a judge's career, even the threat of 
impeachment can do damage. I know that you are worried about 
and rightly so, physical safety, but the extreme rhetoric about 
judges that sometimes accompanies these impeachment threats, I 
think heightens the danger that judges are in. We have seen 
judges attacked both at the State and Federal levels and it is 
important that we understand that Chief Justice Roberts, who 
was exactly right, impeachment is not an appropriate response 
to disagreement concerning a judicial decision. The normal 
Appellate process exists for that purpose, and I add that both 
of you would agree with that?
    Judge Scudder. Yes, definitely.
    Ms. Lofgren. Let me just close with this. I think there is 
an irony here that the Committee is holding a hearing focused 
on fiscal responsibility and supporting the functioning of our 
courts, while some of the Members of this body are actively 
attacking judges with baseless impeachment threats. I don't 
think you can claim to support the Judiciary while undermining 
its independence. This isn't about constitutional 
accountability. It is about political intimidation and that 
political intimidation could unhinge members of the public also 
bleed into actual physical violence. It is important that we 
step back from this Legislative misconduct and I do thank the 
witnesses once again for their service. I yield back.
    Mr. Issa. I thank the gentlelady. The Chair might note that 
this Committee has not taken up any, I repeat any Articles of 
Impeachment on behalf of any of those proponents of the judges. 
Speaking only from this Chair for myself, we are currently 
under no such consideration for any of those that are pending.
    With that, we recognize the gentlelady from North Carolina 
for her questioning.
    Ms. Ross. Thank you, Mr. Chair and the Ranking Member 
Johnson for organizing this extremely important hearing. I 
represent the Eastern District of North Carolina, probably one 
of the fastest-growing districts. We have not gotten a new 
judge or a new courthouse in a really long time and things are 
pretty dire there.
    I also want to thank our witnesses for their testimony 
today and especially for your service during this trying time. 
You have to hear cases, but you are also managing the third 
bridge of government, and we really appreciate that service.
    Recent events have shown that while we should be improving 
and investing in judicial security, this Congress is 
entertaining cuts to budgets because judges are issuing 
decisions that President Trump or some of my colleagues on this 
Committee disagree with. Physical threats are not the only 
danger judges have to do their ability to do their job. The 
Judiciary is increasingly subject to cyber threats and attacks, 
as Judge Scudder noted in his opening remarks. I have been 
working on this issue, Colonial Pipeline affected my district, 
and I have been working on it in the energy sector.
    Judge Scudder, you Chair the Judicial Conference Committee 
on Information Technology and we know that cyberattacks on the 
Judiciary are increasing in both frequency and sophistication. 
What can you tell us about the cyber security threat to the 
Judiciary in this setting? You laid a few things out, but what 
are you doing to shore up? How does that compare to other 
industries? Are you working with NIST? Let us know what you are 
doing.
    Judge Scudder. Yes, thank you very much for your question. 
You are absolutely correct, and as I tried to underscore, the 
cyber risk that the Judiciary faces is very real. It is 
persistent. It is sophisticated. It is hard to stay ahead of.
    One thing we do know is that we are in a shared company. It 
is a whole government issue. It is a whole of society issue. It 
is present in the private sector as well.
    When we first experienced very serious and sophisticated 
breaches, it served as a real call to action for our Branch to 
get very organized around cyber risk and then strategically to 
target it. The way that we are doing that is by investing, with 
your support here in Congress, in securing particular systems 
that are vulnerable, as well as modernizing more broadly 
applications that we depend on, and then focusing like a hawk 
on what is happening daily within our systems and responding to 
it in real time.
    I would be remiss also to not recognize the partnership 
that we have formed with the Executive Branch. This is where 
cyber risk, information, and intelligence becomes very 
important to us. We receive that through the intelligence 
community, through the FBI, and the National Cyber Director's 
Office in the White House--who has been a tremendous supporter. 
We have a lot to do and it is hard work and we are at it.
    Ms. Ross. Right, what more can Congress do to support your 
efforts?
    Judge Scudder. The fact that you are recognizing it 
publicly like you are, is very important and then through the 
budgetary process to support us. Let me also invite to hold us 
accountable to what we are representing we are going to get 
done, along what time lines, and to get this done for everyone 
that litigates in our courts and to get it done through the 
Judiciary and the American public more broadly.
    Ms. Ross. Then, the Arizona Public Defender Office 
situation had to do with ransomware.
    Judge Scudder. Correct.
    Ms. Ross. Could you tell us if you have a policy on 
ransomware? I know that is something that has been very 
difficult for us to establish in the private sector, but could 
you tell us how you handle ransomware?
    Judge Scudder. Yes, we view ransomware as a form of 
cyberattack, which it is. I don't know of any formal policy, 
but I am confident in telling you that we do not pay ransoms 
and have no interest in paying ransoms or associating with 
criminal cyber groups like that. We will descend every possible 
resource including partnering with the Executive Branch to try 
to mitigate the effects of a ransomware attack. We have done 
that here. The losses that you are referring to that the 
Federal Defenders Office experienced are very, very real and 
very, very troubling and it circles back, recognizing where 
that hit, it hit in a Federal Defenders Office. As Mr. Johnson 
was noting, these are folks that are shouldering a very, very 
weighty responsibility under the Sixth Amendment to represent 
indigent defendants. It is all interconnected. It is all very 
real, and it is all very serious.
    Ms. Ross. Thank you very much. I yield back.
    Mr. Issa. I thank the gentlelady, and I would join with the 
gentlelady in denouncing anyone, particularly Members of House 
or Senate, from using such language as may bring any greater 
danger to those who serve in the Federal Judiciary. With that, 
it is my privilege to recognize the gentleman from Wisconsin 
for his five minutes.
    Mr. Fitzgerald. Thank you, Chair. Thank you both for being 
here today.
    Judge St. Eve, there have been some discussions over the 
years on judicial conduct and disability reforms and including 
most recently about the case of Judge Pauline Newman which we 
spoke in the Judiciary Committee about a couple weeks ago. 
Judge Newman's case has now kind of dragging on for now two 
years and it is now pending appeal before the Court of Appeals 
for D.C. Circuit.
    Do you have any idea what the total cost was to the Federal 
Circuit or the Administrative Office of the Court on this 
investigation and the proceeds in and around Judge Newman?
    Judge St. Eve. The Federal Circuit has independent budget 
authority, and it is not under the Judicial Conference budget 
oversight. This is pending litigation that has been going on 
and I ethically can't comment on pending litigation.
    I can tell you from my own experience, I have been involved 
in several judicial conduct inquiries in the Seventh Circuit 
that this is typically paid for out-of-court allotments. The 
ones that I have been involved with, the judges, the three-
judge panel have been involved and usually we have one staff 
person helping. It is just part of our regular business, and it 
comes out of that.
    I know that the statute provides that the Director can ask 
the Administrative Office to pay certain expenses or approve 
that for witnesses who might be testifying. Also, the statute 
provides that if the judge ultimately prevails and the judicial 
misconduct inquiry is dismissed, that this judge can ask for 
reimbursement for expenses. That is provided for in the 
statute.
    Mr. Fitzgerald. That is part of the frustration is whenever 
you see kind of a sum sufficient amount that is not necessarily 
coming out of a specific category in the budget, that it just 
seems to be open ended which fuels the idea that these cases go 
on and on and on. I don't know that is specifically the case 
because we don't have enough information really to make that 
judgment, but it is something I think that we are watching 
closely and we are concerned about.
    While the Sixth Amendment affords the right to a public 
trial for criminal proceedings and the First Amendment has been 
interpreted to mean the same for civil proceedings, records of 
the proceedings are not public or free. Federal Court documents 
are available at a price through an online system known as 
PACER. I am sure you are familiar with it, obviously. However, 
critics of PACER argue that even the minuscule fees can pose an 
access to justice issue that is out there.
    Judge Scudder, you mentioned in your testimony that the 
current court case management system is outdated or is 
unsustain-able. Can you comment a little bit more on that? Then 
what could we do to try and modernize this whole process?
    Judge Scudder. Yes, thank you for the question. We as a 
Branch definitely share your commitment to access to justice 
issues. Judicial policy reflects that. You are right to 
recognize that our case management electronic case filing 
system, PACER, is the vehicle through which you access that as 
you noted, is vulnerable to cyber risk. We welcome your support 
for our ongoing efforts to modernize that application and to 
better secure it, and I am happy to tell you and the Committee 
that we are seriously about that and intensely about it to try 
to drive down that risk.
    Mr. Fitzgerald. Have you guys identified anything 
specifically that you could do from a modernization perspective 
that would help and assist us?
    Judge Scudder. Yes, absolutely. There are several things on 
the technical level. At a more macro level, what I would say is 
this. We have made a lot of progress in recent years in 
thinking about our IT essentially as critical infrastructure, 
as essential to really everything that we are doing. What that 
has translating to is a more enterprise- or branch-wide 
approach to our systems. We need to drive down some of the 
local customization that we have allowed historically with some 
of our applications. As we approach system modernization with a 
more enterprise- or branch-wide approach, we expect to realize 
real security benefits. That is primarily where our focus is.
    Mr. Fitzgerald. Very good. Thank you. My time is up. I 
yield back.
    Mr. Issa. Thank you. We now go to the Ranking Member of the 
Full Committee, Mr. Raskin, for five minutes.
    Mr. Raskin. Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. Judge St. Eve 
and Judge Scudder, thank you for your testimony today. Federal 
judges and State judges both swear an oath to faithfully 
discharge their duties under the Constitution and under the 
laws of the United States.
    Judge St. Eve, should a judge ever decide a case based on 
whether their decision would please the President or any other 
public official?
    Judge St. Eve. I can say in deciding cases, I look at the 
law and apply the law, apply the dictates of the Supreme Court, 
and that is what we are directed to do.
    Mr. Raskin. That is right and that sounds like the normal 
course of business, but we just found out last week that the 
Federal District Court nominee may have done precisely that 
before Florida State Judge Ed Artel was nominated in May by 
President Trump. He lobbied for his Federal Court nomination at 
the same time that he sat on a State Court panel that heard 
Trump's case against the Pulitzer Prize Board which Trump was 
suing because he disagreed with their award of the Pulitzer to 
The New York Times and Washington Post. The decision in the 
case was about a very narrow question of personal jurisdiction 
which the Court ruled on, but this judge filed a concurring 
opinion in which he reprinted lots of Donald Trump's bold and 
capitalized letters about what a fraud all of this was and 
actually not only did he reach the merits of the case saying 
that Trump had shown that the Pulitzer Board had remarkably 
acted with actual malice toward Donald Trump, but the actual 
malice standard set forth in The New York Times v. Sullivan 
should be overturned by the Supreme Court. The Court, he said, 
``should return to the common law standard in England, where 
public officials didn't have to prove intent for libel, and a 
strict liability standard applied. '' Quite a remarkable thing.
    I suppose you don't want to comment on that particular 
situation, but would you think it is improper for a judge to be 
rendering a decision to please a President who might then 
appoint them to the Federal bench? Could I ask you Judge St. 
Eve, first?
    Judge St. Eve. I am not familiar with that situation, and I 
don't think it would be proper to comment on somebody who is 
pending for a judgeship.
    Mr. Raskin. Right, and I would never ask you to do that, 
but let me ask you, Judge Scudder. Abstracting from the facts 
of this case, I have advanced them in a compressed way, and you 
can check it out if you are interested on your own. There is a 
lot of news coverage about it. Do you agree with what I think 
Judge St. Eve said at the beginning which is that a judge 
should never rule in a way that is designed to please a public 
official as opposed to enforce the meaning of the law?
    Judge Scudder. I do agree with that. You recognized it in 
some of your comments that preceded your question and that is 
embedded within the oath that judges take is we swear to decide 
and resolve issues without fear or favor. The independence of 
the Judiciary is enshrined in Article 3 of the Constitution, 
and we take seriously the duty that you recognized earlier that 
Chief Justice Marshall pronounced in Marbury.
    Mr. Raskin. Well, I appreciate that very much. Can you 
describe briefly how the ABA ratings for Federal judicial 
nominees worked before March of this year?
    Judge Scudder. I can't. I didn't--I can't honestly.
    Mr. Raskin. Let me refresh your memory. I don't know 
whether you went through that process. Essentially, the ABA 
examined nominees and their backgrounds to determine whether 
they were qualified for the job and also had the various 
ethical--met the various ethical requirements of the job. That 
existed since 1955, when the ABA began vetting nominees and 
used the present-day system since 1990, so the last 35 years. 
We have a system in place that began under President Eisenhower 
to ensure that judicial nominees have the appropriate 
qualifications.
    In March, Trump announced he was no longer going to provide 
the ABA access to the materials they need to vet the nominees 
and then just over two months later, he nominated one of his 
personal criminal defense attorneys, Emil Bove, to the Third 
Circuit Court of Appeals, and we learned yesterday, the White 
House approached Bove to ask if he wanted to be a Federal judge 
after he ordered the dismissal of corruption charges against 
Mayor Eric Adams.
    Would the Judicial Conference take a position on restoring 
the ABA vetting system or do you think it is just going to 
remain agnostic about whether it should be dismissed?
    Judge St. Eve. The Judicial Conference to my knowledge has 
not taken a position on that one way or the other. That is 
outside of the scope of the budget process that I am here to 
testify about today. I am happy to take that question back or 
put your staff in touch with our staff if you would like.
    Mr. Raskin. All right. I appreciate that. I yield back, Mr. 
Chair.
    Mr. Issa. I thank you for the gentleman. Isn't it an 
interesting coincidence that Eisenhower, the man who made a 
deal politically with Earl Warren for the endorsement made him 
Chief Justice is the guy that he started under. I would note by 
the way that I would likely get a zero on our association 
endorsement for a judgeship. I would get at least a zero.
    Mr. Raskin. We would give you a hundred, Mr. Chair. I don't 
think you have anything to be afraid of.
    Mr. Issa. I thank the gentleman. We now go to the gentleman 
from South Carolina for his questions.
    Mr. Fry. Thank you, Mr. Chair. I would give you a hundred, 
but I am not on there. I do appreciate it. Thank you for having 
this important hearing and thank you, judges, for being here.
    The Judiciary is a co-equal branch of government, I think 
we all recognize that, tasked with upholding and interpreting 
the law. The concern that we have, a lot of us, is that in 
recent years it has become increasingly clear that reform is 
needed to preserve the impartiality and the integrity of the 
court system, particularly when it comes to removing partisan 
influence from the bench. Unfortunately, activist judges, such 
as District Court Judge Boasberg, have used tools like 
nationwide injunctions and temporary restraining orders to 
block the President's agenda raising serious concerns about 
judicial overreach and politicization. If we are to restore the 
public trust in the Judiciary, meaningful reforms are 
necessary.
    Today, I want to focus on this Committee's concerns with 
the compromised aspects of the judge or the Judiciary, as well 
as the broader issues of judicial security and oversight.
    Are nationwide injunctions a core function of the 
Judiciary? Either one of you.
    Judge St. Eve. The Judicial Conference has not taken a 
position on nationwide injunctions, and I know that issue is 
currently before the Supreme Court. There was a case argued 
earlier this term where I anticipate we might get a ruling 
before the term ends that addresses something with respect to 
nationwide injunctions.
    Mr. Fry. Judge St. Eve, what are some of the arguments, I 
guess, that exist out there against nationwide injunctions 
being violative of the Constitution?
    Judge St. Eve. I have not studied that in anticipation of 
today's hearing.
    Mr. Fry. One of those would be just a clear separation of 
powers, right? You probably have heard that. Is it the function 
of the Judiciary to have 600 plus unelected and unaccountable 
judges or do we have one President of the United States? That 
is probably one of the clearest arguments if you are arguing 
against it, that exists out there in the stratosphere, correct?
    Judge St. Eve. Nationwide injunctions, there are issues 
throughout the country and this is an issue that could come 
before me as a sitting judge, so it would not be proper for me 
to comment on it ethically one way or the other.
    Mr. Fry. Do you think the American people believe that 
nationwide injunctions or do they weaken the public's trust in 
our democratic system, one designed to prioritize elected 
governance over judicial overreach? Either one of you?
    Judge Scudder. I don't have an informed view on it and in 
the capacity that I am appearing, I don't know if I should 
venture a guess at it.
    Mr. Fry. Is the JCUS making any attempt to clarify or to 
curtail the use of nationwide injunctions? What efforts or 
discussions are taking place right now regarding nationwide 
injunctions from a court administrative standpoint?
    Judge St. Eve. I am not familiar with or aware of any, but 
again, I am appearing in my capacity as Chair of the Budget 
Committee and haven't studied that.
    Mr. Fry. To your knowledge, there is no discussion taking 
place whatever with the JCUS or the AO about nationwide 
injunctions?
    Judge St. Eve. I don't know one way or the other. I do know 
the Judicial Conference does not have an official policy on 
nationwide injunctions, but beyond that, I am not sure.
    Mr. Fry. Judge Scudder, have you heard anything?
    Judge Scudder. No, I share the same understanding, and I 
would just observed that all the pros and cons on the legal 
side of this are before the Supreme Court and if we stay tuned, 
if their term is ending soon, as everyone expects it will, we 
may receive some guidance on this quickly.
    Mr. Fry. Well, hopefully so. Hopefully, there is some 
guidance. I think it is partially--obviously, Congress has 
oversight, but courts also have the capacity to look at new 
practices.
    What statistics or other information can you provide about 
the percentage of cases at the District Courts in which 
equitable or injunctive relief is granted?
    Judge St. Eve. I don't know those statistics.
    Mr. Fry. Judge Scudder?
    Judge Scudder. Yes, I don't either. I don't either.
    Mr. Fry. What statistics or other information can you 
provide about the percentage of cases at the District Courts in 
which nationwide injunctive relief is granted, namely, 
injunctive relief that enjoins a party against nonparties 
across the country? Any statistics?
    Judge St. Eve. I don't know those statistics. I don't know 
if they are maintained anywhere.
    Mr. Fry. In your view, actually, let me just switch gears 
here. Judge Scudder, AO Director Conrad, has noted a sharp rise 
in cyberattacks on the court system which are prime targets to 
their sensitive data and critical role for the Judiciary. Given 
the rising tensions with Iran, China, the growing threat of 
China, do you believe the Judiciary has adequate cyber 
safeguards in place?
    Judge Scudder. Thank you for the question. I believe we are 
doing everything that we can to mitigate and drive down cyber 
risk, but I would also renew the point that I made earlier in 
response to questions in my opening statement. The cyber risk 
that we face is persistent and sophisticated and it keeps 
growing in its sophistication. The challenge that we have is 
keeping up with it and having the resources that we need to get 
these security improvements and these modernization efforts 
done to, at the very least, keep up with it, but better yet, to 
get ahead of it
    Mr. Fry. Thank you for that. Mr. Chair, I see my time has 
expired and I yield back.
    Mr. Issa. I thank the gentleman. We now go to the gentleman 
from Colorado for five minutes.
    Mr. Neguse. I thank the Chair and the Ranking Member for 
holding this hearing and I want to thank both of our witnesses 
for your service to our country and for your testimony day.
    I want to pick up on a point that was just articulated by 
my colleague from South Carolina. Both of you have served with 
distinction as Federal judges. You both had very extensive and 
distinguished careers in private practice as well as in the 
Government, Assistant U.S. Attorneys, a variety of different 
high-profile cases that both of you prosecuted in the past. You 
both were appointed by President Trump to your current 
positions on the respective Circuit Court of Appeals in which 
you serve, and you both were confirmed unanimously by the U.S. 
Senate which is no easy feat.
    Do either of you believe that the Federal Judiciary is 
``politically compromised'' as my colleague from South Carolina 
is suggesting?
    Mr. Scudder? Judge Scudder?
    Judge Scudder. Thank you for your compliments. I don't. My 
experience in the Seventh Circuit and with my colleagues all 
around the country is very much in keeping with the comments 
and the observations that Representative Raskin made with 
respect to the seriousness with which judges take their oath 
and approach each case or controversy that comes before them, 
to look at the facts and the law, to try to get it right, 
recognizing that there is an Appellate process in place if the 
losing party disagrees, where the ruling can be challenged.
    Mr. Neguse. Judge St. Eve?
    Judge St. Eve. I would echo Judge Scutter's comments. Thank 
you for your compliments. I have been a judge for 23 years now 
and feel the exact same way that Judge Scutter does.
    Mr. Neguse. Well, I wanted to thank you both for your 
candor. It is important contextually for this Committee and I 
think for the American public to hear jurists such as 
yourselves articulate what you have just described. Of course, 
the reason is self-evident. This hearing is a bit odd because 
if one were watching it, you would think it is a fairly 
atypical--or excuse me, not an atypical hearing, a fairly 
normal hearing discussing budgetary and technology matters that 
the judiciary is trying to grapple with. Yet, we find ourselves 
in very abnormal times.
    I am sure it is not lost on either of you that several of 
my Republican colleagues are actively debating defunding 
Federal District Courts, potentially defunding Circuit Courts 
that issue opinions that they disagree with. You all are aware 
of this. I am sure you have seen some reporting in the news 
that suggests this. I can represent to you that having served 
on this Committee and served in the House and I have been a 
witness to the conversations over the last five months, that is 
an active matter of consideration.
    How do you respond to that? What would it mean, Judge St. 
Eve, if the Congress were to defund a District Court? You heard 
my colleague from South Carolina vociferously attacking Judge 
Boasberg, who I suspect you know.
    Judge St. Eve. We have submitted our budget for Fiscal Year 
2026 of $9.4 billion and justify our requests for court 
security, defenders, and the S&E account and the fees of 
jurors. As I said in my oral statement earlier, funding of the 
courts is essential for us to carry out our constitutional 
statutory duties.
    Mr. Neguse. I completely concur with your assessment on 
that front, but I recognize this, it is a question that may be 
a bit uncomfortable, but again this is an atypical time to find 
ourselves in. How will the Budget Committee of the Judicial 
Conference respond if the Congress successfully defunds a 
District Court? If that could happen. Republicans have 
signaled, the majority, that at least some of them would like 
to defund a District Court in Massachusetts or the Washington 
District Court. How will the Judicial Conference respond to 
that? That will just be the new normal, that essentially 
Congress is allowed and permitted to exact political 
retribution against a judge if they rule in a way that the 
Majority of the Congress disagrees with?
    Judge St. Eve. Again, our funding is essential for the 
judges in every District and every Circuit to carry out their 
constitutional and statutory duties. We need that funding to do 
so.
    Mr. Neguse. Well, I appreciate your answer. I would simply 
suggest that given the abnormal nature of the times we find 
ourselves in I hope that the Judicial Conference is actively 
discussing how it will respond if and when proposals like the 
one that I have just described ultimately materialize. Because 
with all respect for both of you, the response to the Judicial 
Conference will have to be more squarely designed to address 
this particular issue rather than the sort of broader budget 
proposal and the justifications that you have offered.
    At the end of the Judicial Conference if they are unwilling 
to defend the propriety of not having the Congress defund a 
particular District Court, that is going to be a very untenable 
position. That would be my request for all of you.
    I thank the Chair for his indulgence on the time. I yield 
back.
    Mr. Issa. My indulgence knows no limits for good reason.
    I will note for the record that we know of no request to 
defund the court. I would also for the record--because all of 
us on the top dais have been here a while, we have all seen the 
disruption that gets caused by government shutdowns to branch, 
including Article III, and would say all the proposals by one-
of-a-kind Members who might say something like that pale in 
comparison to even a few days of shutting down the government, 
which often disrupts the court in a huge way.
    With that, I go my favorite colleague on the dais, the 
gentleman from California.
    Mr. Swalwell. Judge Scutter--
    Mr. Issa. You have always been my favorite. I hope you know 
that.
    Mr. Swalwell. Thank you, Chair.
    Mr. Issa. Thank you.
    Mr. Swalwell. We don't shut down the government on this 
side.
    Mr. Neguse. Mr. Chair?
    Mr. Issa. OK. I spoke. I deserve this. Yes, please.
    Mr. Neguse. I have a unanimous consent request that I 
neglected.
    Mr. Issa. The gentleman will state his unanimous--
    Mr. Neguse. The unanimous consent was to enter into the 
record an article from The Hill that quotes the Speaker of the 
House saying, and I quote,

        We can eliminate an entire District Court. We have power over 
        funding, over the courts, and all these other things, but 
        desperate times call for desperate measures and Congress is 
        going to act.

    Mr. Issa. Touche. Without objection. I will also place in 
the record Leader Schumer in 2022 saying,

        I want to tell you, Gorsuch, I want to tell you, Kavanaugh, you 
        have released the whirlwind and you will pay the price.

    Without objection, both will be placed on the record. I 
know--he is still my favorite colleague from California with 
me. Please.
    Mr. Swalwell. Judge Scudder, will it surprise you if we see 
a Federal judge murdered?
    Judge Scudder. That would be tragic beyond words. I think 
that is implicit in the question and I hope everyone will 
recognize that.
    Mr. Swalwell. Is the threat level that we see today against 
Federal judges at a temperature where you see yourself and your 
colleagues changing their own security posture?
    Judge Scudder. Judge St. Eve may want to weigh in on this 
from the resource perspective, but there is no question that 
judicial security is an enormous priority. It is a priority 
that has intensified in recent years, and it is responsive to 
everything that you all are recognizing across all the 
questioning that we are hearing today. Your support for our 
security needs is essential to us so judges can go about doing 
the duty that we have talked about in the hearing so far.
    Mr. Swalwell. I support that. Most of my colleagues support 
that. I am concerned. Recently, the Chair of the Committee, Mr. 
Jordan, said to Punchbowl News on June 13th, he sees ``few 
Members excited to increase judicial security.'' Then, Chip 
Roy, also a Member of the Committee, said on that same day, 
``Maybe they [the judges] should stop screwing everything up.''
    My concern is that we have put your security in the hands 
of the Executive Branch, and it is often lately that the 
Executive--Commander in Chief will tweet out or issue 
statements against judges. Now, your security is in the hands 
of somebody who doesn't like a ruling that one of your 
colleagues has made. That is why I introduced what is called 
the MARSHALS Act. Every Member of the Democratic side supports 
it. I hope Mr. Issa remains open-minded to support it as well.
    This would move judicial security from the Executive Branch 
and would have the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court appoint 
the U.S. Marshals. Essentially judges would become in charge of 
their own security. What do you think about that Judge St. Eve?
    Judge St. Eve. Thank you for the question. The U.S. 
Marshals are on the front line of our security. They have the 
protection details. They investigate threats. We are very 
thankful for their extraordinary efforts.
    I could tell you in Chicago the U.S. Marshals are 
incredibly professional and responsive and any time I have had 
any issue they have responded immediately and appropriately. 
Although they are not part of our budget, we hope that they are 
fully funded.
    In terms of a separate force, that is not something that I 
have looked into, and I don't believe the Judicial Conference 
has a position on.
    Mr. Swalwell. It wouldn't be a separate force. It would be 
essentially--right now the President appoints the U.S. 
Marshals. They are confirmed by the Senate. This would move 
judicial security, the U.S. Marshals, to appointment by the 
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Essentially the Marshals 
Service would fall under the Judicial Branch. That way you 
still have to come to Congress to receive an appropriation for 
the Judicial Branch and its security, but it would allow the 
Branch that is facing security threats to have more agility and 
surging where security is needed.
    The concern is that if a judge in their deliberations is 
worried that a ruling that goes against the Executive Branch 
when the Executive Branch has shown a willingness to issue 
harsh statements from judges that could bring threats, they may 
let that creep into their deliberations and not be as 
independent as we want.
    So, Judge Scudder, I would welcome your thoughts on moving 
the Marshals from the Executive Branch to the Judicial Branch.
    Judge Scudder. Yes, I don't know--like Judge St. Eve, I 
don't know that the Judicial Conference has taken a position on 
the point, and therefore I can't give you that. Imbedded all 
throughout your question and everything that you are 
acknowledging is the priority to enhance judicial security 
wherever the Marshals are located.
    I completely agree with everything Judge St. Eve has said 
about the Marshals. This is a very, very professional committed 
group of men and women and in my experience in Chicago they are 
A-plus.
    Mr. Swalwell. I want to make it clear to Mr. Issa because 
he and his colleagues often point out that Judge Kavanaugh had 
a serious attempt on his life and his family. That was wrong 
and that should be condemned. It has been condemned by our 
side. My introducing this legislation is entirely motivated by 
the fact that I don't know who the President will be four years 
from now, or eight years from now, 25 years from now, but I do 
know that what we have seen where threats are escalating 
against judges. I think regardless of who the party is at the 
White House their independence needs to remain independent of 
their security threats.
    Mr. Issa, that is why I would suggest moving it to the 
Judicial Branch so they can be in charge of their own security.
    Mr. Issa. If the gentleman would yield?
    Mr. Swalwell. Yes.
    Mr. Issa. For the record, because I think this is the 
appropriate hearing to include that, although I did not sign 
onto the bill for a number of reasons, Judge St. Eve, if you 
could answer what he implied in his question, which is from a 
budgetary standpoint would you say that there are some 
ambiguities in your budget in that a major--some of your 
security falls under your budget, some doesn't? Some of your 
ability to build and enhance and repair facilities falls under 
your budget, but most falls in your budget, but controlled by 
GSA. Are there budgetary changes that this Committee should 
consider?
    Although it was noted we don't appropriate, at the end of 
the day we can say what does fall under appropriations, who 
falls under your direct authority, who is Article III, if you 
will, and what liberties you have like the Federal Circuit to 
have your own budget or to even--not ignore, but to work 
outside the GSA when you think that is appropriate and costs 
savings. If you could opine on that because that is where the 
gentleman and I have become such good friends.
    Judge St. Eve. Just to clarify your question, are you 
talking about in the context of security only?
    Mr. Issa. No. No, the security--the facilities themselves. 
There are a number of areas--because you have to go to the GSA 
for that. You have to go to the Marshals for most but not all 
your security. As someone who has looked at the budget, would 
it streamline your ability and the Conference's ability to do 
their job if to the greatest extent possible we moved into your 
budget all functions and controls so that you would make those 
decisions in the most cost-effective fashion?
    That would include, obviously, the idea that you have three 
separate security organizations. The High Court has a separate 
one. There is the security itself, which you do have. Then, 
there are the Marshals. Also, in the facility side--and I am 
really just asking because you are here on the budget. Can we 
make changes in the Judiciary that makes your budget more 
effective?
    Judge St. Eve. Well, the best way to do that is to make 
sure that we are fully funded. Because we are not fully funded 
and haven't been. We have been flat frozen at the Fiscal Year 
2024 level. That really constrains what we can do. I will use 
the court security account as an example.
    We did not receive what we asked for in our court security 
account in 2024 or 2025. Because of that we had to make some 
tough decisions about what we could use those funds for. We put 
a priority, as I indicated earlier, on court security officers 
who are the main officers at the courthouses that keep the 
judges and the public safe, and in our Vulnerability Management 
Program. As a result of that equipment at courthouses had to 
come in second. There is a lot of equipment out there that 
needs updated that we just have not been able to do because we 
don't have the funds to do it. The best way to help us with our 
budget is to ensure that we are fully funded.
    Mr. Issa. Thank you.
    We now recognize the Chair of the Full Committee for his 
combined opening statement and such questions as he may have.
    Chair Jordan. I don't know if I have that. Thank you, Mr. 
Chair.
    Judge St. Eve, so you are requesting a nine-percent 
increase. Is that accurate?
    Judge St. Eve. That is accurate.
    [Simultaneous speaking.]
    Chair Jordan. What is the Federal District? Is it 677? How 
many Federal District judges?
    Judge St. Eve. It is around that.
    Chair Jordan. Around that number?
    Judge St. Eve. Yes.
    Chair Jordan. What is the average--what is the staff size 
for--what is the budget for your typical Federal District judge 
and what is the staff size that they would have working for 
them and for the court?
    Judge St. Eve. For a typical District Court judge they have 
three staff members. The judge is to make a determination if 
they want three Law Clerks or two Law Clerks and a Judicial 
Assistant. In addition, the District Court judges have a Court 
Reporter and a Courtroom Deputy, although those positions--
    Chair Jordan. What is the total number of all those?
    Judge St. Eve. That is five, but in some districts the 
Courtroom Deputy and the Court Reporter are shared. One 
District Court judge does not have his or her own Courtroom 
Deputy or Court Reporter.
    Chair Jordan. Got it.
    Judge St. Eve. That varies by district.
    Chair Jordan. Each judge has two or three clerks?
    Judge St. Eve. Correct.
    Chair Jordan. Of the nine-percent increase, how much of 
that is going for security?
    Judge St. Eve. The nine-percent increase, our security 
account is asking for $892 million.
    Chair Jordan. What percentage of that is the overall nine 
percent?
    Judge St. Eve. A little under 10 percent of our budget, the 
full budget. Eight hundred ninety-four million of the $9.4 
billion is for our judicial security account.
    Chair Jordan. Understand, but you are asking for an 
additional nine percent increase. Of that increase, what 
percentage of that nine percent are you devoting to security 
going forward?
    Judge St. Eve. Our increase for the judicial security 
account is a 19 percent increase over what it is now. That 
compares it from Fiscal Year 2025 to what we are requesting.
    Chair Jordan. OK. What is the overall dollar amount you are 
asking for compared to where you are at now, and what are you 
going to have for the next year?
    Judge St. Eve. In just judicial security or overall?
    Chair Jordan. Overall.
    Judge St. Eve. The overall amount that we are asking for is 
$9.4 billion for fiscal year--
    [Simultaneous speaking.]
    Chair Jordan. That is an $800 million increase over last 
year?
    Judge St. Eve. That is about a nine-percent increase over 
last year.
    Chair Jordan. What is that dollar amount?
    Judge St. Eve. The dollar amount--I have to--
    Chair Jordan. My understanding is you are asking for an 
$800 million increase. Is that accurate? An $800 million.
    Judge St. Eve. I think that is accurate.
    Chair Jordan. OK. Of that $800 million, how many of the 
dollar amount is going for security?
    Judge St. Eve. The total dollar amount going to security is 
$892 million and that is about an increase of $142 million over 
2025.
    Chair Jordan. OK.
    Judge St. Eve. Out of the--I am sorry.
    Chair Jordan. Go ahead. Say it again. Go ahead.
    Judge St. Eve. Out of our overall increase, $142 million is 
in the court security account.
    Chair Jordan. OK. That means $658 million is for other 
things?
    Judge St. Eve. Yes.
    Chair Jordan. Where is all that going?
    Judge St. Eve. Defender services, we are asking for $1.8 
billion. The S&E, or salaries and expenses account, we are 
asking for $6.9 billion. That, salaries and expenses, goes to 
cover people and buildings primarily and IT.
    Chair Jordan. Now, you are giving me the total number. Of 
the $800 million increase you said, $142 million is going for 
security. That leaves $658 million new dollars. Where is that 
money going, the new dollars?
    Judge St. Eve. The additional increase is $800 million 
over--from the prior year.
    Chair Jordan. Got that.
    Judge St. Eve. I don't have this broken down into 
percentages.
    Chair Jordan. Well, then just give me the dollar amount.
    Judge St. Eve. The dollar amount for defender services, the 
additional amount we are asking for is $315,000, roughly. We 
are asking for a little less in fees and jurors. We are asking 
for $141,000 in court security. A million in court security.
    Chair Jordan. OK. Well, again Members are comfortable. I 
have said this all along, we are comfortable with making sure 
there is security. We are not so comfortable giving increases 
in everything else. I think that is where the Members are. 
Certainly, the folks I represent back home, I think that is 
where they see it. That is our concern particularly with some 
of the decisions we have seen.
    With that, I would be happy to yield my remaining 12 
seconds to the Chair.
    Mr. Issa. I will take all 12 seconds to place in the 
record, and it is a video, so I will just extrapolate the 
statement. On the April 1, 2025, the speaker's comments that 
were earlier referred to verbatim are,

        We are not defunding the courts. We're not doing anything other 
        than limiting in this legislation the ability of a judge to 
        issue a nationwide injunction.

I want to make it clear the Speaker of the House very, very 
clearly had no intention of saying that there was going to be 
any limiting of judges on an individual basis, but rather the 
nationwide Injunctions, which was a bill that was passed out of 
the House.
    With that, I go to the gentlelady from California.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Thank you to the two of you for showing up here today, 
because it sounds to me like you are asking for money. You need 
money for buildings, for cybersecurity, for security, and for 
people. I applaud you for asking for more money for security 
because one of my Republican neighbors has a wanted poster 
outside his office with pictures of 18 judges, nine of whom are 
Republicans. It is very scary to me and to all the folks who 
are walking through the halls visiting us to see.
    I want to talk about the people. The Chair of this Full 
Committee just mentioned defender services. That is what I want 
to talk about. Because in my mind the fundamental right to 
defense is what is on the chopping block.
    So, Judge St. Eve, my understanding is that you were an 
AUSA, correct?
    Judge St. Eve. Correct.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. OK. Judge Scudder, you too were an AUSA, 
correct?
    Judge Scudder. Correct.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. In New York and Chicago, is what I read. 
For regular people listening, like me, an AUSA is a prosecutor. 
My understanding is that prosecutors are assigned a caseload. 
Is that also correct?
    Judge St. Eve. That is correct.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. OK.
    Judge Scudder. Yes.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. Judge Scudder? OK. Great. The caseloads 
are a direct result of investigations done by special agents, 
by agencies like the FBI, like the IRS that are doing their due 
diligence and helping to present evidence for a case. You may 
not want to answer this question, but I am sure that you became 
better prosecutors, which probably enhanced your ability to 
become a judge because of the defense world. Many of these 
folks that I am talking about are the Federal public defenders, 
community defenders.
    I am going to say that you probably became better because 
you had a skilled opponent. You had to work harder, you needed 
to have counterarguments, you needed to be well-read, and 
prepared. I bet that you learned how to prepare to be a judge 
because of your time in the courtroom and preparing for a 
trial. Those are all skills that we would want in our judges.
    I actually think proposing what these Republicans are 
proposing to do, to cut defender services, is really 
hypocritical. Because essentially you are saying we don't want 
the next group of judges to be prepared for their job. We are 
going to cut up and coming for AUSAs' opportunity for growth 
because we are going to be cutting public defenders. That is 
not even talking about how this goes against the Constitution, 
which as I read it says that you get due process, you get 
speedy trials, and you get effective counsel.
    I am talking about a much bigger problem. Because suffice 
it to say if you cut public defenders, if you cut defense, then 
not only are you abandoning the Constitution, but you really 
are going to eliminate the need for judges. Then everybody can 
turn the black robes in because you can't do anything if you 
don't have defense. In my mind that is a very slippery, 
dangerous, surreptitious slope to be on.
    Judge Scudder, as an AUSA I am assuming that your docket 
included both civil and criminal cases, correct?
    Judge Scudder. Mainly criminal.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. OK. My understanding is that the 
priority is the criminal cases because of speedy trial rights. 
A speedy trial is dependent on a qualified defense attorney who 
can advance a case, who knows the value of a case, who 
understands pretrial services, and who can work with an manage 
interpreters, investigators, witnesses, and the prosecution. 
Investigators and interpreters are also on the chopping block 
right here.
    A case cannot be adjudicated without a defense attorney, 
without public defenders, and without these community public 
defenders. You can't enter a plea and you can't even go to 
trial without a defense attorney. These cuts--for the record, 
these cuts: Public defenders, CGAs--well, not CGAs, but public 
defenders and community defenders would stabilize the courts 
and upend your calendars because the cases that have to move 
the fastest would stall; those are the criminal cases.
    I want to say in 2023-2024 there were 66,000 criminal cases 
filed and 113 pending. There were 347,000 civil cases filed and 
633,000 pending. You know who needed public defenders? The 
January 6th-ers.
    I want to enter into the record, Mr. Chair, from the 
National Memo, ``Public Defenders do More for January 6 
Suspects Than Trump Ever Will.'' Sixty percent of the January 
6th-ers had a public defender as their counsel.
    Mr. Issa. Without objection it will be placed in the 
record.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. Thank you so much, Mr. Chair. I know 
that my time is up, but I just want to say even Trump said that 
it was defense counsel. It was his defense counsel where he 
learned that the FBI was making mistakes, procedural and 
substantial misdirection. I will be nice and say that. He was 
unable to uncover partisan blind spots and bring them to light 
because of defense counsel. The Republicans want to cut this 
money that is not just stated in the Constitution that people 
have a right to, but it is the only thing that keeps the courts 
going.
    With that, I yield back.
    Mr. Issa. I thank the gentlelady.
    I now recognize myself. I will note that the Criminal 
Justice Act of 1964 is when we began paying for the defense. 
The gentlelady is right that it has become critical, but it 
also in fact is not a constitutional right, is it? It is, in 
fact, something that our Founders for the first 200 years did 
not think that paying for the defense was mandated, that in 
fact it is the result of a statute. I hope the gentlelady will 
share with me that as we are funding something that we created 
in relatively modern times.
    With that, I would like to ask a question from a budget 
standpoint. One of them is your budget every year exceeds 
inflation in your request, doesn't it?
    Judge St. Eve. I don't know if it exceeds it.
    Mr. Issa. It does this year.
    Judge St. Eve. That is something certainly that impacts our 
budget.
    Mr. Issa. The Chair of the Full Committee made it clear 
when he was asking those questions that you are looking at a 
10-12 percent request, and in some cases more. If we give you 
the cost-of-living increase, nothing more, nothing less, are we 
cutting you or in fact are we base-lining you? In light of a $2 
trillion deficit, do you think you have no reason to try to 
find ways to spend less to do your job than every other part of 
government? Is that a fair question?
    Judge St. Eve. We are very cost-conscious and these--
    Mr. Issa. No, no. Really, judge, I have loved your 
testimony, but lets be--this is now straight budget. The court 
system has the same pressures we have, which is how do we in 
fact stop a government that is taking more tax revenue in 
constant dollars from the American people than we ever have 
before and still spending $2 trillion more than we take in? Do 
you believe that the court should participate to the greatest 
extent possible in finding those cost savings?
    Judge St. Eve. The court is very aware we are spending 
taxpayer dollars, and we do have a Full Subcommittee of the 
Budget Committee that looks for cost-containment measures. We 
are looking at ways in space because our space budget is $1.2 
million.
    Mr. Issa. OK. I will take that as a yes, you agree that you 
should be.
    Judge St. Eve. OK.
    Mr. Issa. I asked you earlier about whether consolidating 
the various different services would help. I would like you to 
take that back for the record that in fact having three 
different sets of bureaucracy, if you will, for security, in 
addition to other subsets of your security budget, whether some 
form of consolidation would eliminate some of the 
administrative people. As the Chair said, ``we have got $677 or 
so Federal judges and plus senior status.'' The question is: 
Are there overheads that can be cut while still fully 
empowering those judges?
    Today included cybersecurity, but I would be remiss if I 
didn't ask a rhetorical question. It is an important one; it is 
a perennial one. If we took the money from PACER instead of it 
being, for better or worse, a slush fund of the court, would 
you be championing, along with the gentlelady from California, 
that this should be a free service?
    In light of the fact that as Washingtonians at times every 
one of our museums is free to the entire public, and yet we 
charge to get the results of what is in fact a public record, 
the record of the court. Is it fair to say that one of the 
things that we should be looking at is the question of whether 
in a modern day recorded information, which is part of the 
overhead of government--we have no choice but to record it when 
the cost of delivering it has become less and less and more de 
minimis, whether or not we should be charging at all, and 
certainly whether we should be charging a tax that makes it a 
profit center for the courts?
    Judge Scudder. Yes, Mr. Chair, thank you for the 
observations and the question. As you know, Congress has 
considered this before and there has been quite a robust dialog 
between the Branches on this.
    Mr. Issa. Yes, the Chief Justice chews me out every time we 
talk about it.
    Judge Scudder. I will leave that to him. If Congress here 
is to make the choice to make all documents for everybody free, 
so to speak, it is not free in this sense. We the judiciary, we 
still have to maintain those systems, operate them, and secure 
them. There would need to be some alternative source of funding 
from somewhere to allow us to do that.
    Mr. Issa. You would agree that the fact that the budget 
doesn't take a hit on the maintenance of PACER because it is a 
revenue source? How much did you receive last year in 
discretionary funds as a result of PACER?
    Judge Scudder. I don't know the answer to that off the top 
of my head.
    Mr. Issa. It had a surplus which was spent on other things?
    Judge Scudder. Yes, all that money, as you know, is 
governed by statute. It is electronic public access funds and 
we invest it right back in the system to maintain it and to 
upgrade it, respecting the legal limits of it.
    Judge St. Eve. We can't take those PACER funds and use 
them, for example, for something in salaries and expenses, or 
defenders. It is governed by statute what we could use those 
funds for. A chunk of it goes back into maintaining and--
    [Simultaneous speaking.]
    Mr. Issa. I have always heard about the chunk that goes 
back in, but I asked that question because, Judge Scudder, we 
are talking about cybersecurity. We are talking about PACER 
having been part of the leak of cybersecurity. I asked the 
question of does it have surpluses, if the clear intent of 
Congress has been that you have discretion, but you have 
discretion based on the assumption that it is a reinvestment in 
the system, then when you ask for more money to modernize 
cybersecurity and when you opine that you don't have enough, 
should we be--is it fair for us to scrutinize where you have 
spent that money for the last decade and why the system is not 
more modern since it does charge its own fees?
    Judge Scudder. Yes, I see here this is approximate, but in 
fiscal 2024 we received about $100--call it $150 million, $145-
$150 million in PACER receipts, that way. That is money that we 
absolutely today rely and depend on to maintain and operate and 
to provide the access that you are recognizing. If it were to 
dry up in whole or in part, we would absolutely need Congress' 
support with some stream of funding to be able to maintain that 
system so as to provide the public good that you are 
recognizing.
    Mr. Issa. Well, and I am not per se saying I want to make 
it free, although it is free to a lot of the users pursuant to 
the will of Congress in various ways. I asked the question 
because it will not surprise you that I have had more than a 
few of the prime vendors to government say if you gave us that 
much money and told us we had to immediately upgrade the system 
and then maintain it, we could do it on moneys similar to what 
you spend. There are competing factors who have said you are 
maintaining a system, but you are maintaining it in the arcane 
old way. There are better ways to maintain it and ways to 
modernize it.
    Judge Scudder, the question I have for you is, would you 
consider the question of could we leap forward to a system that 
was substantially immediately at a best-practices level if 
Congress could give you the authority to essentially contract 
and pay forward over a long period of time?
    Obviously, a long-term contract does require a commitment 
to the funding. That is something that is within the power of 
this Committee to give you the ability to have a 20-year 
contract, or whatever is appropriate with a requirement that 
they meet those and future practices. Would that be empowering 
to you since that is the reason for this hearing today?
    Judge Scudder. Yes, Mr. Chair, the effort to modernize and 
better secure our case management system is a huge priority 
right now and an intense one. You recognize that with your 
question. It absolutely requires resources. We very much depend 
on Congress for that. Getting about the replacement of our 
current system and getting a modern secure one that move 
quickly and draws on outside expertise to achieve that, we 
absolutely share that objective.
    Mr. Issa. Good. Well, I think the Ranking Member and I will 
undoubtedly be talking about this.
    Earlier when Mr. Swalwell referred to--and I am trying to 
wrap this up as quickly as possible--referred to his MARSHALS 
Act. I want to make sure for the record that you know that I 
took it seriously that although, at least from this Chair, I am 
considering in a sense the opposite. I am considering spinning 
off the Marshals to DOJ and then consolidating all your other 
needs and giving the budget to do it.
    I do find an ambiguity between the role of Wyatt Earp, if 
you will, and the other historic marshals, and many of the 
things that happened. Now, that doesn't mean that the marshal 
you trust today would not be transferred to your direct control 
and would somehow disappear. I believe the Marshals Service has 
sort of a two-third or one-third role. We need to ask the 
question: Would it be more efficient to hold DOJ responsible 
for their portion, hold you responsible for yours, and break 
down the budget in that way?
    I have already, because of Mr. Swalwell's suggestion, 
spoken to the Chair and Subcommittee Chair of the conflicting 
appropriations to see if, in fact, they have a problem with it. 
It indicated they didn't. I want to make sure you understand we 
are taking it seriously. Mr. Swalwell came here to make that 
clear. At least from my vantage point he makes a good point.
    It may not be done the way he anticipated, but I hope you 
come back after consultation and ask the question if can we do 
better with the three separate forms of security to give a 
single point of accountability to the process. The answer you 
will give us will be yes.
    I would recognize the gentlelady if she has a question.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. I do not have a question, Mr. Chair, but 
I did want to enter a few things into the record.
    Mr. Issa. I see you have your Constitution--
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. Yes, sir.
    Mr. Issa. --which without objection, the entire 
Constitution will be placed in the record.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. Thank you.
    Well, I am just going to share a little portion of it 
because I don't want people to think that I said that the 
Constitution is talking about funding. I did want to enter the 
record the Sixth Amendment, which does say that in all criminal 
prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and 
public trial by an impartial jury of the State. Of course, then 
the sentence goes on and on.
    So, yes, the Constitution does say that you have a right to 
a speedy trial for criminal prosecutions. In order to have a 
trial you do need a defense attorney of some kind.
    I would also like to enter into the record, asking 
unanimous consent of course, Mr. Chair, this Supreme Court 
decision in 1963, Gideon v. Wainwright, which established the 
right to an appointed counsel. OK? That is why in 1964 we had 
the Criminal Justice Act.
    Then, because I know lawyers like to read, I want to enter 
into the record an article, a third thing. ``Federal Defender 
Services: Serving the System or the Client?''
    Mr. Issa. Without objection, all will be placed into the 
record.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. Thank you, sir. This article actually 
shares the history of how all of this came about. Because prior 
to 1965--
    Mr. Issa. Without objection, the gentlelady may enter all 
of her comments in the record, too.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. Yes. Thank you. Federal cases. The right 
to counsel for those financially unable to retain counsel was 
the general responsibility of the bar and courts would often 
appoint unwilling or inexperienced lawyers without compensation 
for services or necessary expenses.
    To just close, to get public defender services the 
defendant must first submit and have approved a financial 
affidavit. I want all those things in the record as we are 
talking about--
    [Simultaneous speaking.]
    Mr. Issa. Without objection.
    Ms. Kamlager-Dove. --defender services, to talk about why 
it is so important. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Mr. Issa. I thank all our folks today and the witnesses.
    Then, I will go to my favorite--second most favorite part 
of this, which is: This concludes today's hearing. We thank our 
witnesses for appearing before the Subcommittee. We ask that 
each of you, if you will agree, to receive additional questions 
for the record. Feel free to provide extensions of your answers 
for the record. We would ask that both be done within five 
legislative days which I will tell you will be after the Fourth 
of July based on our calendar.
    Without objection, all Members will have those five 
legislative days to submit written questions of witnesses and 
additional materials for the record.
    Without objection, this hearing stands adjourned.
    [Whereupon, at 12 p.m., the Subcommittee was adjourned.]

    All materials submitted for the record by Members of the 
Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the Internet 
can
be found at: https://docs.house.gov/Committee/Calendar/ByEvent 
.aspx?EventID=118401.