Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito remained tightlipped about the court’s Roe v. Wade leak in a public address on May 12 even as pro-abortion demonstrators held protests across the country over the potential strike-down of the 1973 judgment.
“This is a subject I told myself I wasn’t going to talk about today regarding, you know—given all the circumstances,” Alito said. “The court right now, we had our conference this morning, we’re doing our work. We’re taking new cases. We’re headed toward the end of the term, which is always a frenetic time as we get our opinions out.”
Since then, pro-abortion protesters have targeted the homes of Supreme Court justices Roberts, Alito, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett. On May 9, protesters shouted expletives outside Alito’s home. However, no violence was triggered according to Second Lt. James Curry, a spokesman for the Fairfax County Police Department.
During the May 12 event at the Antonin Scalia Law School, around two dozen protesters gathered outside the campus plaza near the law school building and chanted slogans like “Hey hey, ho ho, Alito has got to go! Hey hey, ho ho, we must defend Roe.”
The protesters consisted mainly of students from the university, with some denouncing the institution’s decision to host Alito. Pro-life activists were also at the site, with one person holding a megaphone and shouting “Abortion is violence! Abortion is oppression!”
During the Jan. 6, 2021, protests, Democrats and the corporate media called the demonstrators “insurrectionists,” he noted. “And yet in this instance, they are not willing to call off their goons even now, even now as this has the potential to escalate and escalate further.”
“These images are the latest manifestation of just how extreme, just how radical, the Democratic Party is getting,” Cruz said.