SUPREME COURT NOTEBOOK: From bananas to baby socks, lawyers stick to routines before arguments

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SUPREME COURT NOTEBOOK: From bananas to baby socks, lawyers stick to routines before arguments
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Lawyers at the Supreme Court have some occasionally eccentric rituals

lawyer eats a bunch of bananas. Other advocates play music to psych themselves up. Some rub the feet on John Marshall’s statue a floor below the courtroom.. So it’s no surprise that the lawyers have a few regular, if occasionally eccentric, observances of their own.

“If you can explain your argument to a kid, it helps you focus on what’s important,” said Katyal, who served as the Obama administration’s top Supreme Court lawyer for a time., who holds the same job for President Joe Biden, also has talked in recent appearances about using her children as a sounding board before her frequent arguments at the nation’s highest court.

They were just a few weeks old when Srinivasan, then a Justice Department lawyer, made his first high court presentation in November 2002. Srinivasan is now the chief judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. When Jeffrey Fisher spent a year as a law clerk to Justice John Paul Stevens 25 years ago, he commuted to work on Washington’s subway. He has generally traveled to the court the same way for his 45 arguments since then because it feels so familiar, even after one heart-stopping journey.

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