06/05/2026
Professor Emeritus Arthur Hellman, a nationally recognized scholar of federal courts, was recently quoted on judicial ethics, recusal standards, and public confidence in the judiciary.
Discussing questions surrounding judicial impartiality and recusal obligations, Hellman emphasized the importance of transparency and public trust in the courts:
“These are some difficult questions, and many of them would have been much easier if the council had officially identified the judge.”
Litigants could seize on openings to ask a Georgia federal judge to take herself off certain political cases, after she was found to have improperly had an affair with a police officer in chambers and attended a political event.