Clerk memoir recounts Justice Goldberg's alleged ethical incidents and a rejected gift from Louis Wolfson
Clerk memoir recounts Justice Goldberg's alleged ethical incidents and a rejected gift from Louis Wolfson The passage provides anecdotal recollections with no verifiable documents, specific transactions, or new allegations against high‑profile officials. It repeats known historical themes (e.g., Louis Wolfson’s offer to Justice Fortas) but adds no actionable leads, dates, or evidence of wrongdoing by Justice Goldberg. Consequently, its investigative usefulness is minimal, controversy low, and novelty limited. Key insights: Justice Goldberg allegedly rejected a financial‑sacrifice foundation offer from Louis Wolfson.; Goldberg returned a fruit basket allegedly from Washington Post publisher Katherine Graham during New York Times v. Sullivan.; Clerk describes personal anecdotes about Goldberg’s religious observance and a mistaken phone call with a mohel.
Summary
Clerk memoir recounts Justice Goldberg's alleged ethical incidents and a rejected gift from Louis Wolfson The passage provides anecdotal recollections with no verifiable documents, specific transactions, or new allegations against high‑profile officials. It repeats known historical themes (e.g., Louis Wolfson’s offer to Justice Fortas) but adds no actionable leads, dates, or evidence of wrongdoing by Justice Goldberg. Consequently, its investigative usefulness is minimal, controversy low, and novelty limited. Key insights: Justice Goldberg allegedly rejected a financial‑sacrifice foundation offer from Louis Wolfson.; Goldberg returned a fruit basket allegedly from Washington Post publisher Katherine Graham during New York Times v. Sullivan.; Clerk describes personal anecdotes about Goldberg’s religious observance and a mistaken phone call with a mohel.
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