The court will continue a longstanding tradition today when it hosts a bar memorial to honor the memory of Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, who died on Dec. 1, 2023. For two centuries, going back to “the days of Chief Justice [John] Marshall,” the Supreme Court has held such events.
These memorials consist of “a meeting of the Supreme Court’s Bar, followed by a Special Sitting of the Court.” The bar meeting involves tributes to the justice (typically from former clerks) and ends with the adoption of resolutions that recognize the justice’s life and accomplishments. The Supreme Court Bar then presents these resolutions to the current justices.
The last bar memorials were held in 2023 for Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and 2022 for Justice John Paul Stevens. Elizabeth Prelogar, a former clerk to Ginsburg, opened the bar meeting for Ginsburg in her capacity as the U.S. solicitor general. Prelogar shared some of her favorite memories of Ginsburg, including a moment at the Supreme Court Christmas party when Ginsburg stuck a spoon into the chocolate fountain to eat it “straight.”
As for Stevens’ bar memorial, in addition to the solicitor general and former clerks, Stevens’ granddaughter, Hannah Mullen, offered a tribute to her late grandfather. Mullen explained that she loved her grandfather’s opinions “because they show that he was the same man on the bench and at the coffee table, tenacious and empathetic and observant and funny.” She also recounted that, when she wrote her senior thesis, Stevens read the whole thing and then explained why he thought it was wrong. “I’ve never felt more kinship with Justice Scalia than in that moment,” Mullen joked.
Today’s memorial event for O’Connor is scheduled to begin at 1:45 p.m. EDT in the Upper Great Hall of the Supreme Court Building. The bar meeting will start with remarks from Solicitor General D. John Sauer and will also include tributes from a number of O’Connor’s former clerks, including Chief Judge Sri Srinivasan of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and Judge Richard G. Taranto of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. The meeting is expected to end (as is tradition) with the adoption of a resolution honoring O’Connor’s life.
In-person attendance is by invitation only, but if you would like to watch the bar meeting, it is going to be streamed on the court’s website. Following the meeting, there will be a special session of court at 3 p.m., during which Sauer and Attorney General Pam Bondi are expected to address the justices. The courtroom proceedings are not expected to be live streamed, but if the court continues past practice, then we can expect the audio to be made available online along with the transcripts, resolutions, and a memorial booklet at a later date.


