U.S. Supreme Court

Kindle and iPad Help Kagan and Scalia Read Briefs on the Go

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At least two members of the U.S. Supreme Court are apparently saving some trees by reading briefs with electronic readers.

Justice Antonin Scalia uses an iPad, while Justice Elena Kagan uses a Kindle, C-SPAN reports. The network has posted excerpts of a 48-minute interview with Kagan, her first since she joined the court, the Associated Press reports.

“I have a Kindle that my briefs are on,” Kagan told C-SPAN. “I saw that Justice Scalia said that he had them on an iPad and I thought, huh, maybe I should do it on an iPad. But mine are on a Kindle, and I also of course sometimes truck them around just in hard copy. So I do both. But it is, it’s endless reading. … That’s a big part of the job, and if a Kindle or an iPad can make it easier, that’s terrific.”

Scalia said in a November interview that he sometimes uses an iPad, Above the Law reported at the time.

Hat tip to How Appealing.

Related coverage:

ABAJournal.com: “Do Judges Read Online Briefs Differently? Brief Writers May Need to Be Briefer”

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