Anonymous wrote:The fact that he carried the debt on multiple cards for so many years and then it was just somehow magically paid off is VERY SUSPICIOUS.
Coupled with the explanation that he went into debt for baseball tickets, and borrowed from this 401k...well, something is not making sense. Unless "baseball" is a euphemism for "gambling".
Anonymous wrote:Look, I very much dislike Kavanaugh's politics (as an aside let's please dispense with the notion that judges aren't political), but this kind of personal finance mismanagement (while personally embarrassing and really kind of pathetic) in no way affects his qualification or character to sit on the bench. The people talking about bar discipline for character & fitness or security clearances are a bit much.
That said, it is really pathetic for a 50+ year old with these incomes to have such poor finances. Funny that the conservative "old soul" (as I've seen him described in the press) is really stretched so thin on credit card debt and very little savings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The baseball ticket explanation doesn't make sense to me as the whole story. We're not talking about a single card that had $50k in debt on it; if we were, it would be plausible to me that he and some friends went in on a season's pair of presidents box seats and they paid him back. He had debt spread over three different credit cards, and maybe he did spread a single purchase over three cards because his limits were too low, but when you have balances like that on multiple cards, more typically that's debt from a lot of different things piling up on the cards because you're spending more than you can afford every month.
Every year since 2006 he's filed a financial disclosure and he's had approximately the same level of unsecured debt on 3-4 credit cards (tens of thousands of dollars) and a TSP loan of between $15,000 - $50,000
https://www.judicialwatch.org/document-archive/tag/brett-m-kavanaugh/
In 2016, the level of debt on each credit card went into the $15,000 - 50,000 range. https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/4578103-Kavanaugh-BM-J3-DC-R-16.html
Then, all of sudden, a year later, for the first time in his whole history of filing financial disclosures, he had ZERO credit card debt in 2017.
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/4578093-Kavanaugh-BM-J3-DC-R-17.html
Hmmm....
Anonymous wrote:The baseball ticket explanation doesn't make sense to me as the whole story. We're not talking about a single card that had $50k in debt on it; if we were, it would be plausible to me that he and some friends went in on a season's pair of presidents box seats and they paid him back. He had debt spread over three different credit cards, and maybe he did spread a single purchase over three cards because his limits were too low, but when you have balances like that on multiple cards, more typically that's debt from a lot of different things piling up on the cards because you're spending more than you can afford every month.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We spend about 3K/year on really awesome Nats tickets. We are part of a group that spends a much bigger dollar amount in total. Someone puts that whole amount on a credit card and that gets paid back. I doubt he ultimately paid more than a few thousand for his own tickets.
Federal financial reporting for judges I suspect is a lot like reporting for SES level employees. You report your debt at a given point in time and it is in ranges. It is how much you owed that month. The debt could be $60K or it could be $200K, we do not know. And we do not know the amount or what the TSP loan was for.
FWIW, I am a long time fed, 53 years old with twice as much in my TSP (as does my DH) and a $350K HHI. We do not have kids in private.
He is not a financial genius, nor is he an idiot. This is what UMC living is like in DC for many.
UMC living in DC is taking TSP (401K) loans out for Nats tickets? No, no it's not.
That's idiocy.
Again, we do not know what the TSP loan was for and the tickets were season tickets bought as a group, so he was reimbursed probably for 90% of them.
I am a dem and not a fan of him as a new SCOTUS Justice, but this is not as big a deal as people are making it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We spend about 3K/year on really awesome Nats tickets. We are part of a group that spends a much bigger dollar amount in total. Someone puts that whole amount on a credit card and that gets paid back. I doubt he ultimately paid more than a few thousand for his own tickets.
Federal financial reporting for judges I suspect is a lot like reporting for SES level employees. You report your debt at a given point in time and it is in ranges. It is how much you owed that month. The debt could be $60K or it could be $200K, we do not know. And we do not know the amount or what the TSP loan was for.
FWIW, I am a long time fed, 53 years old with twice as much in my TSP (as does my DH) and a $350K HHI. We do not have kids in private.
He is not a financial genius, nor is he an idiot. This is what UMC living is like in DC for many.
UMC living in DC is taking TSP (401K) loans out for Nats tickets? No, no it's not.
That's idiocy.
Anonymous wrote:We spend about 3K/year on really awesome Nats tickets. We are part of a group that spends a much bigger dollar amount in total. Someone puts that whole amount on a credit card and that gets paid back. I doubt he ultimately paid more than a few thousand for his own tickets.
Federal financial reporting for judges I suspect is a lot like reporting for SES level employees. You report your debt at a given point in time and it is in ranges. It is how much you owed that month. The debt could be $60K or it could be $200K, we do not know. And we do not know the amount or what the TSP loan was for.
FWIW, I am a long time fed, 53 years old with twice as much in my TSP (as does my DH) and a $350K HHI. We do not have kids in private.
He is not a financial genius, nor is he an idiot. This is what UMC living is like in DC for many.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people keep talking like he spent his entire career in public service? The guy was a Kirkland & Ellis partner for crying out loud.
i don't think he was ever a K&E equity partner. big law associate salaries were not high in the 90s - starting salaries were WELL under 6 figures. They didn't start getting astronomical until 2000 - when one of the silicon valley firms raised salaries, and the other big law firms jumped in and started a wave of salary increases. so it sounds like he was only there for a short while before the gravy train salaries began.
It looks like he was at Kirkland from around 98-2001. He’s a 1990 grad I think so he was likely hired out of the govt as a non equity partner bc KE has a 3 year non equity track but he left within 3 yrs and joined the Bush administration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even as an appeals court judge, he never would retire so didn’t really need retirement savings except to support his wife after he is gone. But I would never be that far in debt on credit cards. We pay off every month. Unless he was buying a big block of tickets for friends and waiting for them to pay him back, it’s stupid to buy tickets you don’t have cash for.
I sort of assumed he had family money—what did his dad do?
None of us can count on that. Senility, dementia, chronic disease - it is downright stupid to forgo retirement savings based on "never retiring."
I am boggled that anyone with his education would be so stupid. It tells us that he has terrible, terrible judgment.
None of those things will remove you from the bench. There are plenty of senile and very infirm senior status judges who still get paid. They get good clerks who push out the work and, if they are appellate judges, sit on panels where their colleagues cover for them. If I was guaranteed to be paid six figures until the day I dropped dead, regardless of how much work I did, I might also blow my retirement on fun stuff.
Have you ever cared for someone with Alzheimer’s, or significant dementia? Some people forget how to speak, do not recognize anyone, do not know/remember how to swallow.
My mother lived like this for years.
Have you ever spent time with a person with ALS? Or Parkinson’s? People in advanced stages of these diseases can barely handle the activities of daily living, much less a job. Of any kind. No matter how much support was built in.
There is absolutely no way that someone with that degree of infirmity could work. No way.
Typically, Alzheimer's is a very long, slow road. So there is quite a long time in many cases between forgetting and not being functional able to care for oneself. But sadly, I agree with the poster that you are responding to -- there are some judges with fairly serious memory issues sitting on the bench.