Supreme Court Justices have taken an oath to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution and the justices in these cases who ruled against the plaintiffs should be posthumously impeached
Dred Scott v Standford Decision
Decision. On March 6, 1857, the Justices of the Supreme Court ruled 7–2 in favor of Sandford. In the opinion authored by Chief Justice Roger Taney, it was found that Negroes could not be United States citizens and therefore could not bring suits to the Supreme Court.
Majority Opinion 7 to 2
Plessy v Ferguson Decision
A case in which the Court held that state-mandated segregation laws did not violate the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Majority Opinion 7 to 1
Koramatsu v United States Decision
On December 18, 1944, a divided Supreme Court ruled, in a 6-3 decision, that the detention was a “military necessity” not based on race. Reopening the Case.
Majority Opinion 6 to 3
A Congressional Resolutopn should acknowlege that the Justices that rules against Dred Scott, Homer Plessy and Fred Kormatsi violated their oath of office when thet failed to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution,
Congress should have impeached the following justices for havimg violated their oath to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution. Congress should pass a Resolution acknowledging that the following Justices were operating in bad behavior when they violated their oath.
Roger Taney, Samuel Nelson,Noah Swayne, John Catron, Peter Daniel, Robert Grier, John Campbell
Henry Billings Brown wrote the majority opinion and was joined by Justices Melville Weston Fuller, Stephen Johnson Field, Horace Gray, Rufus Wheeler Peckham, George Shiras, and Edward Douglass White.
Hugo Black issued the majority decision and was joined by Harlan Stone, Stanley Reed, Felix Frankfurter, William Douglas, Wiley Rutledge