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Sotomayor and Bad Bunny? Takeaways from Supreme Court financial disclosures

Washington Examiner Published Jun 29, 2026 Reviewed Jun 30, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
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Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson received a $1.18 million book advance from Penguin Random House.
1180000 USD · book advance
Ketanji Brown Jackson, Supreme Court Justice
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Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson reported receiving a painting of herself valued at $2,500.
2500 USD · painting
Ketanji Brown Jackson, Supreme Court Justice
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Justice Samuel Alito requested a deadline extension for the 15th consecutive year.
15 · consecutive deadline extensions
Samuel Alito, Supreme Court Justice
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Justice Sonia Sotomayor received $598 from the Coterie Theater for travel to a musical opening night.
598 USD · gift from Coterie Theater
Sonia Sotomayor, Supreme Court Justice
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Justice Brett Kavanaugh earned $33,285 teaching at the University of Notre Dame Law School.
33285 USD · teaching compensation
Brett Kavanaugh, Associate Justice
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Justice Amy Coney Barrett earned $33,285 teaching at the University of Notre Dame Law School.
33285 USD · teaching compensation
Amy Coney Barrett, Associate Justice
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Justice Sonia Sotomayor received the 2025 Brandeis Medal valued at $822.
822 USD · medal value
Sonia Sotomayor, Supreme Court Justice
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Justice Neil Gorsuch received a wooden bowl priced at $450 that he did not disclose.
450 USD · wooden bowl
Neil Gorsuch, Associate Justice
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Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was awarded the Spirit of America Award medal valued at $193, which she did not disclose.
193 USD · medal value
Ketanji Brown Jackson, Supreme Court Justice
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Justice Sonia Sotomayor received the Powell Distinguished Leadership Award valued at $344.
344 USD · award value
Sonia Sotomayor, Supreme Court Justice
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Justice Sonia Sotomayor received the Lifetime Liberty Achievement Award valued at $359.
359 USD · trophy value
Sonia Sotomayor, Supreme Court Justice
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Justice Samuel Alito requested a deadline extension for his annual financial disclosure for the 15th consecutive year.
15 year · consecutive deadline extension
Justice Samuel Alito, Justice
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Justice Sonia Sotomayor accepted free concert tickets for herself and guests valued at $4,333 from Rimas Entertainment.
4333 USD · value of concert tickets
Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Justice
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Justice Sonia Sotomayor stated in her disclosure's appendix that Rimas Entertainment provided tickets for a concert for her and guests during a private trip to Puerto Rico in August 2025.
2025 year · trip to Puerto Rico
Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Justice
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Justice Sonia Sotomayor reported receiving $598 from the Coterie Theater in Kansas City, Missouri, for travel funds.
598 USD · travel funds
Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Justice
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Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson received a $1.18 million book advance from Penguin Random House.
1180000 USD · book advance
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, Justice
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Ketanji Brown Jackson made more than $2 million in 2024 from Penguin Random House book advances.
more than 2000000 USD · book advances
Ketanji Brown Jackson, Justice
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Chief Justice John Roberts earned $25,000 for teaching at New England Law.
25000 USD · income from teaching
Chief Justice John Roberts, Chief Justice
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Associate Justice Clarence Thomas earned $18,000 teaching at Catholic University’s Columbus School of Law.
18000 USD · income from teaching
Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, Associate Justice
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Justice Neil Gorsuch made about $30,000 teaching a summer abroad program in Prague for George Mason University.
about 30000 USD · income from teaching
Neil Gorsuch, Justice
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Justice Brett Kavanaugh earned $33,285 teaching at the University of Notre Dame’s Law School.
33285 USD · income from teaching
Brett Kavanaugh, Justice
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Justice Sotomayor received the 2025 Brandeis Medal from the University of Louisville, valued at $822, according to a vendor receipt obtained by Louisville Public Media.
2025 year · Brandeis Medal award year822 USD · value of Brandeis Medal
Louisville Public Media, news organization
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Donors told Fix the Court that Justice Sotomayor received the Powell Distinguished Leadership Award from the City University of New York, with the plaque and medallion costing $344, and the Tort Trial and Insurance Practice Section’s Lifetime Liberty Achievement Award, a $359 glass trophy.
344 USD · cost of Powell Distinguished Leadership Award plaque and medallion359 USD · cost of Lifetime Liberty Achievement Award glass trophy
donors
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Last year, the Supreme Court justices received free concert tickets, money tied to lucrative book deals, and supplemental income from teaching jobs, according to a Washington Examiner review of the high court’s 2025 financial disclosure reports released on Monday.

All but Justice Samuel Alito, who requested a deadline extension for the 15th consecutive year, filed their annual disclosures on time.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor accepted free concert tickets for herself and guests valued at $4,333 from Rimas Entertainment, the record label representing Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny.

Sources told Puerto Rican journalist Jay Fonseca last year that Sotomayor would be attending Bad Bunny’s sold-out summer concert series in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

“It’s an excellent initiative by both Bad Bunny and the company he runs with his business partners,” said a guest appearing on Fonseca’s podcast, according to an English translation. “I think that even if you aren’t a fan of Justice Sotomayor, it’s an excellent opportunity, an honor, and a privilege to have her attend a concert of that magnitude.”

The podcast guest celebrated Sotomayor’s Puerto Rican roots, praising that a figure of “national importance, regardless of what anyone says, decided to share her time here at a concert in Puerto Rico that many Puerto Ricans enjoy.”

Sotomayor’s attendance was not widely reported at the time in the U.S., nor did she publicly announce her appearance.

It is unclear why Sotomayor did not specify that the tickets, simply listed as a gift of Rimas Entertainment on her disclosure form, were to see Bad Bunny in concert. Sotomayor wrote in the disclosure’s appendix, “Rimas Entertainment is a record company, which provided tickets for a concert for me and guests while I was on a private trip to Puerto Rico in August 2025.

In contrast, Sotomayor reported in an entry directly below the vague ticket listing that she was given $598 from the Coterie Theater in Kansas City, Missouri, and explicitly stated in the gift’s description that the travel funds were so that Sotomayor could attend the opening night of Just Ask! Be Different, Be Brave, Be You, the musical adaptation of her children’s book.

Bad Bunny, a vocal critic of President Donald Trump’s immigration policies, generated controversy in the lead-up to his Spanish-only performance at the Super Bowl halftime show this year. Conservatives argued that Bad Bunny intended to stir anti-American sentiments over the Trump administration’s mass deportation operations, while supporters saw Bad Bunny’s appearance as a form of “resistance to U.S. imperialism.”

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson received a $1.18 million book advance from Penguin Random House, paid through KayPac LLC, a private company created by her husband, Dr. Patrick Jackson.

District of Columbia business registration records list Jackson as the “beneficial owner” of KayPac, which is used to manage the justice’s book-derived payments.

Dr. Patrick Jackson, a prominent gastrointestinal surgeon at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital, also operates a side business as a medical-legal consultant offering expert witness testimony in court proceedings for a fee. It is unknown whether KayPac was established to process earnings from his expert-witness services.

Ketanji Brown Jackson made more than $2 million in 2024 from Penguin Random House book advances paid through KayPac.

Signing bonuses for a book contract are typically paid in installments, rather than in one lump sum upfront. Jackson’s memoir, Lovely One, was published by Penguin Random House in 2024 and became a New York Times bestseller.

Jackson surpassed Sotomayor as the most-compensated author of all the current justices who have written books, with 2025’s million-dollar haul bringing her overall book payments to a total of $4.14 million, compared to Sotomayor’s $4.06 million.

The only gift that Jackson reported receiving was a painting of herself valued at $2,500.

Five justices supplemented their income through teaching.

Chief Justice John Roberts took home $25,000 in pay for teaching at New England Law. Associate Justices Clarence Thomas earned $18,000 teaching at Catholic University’s Columbus School of Law, Neil Gorsuch made about $30,000 teaching a summer abroad program in Prague for George Mason University. Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett both taught at the University of Notre Dame’s Law School, each earning $33,285. None of the justices exceeded the statutory maximum of $33,855 for income earned from outside employment.

Several justices reportedly failed to disclose gifts and awards given to them in 2025.

Among them, Sotomayor received the 2025 Brandeis Medal from the University of Louisville, according to a copy of the vendor receipt obtained by Louisville Public Media, which shows the award was worth $822. She also received the Powell Distinguished Leadership Award from the City University of New York, with the plaque and medallion costing $344, and the Tort Trial and Insurance Practice Section’s Lifetime Liberty Achievement Award, a $359 glass trophy, donors told Fix the Court.

Gorsuch reportedly received but did not report a wooden bowl priced at $450 from the Yakima Valley Museum to the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts.

Jackson was bestowed the Spirit of America Award by the National Council for the Social Studies, but reportedly did not disclose the $193 medal.

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