Protesters pass Chief Justice John Roberts house on June 8, 2022 in Chevy Chase, Maryland.Photo: Nathan Howard/Getty

Less than two weeks after the Supreme Court announced their decision tooverturnRoe v. Wade, SCOTUS Marshal Gail Curley is asking state governors to step in and stop the picketing outside of justices' homes.
Curley sent letters to officials in Maryland and Virginia over the weekend calling on them to “enforce” state and local laws that “prohibit picketing outside of the homes of Supreme Court Justices,“NPRreported.
In a letter to Virginia Gov.Glenn Youngkin, Curley referred to one instance “earlier this week” where “at least 30 protesters gathered outside one Justice’s Fairfax County home chanting expletives, and dozens appeared outside another’s Fairfax County home chanting ‘no privacy for us, no peace for you,'“Bloombergreported.
Elsewhere in the letter she wrote, “for weeks on end, large groups of protesters chanting slogans, using bullhorns, and banging drums have picketed Justices’ homes in Virginia,” according to NPR. “This is exactly the kind of conduct that Virginia law prohibits.”
Curley sent letters with similar language to other Maryland and Virginia officials, including Maryland Gov.Larry Hogan, according to NPR.
In one instance,ABCreported, Curley highlighted a Maryland law which states a “person may not intentionally assemble with another in a manner that disrupts a person’s right to tranquility in the person’s home.”
Demonstrators outside the home of Justice Clarence Thomas in Fairfax, Virginia.ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP via Getty

She also referenced a Montgomery County law that says a “person or group of persons must not picket in front of or adjacent to any private residence,” the outlet continued.
According to ABC, Curley said there has been an uptick in demonstrations outside of justices' homes since the draft opinion overturningRoe v. Wadewas leaked to the public in May.
In response to the letters, Hogan’s director of communications, Michael Ricci, shareda statementon Twitter Saturday saying both governors have been trying to enforce these laws for months.
“Two months ago, Governor Hogan and Governor Youngkin sent a letter calling on Attorney General Garland to enforce the clear and unambiguous federal statutes on the books that prohibit picketing at judge’s residences,” the statement begins.
He wrote that a month later, after anarmed man was arrestednear Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s home, “the Department of Justice finally responded, declining to enforce the laws.”
Tasos Katopodis/Getty

Ricci said that Curley’s latest letters contain “conflicting information.”
He continued that throughout the back and forth, Maryland’s “state and local law enforcement have been on the front lines every day protecting these communities.”
source: people.com