Supreme Court of New York In 1990, Pooler was elected as a Justice for the Fifth Judicial District of the
Supreme Court of New York, serving until 1994. She assumed
senior status on March 23, 2022.
Notable dissents Pooler dissented in the 2009 ruling
Arar v. Ashcroft, a case in which
Maher Arar, a Canadian citizen, had been sent to Syria and was tortured there. While the majority found that there was no remedy for Arar, Pooler and three other judges would have granted Arar the
declaratory judgment he was seeking. All four dissenters wrote their own dissenting opinion. In August 2017, Pooler dissented when the court upheld the
insider trading conviction of
Mathew Martoma, in which she argued that the majority was improperly overruling circuit precedent. In June 2018, the majority issued an amended opinion reaching the same result, again over the dissent of Pooler. In an August 2021 case regarding an unwarranted police search of a Black man, Pooler was one of three dissenters who argued that the search violates the
4th Amendment (the other 2 dissenters were
Guido Calabresi and
Denny Chin). Pooler noted that "The victims of police officers’ whims are disproportionately people of color. Black drivers are more likely to be pulled over by police officers than white drivers, and police officers search stopped black and Latino drivers twice as often as stopped white drivers, despite data suggesting searches of these black and Latino drivers are less likely to discover guns, drugs, or other illegal contraband." ==Death==