KEY POINTS
  • More than 1,000 federal judges have asked the U.S. Courts system for help removing personally identifiable information from the internet.
  • The program was adopted in response to the 2020 murder of the son of a New Jersey judge at their house.
  • The U.S. Marshals Service says that there were more than 4,500 threats or inappropriate communications against judges and other court personnel in 2021, a four-fold increase since 2015.
  • In June, an armed California man was arrested outside the Maryland home of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, whom he allegedly planned to kill over an expected abortion ruling.
Television news microphones outside the Thurgood Marshall federal courthouse in New York, U.S., on Tuesday, Dec. 28, 2021.

More than 1,000 federal judges have asked the U.S. Courts system for help removing personally identifiable information from the internet under a program implemented after a New Jersey judge's son was murdered at their house.

That is nearly one-third of the active and retired federal judges eligible for the program, a spokesman for the U.S. Courts system told CNBC on Friday. The response to the online scrubbing program was detailed in the agency's annual report, released Thursday.