
Aileen Cannon (February 1, 1981)
I haven’t tried to raise her birth chart previously, because no reputable online sites have ever listed her birth date. Judge Aileen Cannon seems to be a mysterious individual to most legal pundits, but the website Medium seemingly got hold of her birth details and raised a chart for 12 noon.

Well, I’ve gone one step further and randomized her birth time, just to see what comes out in the wash.
The 7th House (of Open Enemies) is in Libra, the sign of justice and judgement. Jupiter and Saturn are conjunct there, which is also a sign of balance between Others and Oneself.
Jupiter Conjunct Saturn
Throughout your life you will make plans and try to organize your affairs with care and discipline. You do not want to go too far too fast, and you want to have a structure that will regulate your life and keep it moving forward in the best possible manner. However, the discipline structure that you adopt must not keep you from growing, because you will develop a strong sense of objectives early in life, and you will rebel against anything that interferes with your progress toward your goals. When your life is working well, you can do everything carefully and in an orderly manner. When you take up a task, you follow it through systematically and thoroughly. You can stick to a job longer than most others, and you can keep track of many details at once.
I didn’t think it would be that obvious, but the Jupiter/Saturn conjunction echoes the life of Jesus, who, when faced with having to judge another, chose not to. His Jupiter/Saturn conjunction was in Pisces.
The Pluto in Libra (in the 7th House) in her chart is timed for about 39 years, when she was appointed to the US District Court of the Southern District of Florida on November 2020, by Donald Trump. Did he know that he would need her help in the future? I think so, but let’s say, for brevity’s sake, that he made a lucky appointment. She is now on the hot seat of his Mar-a-Lago secret documents case.
Her predicament seems to be straight out of the plot of 1947’s “Miracle on 34th Street”. Like Judge Baxter in the film, she has to walk a fine line between saying out loud what everyone believes to be true and what is most politically expedient for her career trajectory. In other words, she is caught between a rock (Saturn) and a hard place (Jupiter).
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