Showing posts with label judge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label judge. Show all posts

Friday, April 4, 2014

Judge dismisses lawsuit over drone strikes







FILE – In this image taken from video and released by SITE Intelligence Group on Monday, Nov. 8, 2010, Anwar al-Awlaki speaks in a video message posted on radical websites. On Friday, April 4, 2014, U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer dismissed a lawsuit against Obama administration officials for the 2011 drone-strike killings of three U.S. citizens in Yemen, including U.S.-born al-Qaida leader al-Awlaki. Collyer said the case raises serious constitutional issues and is not easy to answer, but that “on these facts and under this circuit’s precedent,” the court will grant the Obama administration’s request. (AP Photo/SITE Intelligence Group, File) NO SALES, MANDATORY CREDIT





FILE – In this image taken from video and released by SITE Intelligence Group on Monday, Nov. 8, 2010, Anwar al-Awlaki speaks in a video message posted on radical websites. On Friday, April 4, 2014, U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer dismissed a lawsuit against Obama administration officials for the 2011 drone-strike killings of three U.S. citizens in Yemen, including U.S.-born al-Qaida leader al-Awlaki. Collyer said the case raises serious constitutional issues and is not easy to answer, but that “on these facts and under this circuit’s precedent,” the court will grant the Obama administration’s request. (AP Photo/SITE Intelligence Group, File) NO SALES, MANDATORY CREDIT





In this Thursday, May 1, 2008 photo, U.S. District Judge Rosemary M. Collyer attends a ceremony at the federal courthouse in Washington. On Friday, April 4, 2014, Collyer dismissed a lawsuit against Obama administration officials for the 2011 drone-strike killings of three U.S. citizens in Yemen, including an al-Qaida cleric. Collyer said the case raises serious constitutional issues and is not easy to answer, but that “on these facts and under this circuit’s precedent,” the court will grant the Obama administration’s request. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)













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(AP) — A federal judge on Friday dismissed a lawsuit against Obama administration officials for the 2011 drone-strike killings of three U.S. citizens in Yemen, including an al-Qaida cleric.


U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer said the case raises serious constitutional issues and is not easy to answer, but that “on these facts and under this circuit’s precedent,” the court will grant the Obama administration’s request.


The suit was against then-Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, then-CIA Director David Petraeus and two commanders in the military’s Special Operations forces.


Permitting a lawsuit against individual officials “under the circumstances of this case would impermissibly draw the court into ‘the heart of executive and military planning and deliberation,’” said Collyer. She said the suit would require the court to examine national security policy and the military chain of command as well as operational combat decisions regarding the designation of targets and how best to counter threats to the United States.


“Defendants must be trusted and expected to act in accordance with the U.S. Constitution when they intentionally target a U.S. citizen abroad at the direction of the president and with the concurrence of Congress,” said Collyer. “They cannot be held personally responsible in monetary damages for conducting war.” The lawsuit sought unspecified damages.


At oral arguments last July, the judge challenged the Obama administration’s position repeatedly, pointedly asking “where was the due process in this case?” for the now-dead U.S. citizens targeted in the drone attacks. When an administration lawyer said there were checks in place, including reviews done by the executive branch, Collyer said “No, no, no, no, no,” declaring that “the executive is not an effective check on the executive” when it comes to protecting constitutional rights. But in Friday’s ruling, it was clear that the administration’s arguments had a strong impact on the judge, who was appointed by President George W. Bush.


The government argued that the issue is best left to Congress and the executive branch, not judges, and that courts have recognized that the defense of the nation should be left to those political branches.


Anwar al-Awlaki’s classification as a key leader raises fundamental questions regarding the conduct of armed conflict, Collyer’s 41-page opinion stated. The Constitution commits decision-making in this area to the president, as commander in chief, and to Congress, the judge said.


U.S.-born al-Qaida leader al-Awlaki and Samir Khan, an al-Qaida propagandist, were killed in a drone strike in September 2011. Al-Awlaki’s 16-year-old son, Abdulrahman, was killed the following month.


The lawsuit was filed by Nasser al-Awlaki — Anwar’s father and the teen’s grandfather — and by Sarah Khan, Samir Khan’s mother


Al-Awlaki had been linked to the planning and execution of several attacks targeting U.S. and Western interests, including a 2009 attempt on Christmas Day on a Detroit-bound airliner and a 2010 plot against cargo planes.


“The fact is that Anwar al-Awlaki was an active and exceedingly dangerous enemy of the United States, irrespective of his distance, location, and citizenship,” said Collyer. “As evidenced by his participation in the Christmas Day attack, Anwar al-Awlaki was able to persuade, direct, and wage war against the United States from his location in Yemen, without being present on an official battlefield or in a hot war zone.”


She said that the U.S. government moved against al-Awlaki as authorized by the defendants and she said the officials acted in accordance with the Authorization for Use of Military Force, which was enacted by Congress after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.


Also impacting the outcome was the type of lawsuit, commonly known as a Bivens action, which seeks to hold liable individual officials as opposed to being a legal action against an entity. Bevens actions have a high legal hurdle to meet in order to survive.


“Allowing plaintiffs to bring a Bivens action against defendants would hinder their ability in the future to act decisively and without hesitation in defense of U.S. interests,” Collyer said.


“Although it gave this court pause, a plaintiff’s U.S. citizenship has not affected the analysis of Bivens special factors by the circuit courts,” she added.


“The Supreme Court has never suggested that citizenship matters to a claim under Bivens,” said Collyer’s opinion, quoting from a federal appeals court case.


Associated Press




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Judge dismisses lawsuit over drone strikes

Sunday, March 30, 2014

Judge wants back on bench after being declared legally insane

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Judge wants back on bench after being declared legally insane

Monday, March 17, 2014

‘Sovereign citizen’ fails to persuade judge that medieval laws give him claim to empty homes

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‘Sovereign citizen’ fails to persuade judge that medieval laws give him claim to empty homes

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Texas judge rules man could be tried as adult for crime he committed 13 years ago

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Texas judge rules man could be tried as adult for crime he committed 13 years ago

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Judge Strikes Down Gay Marriage Ban in Texas





(Newser) – Yet another big win for gay marriage: A federal judge declared Texas’ ban unconstitutional today, but left it in place until an appeals court can rule on the case. Judge Orlando Garcia issued the preliminary injunction after two gay couples challenged a state constitutional amendment and a longstanding law. He said the couples are likely to win their case and the ban should be lifted, but said he would give the state time to appeal to the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals before do so.


“Without a rational relation to a legitimate governmental purpose, state-imposed inequality can find no refuge in our United States Constitution,” Garcia wrote. “These Texas laws deny plaintiffs access to the institution of marriage and its numerous rights, privileges, and responsibilities for the sole reason that Plaintiffs wish to be married to a person of the same sex.” The ruling is the latest in a series of victories for gay rights activists following similar decisions in Utah, Oklahoma, and Virginia.







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Copyright 2014 Newser, LLC. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. AP contributed to this report.





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Judge Strikes Down Gay Marriage Ban in Texas

Friday, February 14, 2014

Judge allows clinic to evade consequences of dangerous health violations

CHICAGO, Feb. 11, 2014 /Christian Newswire/ – Today, Thomas More Society attorneys along with Illinois Right to Life issued a women’s public health memorandum demanding the Illinois Attorney General’s office appeal Judge Alexander White’s decision to permit a $ 77 payment to satisfy the Illinois Department of Public Health’s $ 36,000 fine against Women’s Aid Clinic.


According to the women’s public health memo, the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) conducted its first health inspection in 15 years of Women’s Aid Clinic on September 9, 2011. Following the inspection, the IDPH shut down the women’s clinic on an emergency basis, assessing countless sanitary violations. Some of these violations included storing frozen tv dinners in the same biohazard refrigerator as eight containers of fetal tissue. All five recovery rooms contained rust and nearly twenty medication cups with Motrin and Tylenol also had crumbs in them. A technician was observed by inspectors as “retrieving a paper towel from a garbage receptacle and using the same paper towel to cover a tray that would serve food items to patients.” The IDPH inspection report also cited the women’s clinic for failing to perform CPR on a girl who died following an abortion.


“The women of Illinois deserve well-kept and sanitary health centers, not substandard ones,” said Emily Zender, executive director of Illinois Right to Life. “We demand the Illinois Attorney General’s office treat women better by holding this women’s health center fully accountable for abusing their female patients. Failure to appeal the ruling effectively creates get-out-of-jail-free cards that allow health centers to skirt fines by playing Chicago-style politics with women’s health.”


According to the memo, after the IDPH inspection and assessment of fines, Women’s Aid Clinic owner Larisa Rozansky informed the IDPH that “…Women’s Aid Clinic, IDPH LIC. NO. 7001647 will be closing as of November 10, 2011.” However, the memo details evidence that Rozansky closed Women’s Aid Clinic only to promptly open Women’s Aid Center in its place — at the same address, with the same phone number, and using the same website.


“Compelling evidence makes it clear that Women’s Aid Clinic is attempting to duck responsibility for their flagrant disregard for women’s safety simply by making a minor, technical change to their name,” said Jocelyn Floyd, an attorney for the Thomas More Society. “How can the women of this state trust the Illinois Department of Public Health to protect female patients if the consequences for not meeting Illinois’ medical standards are just brushed aside?”


According to the public health memorandum, strongly persuasive evidence was produced to Judge Alexander White that Women’s Aid Clinic changed its name and filed a new business registration to avoid paying the sanitary violation fines. However, the women’s health center’s attempt to skirt the law was ignored and its fine was reduced to $ 77, which was the amount claimed to be remaining in the bank account on the entity.


The Illinois Attorney General has until February 13, 2014, to appeal Judge Alexander’s January 14 ruling that allows a $ 77 payment to suffice for $ 36,000 worth of violations.



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Judge allows clinic to evade consequences of dangerous health violations

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Judge Napolitano: Google Glass App Nametag & What It Means For Privacy

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Judge Napolitano: Google Glass App Nametag & What It Means For Privacy

Judge Who Jailed Ukraine Protesters Shot Dead

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Judge Who Jailed Ukraine Protesters Shot Dead

Monday, February 10, 2014

Judge rebukes Apple for invoking nationalist bias but denies Samsung a retrial

Judge rebukes Apple for invoking nationalist bias but denies Samsung a retrial
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IDG News Service – A U.S. judge has denied Samsung’s request for a retrial in a patent dispute with Apple, but she also chastised Apple’s lawyers
for making the Korean firm’s “foreignness” an issue in closing remarks to the jury.


The order from Judge Lucy Koh late Friday means a damages award against Samsung of $ 290 million still stands. But she clearly took issue with the way Apple summed
up its case to the jury, saying it suggested an “American-versus-non-American theme.”


The case at the District Court in San Jose, California, is the one in which Apple was initially awarded just over a billion
dollars in damages in August 2012. Koh struck down $ 410 million of the award, partly because the jury hadn’t calculated it
properly, and ordered a new trial to determine the correct damages.


The new trial ended in November with the $ 290 million award to Apple, but Samsung asked for another retrial, in part, it argued,
because Apple’s lawyers had appealed to “racial, ethnic, and national origin prejudice.”


It highlighted portions of Apple’s closing argument in particular.


“When I was young, I used to watch television on televisions that were manufactured in the United States,” an Apple attorney
told the jury. “Magnavox, Motorola, RCA. … They were inventors. They were like the Apple and Google today.


“But they didnt protect their intellectual property,” the Apple attorney said. “They couldnt protect their ideas. And you
all know the result. There are no American television manufacturers today.”


In her order Friday, Koh wrote several times that she found the remarks “troubling.”


“Counsels argument clearly suggested an us-versus-them, American-versus-non-American theme to the jury, which could have evoked
national origin prejudice,” she wrote.


The impact of the remarks is minimized by the “cold transcript,” she wrote,” which “elides counsels strategic and effective
pauses, timed in a way that created silence for listeners to connect the dots and make troubling inferences.”


She also noted the “context of the courtroom,” in which the seats behind the attorneys were “filled with client representatives
with obvious differences in terms of racial and ethnic backgrounds.”


Moreover, Koh wrote, the impact of the remarks must be considered in the wider context of whether juries in the U.S. can “fairly
adjudicate patent disputes between American companies and foreign companies.”


She cited a study which found that in jury trials, the win rates of foreign firms against domestic infringers (38 percent),
are significantly lower than wins by domestic firms against foreign infringers (82%). In contrast, in cases decided by judges
rather than juries, “the patentee win rate is almost identical.”


Despite that, Koh concluded the remarks by Apple’s attorneys did not warrant another trial. The misconduct did not “permeate
the proceedings,” she wrote, but was “confined to a few seconds of the closing argument.” She also found there was no evidence
that the jury had been influenced by the “problematic comments.”





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Sunday, February 9, 2014

Judge Rules White Girl Will Be Tried As Black Adult

Judge Rules White Girl Will Be Tried As Black Adult
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The court ruled a white teen who stabbed a classmate to death will face the jury as a 300-pound black man. Onion News Network, Fridays at 10/9c on IFC.
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Thursday, February 6, 2014

Black Openly Gay Judge Would Be Federal Bench"s First





hide captionFlorida Sen. Marco Rubio has indicated he won’t block the nomination of Judge Darrin Gayles, who would be the first openly gay black man to serve on the federal bench.



AP


Darrin P. Gayles, a Florida state circuit judge, appears to be on track to become the nation’s first openly gay black man to serve on the federal bench.


President Obama on Wednesday nominated Gayles, a former assistant U.S. attorney, to fill a vacancy on the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida.


His nomination, among four made by Obama, comes months after GOP Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida used his home-state prerogative to block the president’s nomination of circuit judge William Thomas of Miami, who is also gay and black, for the same position. Rubio initially backed Thomas’ nomination.


That reversal appears unlikely to be Gayles’ fate.


In an emailed statement, Rubio said he welcomes the president’s nomination, adding that: “I do not anticipate having an objection to moving forward on any of these nominations pending the outcome of the customary background check conducted on every nominee.”


Rubio, however, said he was disappointed that the president took a pass on Republican finalists for the bench who were “jointly suggested by Sen. [Bill] Nelson and myself.” Nelson is a Florida Democrat.


Last year, Rubio withdrew his support for Thomas’ nomination, citing concerns about his fitness for the position. He questioned sentences the judge meted out in a hit-and-run case, and Thomas’ decision to disallow a murder case confession because he found the suspects hadn’t been properly informed of their Miranda rights.


Thomas’ supporters asserted that he was being blocked from the higher bench because he’s black and openly gay.


“We hope Sen. Rubio doesn’t change his mind on [Gayles] as well,” said Fred Sainz of the Human Rights Campaign, one of the nation’s largest LGBT rights organizations.


Steve Thai of the Gay and Lesbian Victory Institute, which works to get gay Americans elected to office and appointed to federal positions, lauded Gayles’ nomination.


“We commend the administration for nominating a qualified jurist who will also add diversity to the federal bench,” Thai said in a statement. “If confirmed, Judge Gayles will be the nation’s first black, openly gay federal judge, and he will reflect the talent and commitment that exists in communities that are underrepresented in public service.”


According to a bio released by the White House Wednesday, Gayles has served as a circuit judge since 2011 when he was appointed by then-Gov. Charlie Crist. He previously was a county judge, an assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Florida, and assistant district counsel at the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service.


He graduated from Howard University and received his law degree from George Washington University.




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Black Openly Gay Judge Would Be Federal Bench"s First

Friday, January 17, 2014

Pennsylvania judge strikes down state"s voter ID law


People fill the waiting area of a Pennsylvania Department of Transportation office in Philadelphia as they wait to get a voter ID card, September 27, 2012.


Credit: Reuters/Tom Mihalek




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Pennsylvania judge strikes down state"s voter ID law

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

TYT Network Reports - Anti-Abortion Judge: Drive Faster If The Clinic Is Far Away

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TYT Network Reports - Anti-Abortion Judge: Drive Faster If The Clinic Is Far Away

Monday, January 13, 2014

Judge OKs American Airlines-Cantor Fitzgerald 9/11 Settlement

A federal judge on Monday approved a $ 135 million settlement between American Airlines Group Inc and Cantor Fitzgerald over business and property losses suffered by the financial services company in the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center, in which 658 of Cantor’s employees were killed.

U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein said the agreement, which averts a trial that had been scheduled to begin this month, was “fair and reasonable” at a brief court hearing.


Under the settlement, American’s insurers will pay Cantor $ 135 million, minus approximately $ 2.5 million from two insurers that are insolvent and cannot cover their share.


The settlement ends one of the last remaining pieces of litigation stemming from the 2001 attacks, which killed nearly 3,000 people.


Cantor lost almost two-thirds of its 1,000 New York employees after American Airlines Flight 11 struck the north tower of the World Trade Center.


In the lawsuit, originally filed in 2004, Cantor accused American Airlines of negligence for failing to prevent hijackers from boarding the flight at Logan International Airport in Boston. At one point, the company had sought more than $ 1 billion in damages, but the sum was later reduced to between $ 464 million and $ 484 million.


American Airlines had said in defending the case that it had no way to foresee the attacks.


The terms of the settlement were first disclosed in December. In a statement at that time, Cantor’s chief executive officer, Howard Lutnick, said, “For us, there is no way to describe this compromise with inapt words like ordinary, fair or reasonable. All we can say is that the legal formality of this matter is over.”


American Airlines said in a statement that it had defended itself in litigation brought by property owners “who allege that American should have done what the government could not do – prevent the terrorist attacks.” It said it would “forever honor the memory” of the victims and heroes of Sept. 11.


© 2014 Thomson/Reuters. All rights reserved.




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Judge OKs American Airlines-Cantor Fitzgerald 9/11 Settlement

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Judge Rules Computer Searches, Seizures Legal at US Borders

The Department of Homeland Security can keep searching laptop computers at the nation’s borders, a federal judge has ruled in his dismissal of a lawsuit filed by civil-liberties groups that had contended the practice was unconstitutional.

The American Civil Liberties Union and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers filed their lawsuit challenging the DHS policy in 2010, The Hill reported. The policy allowed searches even if there was no suspicion of illegality.


Officials at the border search and copy contents of people’s laptop computers and other devices thousands of times a year, government documents say. Travelers may be detained for short periods of time even if there is no reasonable suspicion they have broken a law.


But while the ACLU and other groups say such searches violate Americans’ protection against unreasonable searches and seizures, Judge Edward Korman said there are exceptions when an international border is involved.


Further, he said, people such as journalists, lawyers, and others should not expect their sensitive information to be protected while they are traveling abroad, The Huffington Post reported.


The ACLU filed the lawsuit on the behalf of French-American Pascal Abidor, whose laptop was confiscated at the Canadian border, for the National Press Photographers Association.


Korman said the groups suing to stop the DHS searches did not face a “substantial risk that their electronic devices will be subject to a search or seizure without reasonable suspicion.”


Further, Korman said, policies for border agents are sensitive to privacy and confidentiality issues, and “contain significant precautionary measures to be taken with respect to the handling of privileged and other sensitive materials.”


Abidor said his personal files were searched while Border Patrol officials had his laptop for 11 days.


Korman, though, ruled that the agents had “reasonable suspicion” to search the files, because the man had recently returned from Lebanon and had photos of rallies by terrorist groups Hezbollah and Hamas. Abidor at the time was a McGill University doctoral student.


Computer users should also expect searches on trips overseas, such as to the United Kingdom, where former Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald’s partner David Miranda was stopped recently so agents could search his storage devices, The Huffington Post reported.


“This is enough to suggest that it would be foolish, if not irresponsible, for plaintiffs to store truly private or confidential information on electronic devices that are carried and used overseas,” Korman wrote.


The ACLU is considering an appeal. Attorney Catherine Crump said the judge’s decision was disappointing, but “these searches are part of a broader pattern of aggressive government surveillance that collects information on too many innocent people, under lax standards, and without adequate oversight.”


Related Stories:


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – America



Judge Rules Computer Searches, Seizures Legal at US Borders

Monday, December 30, 2013

Drug court judge allegedly drunk during proceedings; goes to rehab instead of jail



Judge Gisele Pollack
(Source: ABC)



BROWARD COUNTY, FL — A Florida judge presiding over misdemeanor drug cases reportedly showed up to work intoxicated and had to be removed from court. In a palpable irony, even a person who has dedicated her career toward meddling in other people’s lives and using the force of government against them is herself incapable of keeping herself sober at work. The judge faces no legal consequences and instead of being carted off to jail like so many of the recreational drug users she has dealt with, she will voluntarily put herself in rehab.


Judge Gisele Pollack, who founded Boward County’s misdemeanor drug court in 2005, was seen verbally assaulting her judicial assistant and yelling for her car keys to be returned before another judge intervened, according to an unidentified source.


The tirade followed Pollack’s abrupt dismissal of the day’s session after only serving an hour and a half on the bench, during which time she began slurring her words while addressing defendants.


“She’s not afraid to lock somebody up if they’re repeatedly thumbing their nose at authority.”


One can only speculate how many cases Pollack, an admitted alcoholic, may have presided over while under the influence. She says she will address what she calls “health issues” during an intensive two week outpatient program before returning to the bench.


Not everyone in the legal community feels that’s quite an adequate remedy.


“Could you imagine doing a night in jail because a judge couldn’t understand or appreciate your argument?” said attorney Steven Schaet. “If she’s adversely affected someone’s life, she shouldn’t be on the bench.”


There are thus far no indications Pollack will face official disciplinary action. She has, however, checked herself into rehab.


Pollack’s court provides misdemeanor drug offenders opportunities to have their charges dismissed and their records wiped clean if they complete six months of rehabilitative treatment. Offenders who relapse face tougher consequences.


“She’s not afraid to lock somebody up if they’re repeatedly thumbing their nose at authority,” said defense attorney Bill Gelin.


In view of the vague penalties high-profile offenders are handed relative to the punishments routinely meted out to the commonfolk, it’s clear American society operates with orders of jurisprudence. U.S. Senator Donne Trotter, for instance, received one year of court supervision after he was caught trying to smuggle a handgun onto a plane at O’Hare airport late last year, and Keith Tabron, a former “Detective of the Year” for the Washington D.C. police department, was given a five year suspended sentence and probation for furtively videotaping his stepdaughter in the shower; a felony that under Maryland law demands sex offender registration. Prosecutors granted Tabron immunity from this provision, ostensibly because he had no prior criminal history.


Addiction is a tragic and destructive problem, as Judge Pollack surely must be aware. But it is not one that the government is capable of fairly or competently dealing with. In the spirit of justice, one would hope when she returns to the bench, she comes back with a new outlook on the oppressive War on Drugs… and that she comes back in a lucid state when holding people’s fates in her hands.




BlackListedNews.com



Drug court judge allegedly drunk during proceedings; goes to rehab instead of jail

Drug court judge allegedly drunk during proceedings; goes to rehab instead of jail

Drug court judge allegedly drunk during proceedings; goes to rehab instead of jail
http://pixel.quantserve.com/pixel/p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif



Judge Gisele Pollack
(Source: ABC)



BROWARD COUNTY, FL — A Florida judge presiding over misdemeanor drug cases reportedly showed up to work intoxicated and had to be removed from court. In a palpable irony, even a person who has dedicated her career toward meddling in other people’s lives and using the force of government against them is herself incapable of keeping herself sober at work. The judge faces no legal consequences and instead of being carted off to jail like so many of the recreational drug users she has dealt with, she will voluntarily put herself in rehab.


Judge Gisele Pollack, who founded Boward County’s misdemeanor drug court in 2005, was seen verbally assaulting her judicial assistant and yelling for her car keys to be returned before another judge intervened, according to an unidentified source.


The tirade followed Pollack’s abrupt dismissal of the day’s session after only serving an hour and a half on the bench, during which time she began slurring her words while addressing defendants.


“She’s not afraid to lock somebody up if they’re repeatedly thumbing their nose at authority.”


One can only speculate how many cases Pollack, an admitted alcoholic, may have presided over while under the influence. She says she will address what she calls “health issues” during an intensive two week outpatient program before returning to the bench.


Not everyone in the legal community feels that’s quite an adequate remedy.


“Could you imagine doing a night in jail because a judge couldn’t understand or appreciate your argument?” said attorney Steven Schaet. “If she’s adversely affected someone’s life, she shouldn’t be on the bench.”


There are thus far no indications Pollack will face official disciplinary action. She has, however, checked herself into rehab.


Pollack’s court provides misdemeanor drug offenders opportunities to have their charges dismissed and their records wiped clean if they complete six months of rehabilitative treatment. Offenders who relapse face tougher consequences.


“She’s not afraid to lock somebody up if they’re repeatedly thumbing their nose at authority,” said defense attorney Bill Gelin.


In view of the vague penalties high-profile offenders are handed relative to the punishments routinely meted out to the commonfolk, it’s clear American society operates with orders of jurisprudence. U.S. Senator Donne Trotter, for instance, received one year of court supervision after he was caught trying to smuggle a handgun onto a plane at O’Hare airport late last year, and Keith Tabron, a former “Detective of the Year” for the Washington D.C. police department, was given a five year suspended sentence and probation for furtively videotaping his stepdaughter in the shower; a felony that under Maryland law demands sex offender registration. Prosecutors granted Tabron immunity from this provision, ostensibly because he had no prior criminal history.


Addiction is a tragic and destructive problem, as Judge Pollack surely must be aware. But it is not one that the government is capable of fairly or competently dealing with. In the spirit of justice, one would hope when she returns to the bench, she comes back with a new outlook on the oppressive War on Drugs… and that she comes back in a lucid state when holding people’s fates in her hands.




WHAT REALLY HAPPENED




Read more about Drug court judge allegedly drunk during proceedings; goes to rehab instead of jail and other interesting subjects concerning The Edge at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Friday, December 27, 2013

Washington Judge Strikes Part of Minimum Wage Hike Measure


A Washington state judge has struck part of the voter-approved $ 15 an hour minimum wage measure for airport workers in SeaTac.


King County Superior Court Judge Andrea Darvas says the measure applies to about 1,600 hotel and parking lot workers in the city of SeaTac, but does not apply to employees and contractors working within Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, which is operated by the Port of Seattle.


Darvas said the state Legislature has given municipalities like the Port of Seattle “exclusive jurisdiction” over their operations.


Supporters of the measure say they will file an appeal to the state Supreme Court.


Last month voters in the city of SeaTac narrowly approved the measure, which would apply to around 6,000 workers at the airport and related industries, like hotels and rental car companies.


© Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




Newsmax – America



Washington Judge Strikes Part of Minimum Wage Hike Measure

US judge rules NSA phone surveillance program is legal

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US judge rules NSA phone surveillance program is legal

US judge rules NSA phone surveillance program is legal

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US judge rules NSA phone surveillance program is legal