NOTE: A shorter version of this column
appears on page 10 of this morning's New York Sun.
Federal Judge Opens
Door to Reform,
The Case Now Goes to Second Circuit;
State Chief Judge Kaye Seeks Panels.
By Henry J. Stern
February
9, 2006
Last Friday we sent you a long
article about Federal
Judge John Gleeson’s rather remarkable
decision
on January 27. In a case that had been pending for several years, he
wrote a 77-page opinion holding that the State of New York’s constitutional
provision for selecting Supreme Court Justices by judicial convention was
in violation of the United States Constitution in that it deprived the people
of the state of meaningful participation in the selection of judges.
Judge Gleeson found, as a matter of fact, that these conventions are tightly
controlled by a small group of political leaders (the county bosses) and
that judicial candidates not recommended by these bosses have no chance to
be chosen for their party’s nomination. Judge Gleeson directed the
legislature to reform the system by this summer, when petitioning would begin
for Supreme Court candidates, if primaries were to be held. In political
and judicial circles, the decision is considered momentous. If upheld,
it will result in substantial change in the way judges are chosen.
On Tuesday, Chief Judge Judith Kaye presented her annual
State of the
Judiciary message to the State Legislature. Part of her remarks
dealt with the selection of judges. She presented a number of proposals
to improve the existing system of judicial conventions, which had been developed
by a commission headed by John Feerick, the dean of Fordham Law School.
The proposals are meritorious and should be adopted, but they should not
exclude the abolition of the grossly unfair system of judicial conventions.
If they can be abolished, the reforms will have even greater effect, since
voters are more likely to heed professional evaluations than party bosses,
for whom a judgeship can be a commodity of value.
The demise of judicial conventions would not automatically lead to the selection
of better judges. It would be, however, a healthy first step toward
a merit-based judiciary. Primaries, especially borough-wide contests
in Brooklyn and New York counties, are very expensive, the costs running
into hundreds of thousands of dollars, and possibly more if there is a deep-pockets
aspirant.
If the candidates try to finance their campaigns by soliciting funds from
litigants who may appear before them, they will create relationships that
may interfere with their objectivity and impartiality. Rule 28-C: “Don’t
accept cigarettes in prison.” You may incur obligations that you are
unwilling to meet.
We will be watching the appeal process closely, and reporting to you on it.
If judges are to be elected in primaries, the petitioning process would begin
in June, which is just four months off. We should be aware that it
requires hones, intelligent and fair-minded people to select good judges.
The governor may appoint his out-of-town cronies to the Appellate Division,
as has occurred in the First Department (Manhattan and the Bronx). The
electorate may select the candidate who has spent the most money trying to
reach them. The county bosses may select candidates based on a negotiated
sale, since a public auction would appear unseemly, as well as be illegal.
It is possible, maybe even likely, that the payoffs would be less costly
than the printing, polling, media buys and walking-around-money which comprise
a great deal of the cost of political campaigns today. If judges must
buy their robes (synecdoche), should they not be sold to the most worthy
customers, not to the richest or the best connected?
The situation was summed up by
Alexander Pope in
1734 in his “Essay on Man,” where he wrote:
For forms of government let fools contest;
Whate'er is best administered is best:
For modes of faith let graceless zealots fight;
His can't be wrong whose life is in the right.
Judge Gleeson’s decision has opened the door to reform of a self-serving
practice in which mediocre insiders are elevated to the judiciary while far
better qualified outsiders are excluded. We should do what we can to
see that this unusual opportunity is not lost. There are many honest and
able lawyers who would make fine judges. The bench should not be chosen
from among ward-heelers, time-servers, sycophants, and rich lawyers seeking
a hobby while in retirement from the hurly-burly of private practice.
Let us be clear: there ARE decent, honest, and intelligent judges serving
today. They deserve particular credit for beating the system and making
their way to the bench.
The case of Brooklyn Judge
Victor
Barron, sentenced to prison for taking bribes, is cited both as an example
of a corrupt judiciary, and as an indication of an honest one, since he is
the only judge, out of many, who committed this particular crime. We
should know, however, that the only way this case was made is that the victim
of the shakedown complained to the district attorney, and wore a wire to
trap the judge. The great majority of bribery cases are consensual,
with the briber relatively satisfied with the result, and, if he had made
a payoff, unwilling to complain lest he be disbarred himself. There
is a thin line between bribery and extortion, and some cases have elements
of both.
In our view, there are a good number of judges who either take money or gifts,
side with their friends out of loyalty, don't understand the cases before
them, or are too lazy to read the briefs. These vices appear to a greater
or lesser extent in different individuals, and judges’ performance can change
over the years, as senility sets in, or as personal problems cause distress.
That is human nature.
Our object is to find a system in which the wisest and fairest men and women
will sit on the bench. This will elevate not only the reputation of
the courts, but the quality of justice dispensed. The parasites in
robes would have to content themselves with patronage from the surrogates,
until the tide of reform reaches that barnacle-encrusted office.
Reform is always an uphill struggle. The system is the way it is because
the people who live off it want it that way. But an opening has been
created. We need a
Prague Spring to take
advantage of it. The cause will have to be championed by the MSM (mainstream
media). The case for reform was first brought to public attention several
years ago by the Daily News, and the Post joined in with enthusiasm. It
is time to reactivate the Fourth Estate to clean out the
Augean stables, and
to try to find better horses.
Judicial reform is possible, even in Brooklyn. BTW, two other counties,
Queens and the Bronx, are somewhat better, if only because they conduct the
shabby business more decorously and discreetly. Staten Island is constantly
being screwed by Brooklyn, because they have been placed in the same judicial
district. Manhattan is different; there the test is not so much money
as ideology, ethnicity, gender and sexual orientation. Guess, in each
category, which side is favored by the cadre composed of the activists in
the New York County Democracy.
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