UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT
February 6--February
8, 2010
FEDERAL
COURTS
3rd Circuit to Mull Privacy of Cell Phone Data
Case offers rare glimpse into the mechanics of federal criminal
investigations where nearly all documents are filed ex parte and
stay under seal until indictments are handed up
Shannon
P. Duffy, The Legal Intelligencer
02-08-10 --
In a case that could prove to be one of the most important privacy
rights battles of the modern era, the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals will hear argument this week on the proper legal standard to
apply when prosecutors demand cell phone location data. . . . The
data, which are recorded about once every seven seconds whenever a
cell phone is turned on, effectively track the whereabouts and the
comings and goings of every cell phone user. . . . Justice
Department lawyers argue that, by statute, they need only show
"reasonable grounds" to believe that such records are "relevant and
material to an ongoing criminal investigation."
SEC Abandons Beleaguered Backdating Case Against
Former Broadcom Executives
Amanda
Bronstad, The National Law Journal
02-08-10 --
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has voluntarily dropped
its civil case against four former executives of Broadcom Corp.,
including the former general counsel. The move came one week after a
federal judge said there were "serious problems" with the charges.
. . . It was the latest setback in the U.S. government's pursuit of
securities fraud tied to stock options backdating at Broadcom. On
Dec. 15, U.S. District Judge Cormac Carney
dismissed criminal charges against Broadcom co-founder Henry
Nicholas and William Ruehle, the former chief financial
officer, based in large part on prosecutorial misconduct. The judge
also dismissed the SEC's related complaint but gave the commission
the option to amend the charges.
Federal judge breathes new life into 30-year-old death penalty
case from San Jose
By
Howard Mintz, mercurynews.com
02-07-10 --
Few of the nearly 700 inmates on California's death row have awaited
execution longer than Santa Clara County's Marvin Pete Walker Jr. .
. . But as he approaches three decades inside San Quentin, Walker's
long journey through the legal system has just taken one more turn
that could breathe new life into his effort to overturn his death
sentence and certainly prolong his legal battle. . . . Last week, a
federal judge ordered new hearings into Walker's case, concluding
that he has raised enough doubt about the effectiveness of the
lawyer who defended him in his 1980 trial that there must be a
thorough inquiry into whether his murder conviction and death
sentence were tainted. . . . Although state prosecutors insist
Walker received a fair trial, Oakland-based U.S. District Judge
Saundra Brown Armstrong's 17-page ruling could send the case back to
square one if she concludes the defense lawyer's performance fell
below constitutional standards.
|
HELP KEEP
VICTIMS-OF-LAW ON THE WEB
SHOP OUR ADVERTISERS
OR
CONTRIBUTE NOW
|
GENERAL
Race & Gender of Judges Make Enormous Differences in Rulings,
Studies Find
By
Edward A. Adams, ABA Journal
02-06-10 --
A judge's race or gender makes for a dramatic difference in the
outcome of cases they hear—at least for cases in which race and
gender allegedly play a role in the conduct of the parties,
according to two recent studies.
The results were the focus of a
program about “Diversity on the Bench: Is the ‘Wise Latina’ a
Myth?,” sponsored by the ABA Judicial Division at the ABA Midyear
Meeting in Orlando on Saturday afternoon. . . . In federal racial
harassment cases,
one study (PDF) found that plaintiffs lost just 54
percent of the time when the judge handling the case was an
African-American. Yet plaintiffs lost 81 percent of the time when
the judge was Hispanic, 79 percent when the judge was white, and 67
percent of the time when the judge was Asian American. . . . The
comprehensive study, by professors from the University of Pittsburgh
School of Law and Carnegie Mellon University's Tepper School of
Business, examined a random assortment of 40 percent of all reported
racial harassment cases from six federal circuits between 1981 and
2003.
|

A Victims-of-Law Advertiser |
DISTRICT OF
COLUMBIA
After Ex-Girlfriend's Conviction, Ethics Complaint Still Stalks
Judge
Jordan
Weissmann, The National Law Journal
02-08-10 --
When a District of Columbia jury
convicted Taylar Nuevelle last week of charges that she
had stalked her former girlfriend, Magistrate Judge Janet Albert, it
brought closure to the public half of
a drama that has played out for more than a year at the
D.C. Superior Court. . . . For Nuevelle, the only uncertainty left
is her sentence. The 40-year-old Nuevelle, who already has another
felony conviction on her record, faces a maximum of 16 years in
prison. For Albert, the remaining question is what happens to the
judicial misconduct complaint lodged against her by Nuevelle after
their 2008 breakup. . . . Nuevelle's complaint, filed in October
2008, is being investigated by the Superior Court's Committee on the
Selection and Tenure of Magistrate Judges, which has not yet held a
formal hearing, according to a source with direct knowledge of the
process. Nuevelle claimed that Albert, who handles child abuse and
neglect cases in Family Court, misused her judicial authority in
several ways -- from privately mocking litigants to sending a U.S.
marshal to investigate Nuevelle after their relationship cratered.
If the committee finds the allegations are true, Albert could at
worst lose her job. Albert's lawyer, Schertler & Onorato partner
Robert Spagnoletti, declined to comment on the complaint.
FLORIDA
Judge Reprimanded for Misleading YouTube Ads
By Jeff
Gorman, Courthouse News Service
02-08-10 --
The Florida Supreme Court announced that it will publicly reprimand
a judge over a misleading YouTube advertisement. . . . Judge Angela
Dempsey posted an advertisement to "re-elect" herself in 2008. In
addition to using the word "re-elect" in her online ad, one of her
campaign mailers claimed that she had "20 years of legal
experience." . . . Dempsey was not elected as a judge before the
2008 campaign; she was appointed to the bench in 2005. . . . As for
the 20 years of legal experience, she was admitted to the practice
of law in 1994.
ILLINOIS
Illinois Supreme Court Uncaps Medical Malpractice Damages Again
Lynne
Marek, The National Law Journal
02-08-10 --
The Illinois Supreme Court has once again shot down a state law
capping non-monetary damages in medical malpractice lawsuits,
finding that such a statute violates the separation of powers
between the judicial and legislative branches. . . . The high court
said in the Thursday decision that the limit on non-monetary
damages, such as those for pain and suffering, interferes with "the
authority of the judicial branch to reduce verdicts." While four
justices backed the decision, two concurred in part and dissented in
part, and one didn't participate. . . . Health care industry
defenders and trial lawyer opponents of the 2005 law squared off in
the case, which alleged malpractice against a hospital, doctor and
nurse involved in the delivery of a brain-damaged baby. The new law
would have capped damages in such cases at $1 million against
hospitals and their personnel and $500,000 against individual
doctors.
MASSACHUSETTS
SJC says lewd IMs to minors not illegal
Patrick, legislators aim to close loophole
By
Jonathan Saltzman and John R. Ellement, Boston Globe Staff
02-08-10 --
A Beverly man who sent a series of sexually explicit instant
messages to someone he thought was a 13-year-old girl had his
convictions overturned yesterday by the state’s highest court, which
declared that state law does not bar people from sending lewd
computer messages to minors. . . . Although state law bans the
dissemination of “any matter harmful to minors’’ - including
photographs, magazines, movies, and “handwritten or printed
material’’ - it does not mention instant messaging or other text
sent online. . . . “The online conversations in this case, as they
were not written with pen or pencil, cannot be considered
`handwritten’ materials,’’ Justice Francis X. Spina wrote on behalf
of the Supreme Judicial Court, in a ruling that illustrates how
evolving technology outpaces changes in legal language. . . . “If
the Legislature wishes to include instant messaging or other
electronically transmitted text in the definition,’’ the court added
in the unanimous decision, “it is for the Legislature, not the
court, to do so.’’
|

A
Victims-of-Law Advertiser |
NEW YORK
As 9/11 health trials loom, first cases include some with
credibility problems
David B.
Caruso, Associated Press Writer, Los Angeles Times
02-08-10 --
As the first cases in a massive battle over illnesses linked to 9/11
near trial, an Associated Press investigation has found that several
of the initial 30 suits contain inconsistent or exaggerated claims
about how the workers got sick or how much time they spent at ground
zero. . . . One demolition worker who said he developed health
problems after toiling for six months in the toxic ruins of the
World Trade Center has actually been severely ill since the 1990s.
In a previous medical malpractice case, he said he was so sick
between 2000 and 2003 that he couldn't work regularly. He never
mentioned 9/11 during his testimony in that lawsuit. . . . Lawyers
for a police officer from northern New Jersey who died in 2006
claimed in a court filing that he spent nearly 300 days handling
debris at ground zero, but his work records indicate that his actual
time and duties related to 9/11 were far more limited. During the
months the lawyers said the man worked at ground zero, he was
recording full-time shifts in Cresskill, N.J. . . . Another police
officer who was listed by her lawyers as having lung cancer, doesn't
have cancer at all. Her actual illness involves something akin to
chronic asthma. She insists her lawyers were mistaken. . . . The
three cases are among the 30 plaintiffs whose suits are being
considered for May trials over the city's culpability for chronic
illnesses caused by exposure to contaminated dust in the months
after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. . . . Those cases are
among the thousands filed over the health of ground zero workers,
but they have an outsized importance.
OHIO
More proof of dysfunction in criminal justice system
Youngstown Vindicator
02-07-10 --
A community in shock over the cold-blooded slaying of an 80-year-old
God-fearing woman should not have to wonder about the ability of the
criminal justice system to make the killer pay for his dastardly
deed. . . . But that’s exactly what residents of the city of
Youngstown and of the Mahoning Valley at large are experiencing
today as the criminal history of the 18-year-old accused murderer,
Jamar Houser, becomes public. . . . A major part of that history is
the revelation that Houser had been in the Mahoning County jail in
November on $500,000 bond when Judge Lou D’Apolito of the Mahoning
County Common Pleas Court reduced the bond to $20,000, with a 10
percent cash option. As a result, Houser walked out of jail after
posting the $2,000. . . . On Jan. 23, 80-year-old Angeline Fimognari
was found shot to death in her car in the fenced-in parking lot of
St. Dominic Church on Youngstown’s South Side. Angeline’s purse was
missing. Six days later, city police arrested Houser, also known as
“Mook,” and charged him with aggravated murder and aggravated
robbery. Bond has been set at $3 million. . . . Why was he on the
streets of the city in the first place? Because Judge D’Apolito
reduced his $500,000 bond. Why did the judge do that? He isn’t
saying. The case is still open.
February 4--February
5, 2010
FEDERAL
COURTS
Do 3rd Circuit Rulings Over Student Speech on
MySpace Pages Contradict?
Shannon
P. Duffy, The Legal Intelligencer
February 05, 2010
02-05-10 --
Lawyers were scratching their heads on Thursday over a federal
appellate court's seemingly conflicting rulings in a pair of closely
watched student-speech cases that both involve high school students
who were suspended for creating fake MySpace pages on their home
computers to ridicule their principals. . . . Although the cases
appeared at first glance to raise nearly identical legal questions
about the limits on a school's power to discipline students for
off-campus speech, the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals sided with
the student in
Layshock v. Hermitage School District and with the
school in
J.S. v. Blue Mountain School District. . . . In
Layshock, a unanimous three-judge panel declared that punishing
students for off-campus speech violates their First Amendment
rights. But the Blue Mountain panel split, voting 2-1 in holding
that students may be punished for lewd speech on the Internet about
school officials that has the potential to create a substantial
disturbance at the school.
Settlement Pressure Builds for Parties in 9/11
Injury Cases
Mark
Hamblett, New York Law Journal
02-05-10 --
A draft settlement has been negotiated in the nearly 10,000 lawsuits
seeking damages for respiratory and other ailments allegedly
incurred in the first response and massive cleanup after the Sept.
11, 2001, terror attacks on the World Trade Center. . . . "There
have been intensive discussions going on, as I've been given to
understand, looking to settlements of individual cases and globally
of all cases," Southern District of New York Judge Alvin K.
Hellerstein disclosed at a Jan. 21 hearing with lawyers for the
plaintiffs and counsel for New York City and other defendants,
according to a
transcript of the session. . . . The possibility of a
settlement was disclosed when Hellerstein asked how negotiations
were going. The judge said that "the settlement is complicated," and
added, "I don't know what numbers have been discussed or what terms
have been discussed or what a timetable will be."
Lawsuits Accusing Banks of Illegal Overdraft Fees
Start to Add Up
Tresa
Baldas, The National Law Journal
02-05-10 --
For the third time in a month, Washington, D.C.'s
Tycko & Zavareei has filed a lawsuit challenging
overdraft fees. The latest case, filed Monday in federal court in
Atlanta, targets Cincinnati-based Fifth Third Bank. . . . Two
similar suits were filed in January -- one against TD Bank in
Washington, D.C., and the other against Citizens Financial Group in
Chicago. The firm says more are in the pipeline. . . . In the Fifth
Third suit, customers allege that the bank charges unjustified
overdraft fees in violation of state and federal laws. Specifically,
the suit accuses Fifth Third of manipulating debit postings to
maximize overdraft fees, even when the customer has enough funds to
cover some of the withdrawals or purchases. The suit also challenges
the bank's practice of charging overdraft fees every day an account
is overdrawn, even if it's overdrawn solely because of the overdraft
fees.
|
HELP KEEP
VICTIMS-OF-LAW ON THE WEB SHOP OUR ADVERTISERS
OR
CONTRIBUTE NOW
|
Senate panel backs Obama's judge nominee
Bob
Egelko, Chronicle Staff Writer
02-05-10 --
The Senate Judiciary Committee approved President Obama's nomination
of U.S. Magistrate Edward Chen to a federal judgeship in San
Francisco on a party-line vote for the second time Thursday, with
Republicans criticizing his public statements and background as an
American Civil Liberties Union lawyer. . . . The 12-7 vote was
identical to Chen's margin of approval at a committee hearing in
October. Democratic leaders never brought the nomination up for a
Senate floor vote and instead returned it to Obama, who renominated
Chen last month. . . . Chen, 56, was appointed as a magistrate by
Bay Area federal judges in 2001. He would be the first Asian
American judge in the federal Northern District of California, which
extends along the coast from Monterey County to the Oregon border.
BofA Settles With SEC, Faces New Suit From New York
Attorney General
Zach
Lowe, The American Lawyer
02-04-10 --
Are $127 million and some oversight provisions enough to placate
Judge Jed Rakoff? Last September, Rakoff
ferociously rejected a proposed settlement agreement
under which Bank of America would have paid $33 million fines to
settle a Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit charging the
bank with failing to notify shareholders that Merrill Lynch, which
BofA purchased under pressure in late 2008, was going to pay as much
as $5.8 billion in employee bonuses in early 2009. . . . Rakoff
dismissed the proposed $33 million settlement as "trivial" and
"absurd," and wondered why the bank -- and ultimately its
shareholders -- should pay the fine instead of the individual
executives who committed the alleged disclosure violations. He even
raised the possibility that BofA's outside counsel at
Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz might deserve some
punishment.
|

A
Victims-of-Law Advertiser |
CALIFORNIA
Judge: Taping by spokesman OK
Wyatt
Buchanan, SF Gate
02-05-10 --
A former spokesman for California Attorney General Jerry Brown did
not break the law when he secretly recorded telephone conversations
with several reporters, including a reporter from The Chronicle, the
Alameda County District Attorney has decided. . . . Scott Gerber,
the former spokesman, resigned last year after it was revealed that
he taped six interviews with five reporters without their consent.
Judge Censured for Ordering Lawyers to Be
Paid by
Retailer Gift Vouchers
Mike
McKee, The Recorder
02-04-10 --
No one was more dumbfounded than now-retired Judge Brett Klein when
California's Commission on Judicial Performance initiated an
investigation into his handling of a class action settlement. . . .
That investigation, begun three weeks ago, concluded Tuesday with
the CJP issuing a
seven-page order publicly censuring the 20-year veteran,
who stepped down from the bench on Dec. 1, and barring him from
future judicial assignments. . . . "I was a bit surprised that after
they received my written response in their preliminary investigation
that they went ahead with this," the 60-year-old former Los Angeles
County Superior Court judge said Tuesday. "In the past, they have
mostly seemed interested in corruption and judges who don't get
their work done and then falsely sign their pay stub affidavits. . .
. "But now," he added, "they seem to be moving into a different area
for them, which is reviewing the correctness of trial judges'
rulings, which I find more the function of an appellate court."
DISTRICT OF
COLUMBIA
D.C. Lawyer Will Defend Chicago's Gun Law Before Supreme Court
Tony
Mauro, The National Law Journal
02-05-10 --
A Washington, D.C. solo practitioner with extensive experience
before the Supreme Court will argue in defense of the city of
Chicago's strict handgun ordinance in a closely watched Second
Amendment case next month. . . .
James Feldman, who argued 45 times before the high court
as an assistant to the U.S. solicitor general, got the nod to argue
in what is widely viewed as an uphill battle for gun control
advocates. The case is
McDonald v. City of Chicago.
FLORIDA
Fla. justices order reprimand of Tallahassee judge
The
Associated Press, MiamiHerald.com
02-04-10 --
Florida Supreme Court had agreed to publicly reprimand a Tallahassee
judge for misleading campaign claims. . . . The justices Thursday
ruled unanimously in the case of Circuit Judge Angela Dempsey. She
admitted violating ethics rules and apologized to a hearing panel of
the Judicial Qualifications Commission last year.
|
Love and Savings are in the Air at Lillian Vernon

A
Victims-of-Law Advertiser
|
ILLINOIS
Illinois Supreme Court strikes down medical malpractice law
Court says limiting damages violates separation-of-powers clause by
allowing lawmakers to interfere with a jury's right to determine
damages
By Bruce
Japsen and Ameet Sachdev, Chicago Tribune reporters
02-04-10 --
The Illinois Supreme Court on Thursday struck down the state's
medical malpractice law, saying limits on damages awarded to victims
of medical negligence are unconstitutional. . . . The
much-anticipated ruling deals a blow to doctors and hospital
officials who say caps on damages are a way to tame rising health
care costs. . . . State lawmakers in 2005 passed legislation, which
was signed into law by then-Gov. Rod Blagojevich, that established
limits on pain and suffering and other non-economic damages of
$500,000 in cases against doctors and $1 million against hospitals.
Illinois followed other states, such as California, that capped
damages years ago. . . . The court said the law violates the state's
separation-of-powers clause between the branches of government by
allowing lawmakers to interfere with a jury's right to determine
damages. "The crux of our analysis is whether the statute unduly
infringes upon the inherent power of the judiciary," the majority
opinion said.
A disastrous decision
Chicago
Tribune Editorial
02-04-10 --
The Illinois Supreme Court on Thursday threw out a sound law passed
by the General Assembly in 2005 to protect health care in this
state. The court threw out a sound law that has worked. The court
threw out a sound law and essentially told the state's lawmakers:
Don't even bother to try this again. . . . This is a disastrous
decision. . . . It declares that caps on medical malpractice awards
violate the state constitution's separation-of-powers clause. The
caps limited noneconomic damages, such as pain and suffering, to
$500,000 in claims against doctors and to $1 million in claims
against hospitals. . . . The Legislature acted appropriately in
response to a crisis. Malpractice costs were skyrocketing in
Illinois because insurers were afraid to do business here. They were
afraid of runaway jury verdicts. They also knew that more than 20
states had some caps on damages, making those states much safer
places to do business. . . . Malpractice premiums in Illinois were
particularly egregious for doctors in riskier specialties such as
obstetrics and neurosurgery. As a result, doctors were leaving,
particularly doctors in rural areas. They couldn't afford to
practice in their communities. That made it more difficult for
patients to find the care they needed. . . . The 2005 law eased the
crisis. Malpractice premiums declined. The exodus of doctors
stopped.
MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Skycap Suit Goes National After Ruling
The
Associated Press, Law.com
02-05-10 --
Skycaps across the country who claim they lost tips after
American Airlines imposed $2 curbside baggage fees can
now join a Boston lawsuit. . . . U.S. District Court Judge William
Young on Thursday certified a national class action suit against the
airline. . . . The class action lawsuit comes 18 months after a
federal jury
awarded nine current and former American Airlines skycaps from
Massachusetts $325,000 for tips they lost as a result of the
baggage fees.
MICHIGAN
Cox: Close canal to stop carp
DNA
data was kept from U.S. Supreme Court, he says
By Tina
Lam, Free Press Staff Writer
02-05-10 --
Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox filed a renewed request for an
immediate injunction Thursday with the U.S. Supreme Court, asking
the justices to close locks on the Chicago shipping canal leading to
Lake Michigan. . . . Cox's filing said the request for an injunction
was based on new information that was not available to the court
when it denied an injunction on Jan. 19. . . . Cox said the new
information was an economic study showing the lock closure would not
cause serious economic harm and the fact that federal officials knew
days before the court's ruling that there was DNA evidence of Asian
carp in Lake Michigan, but failed to tell the court. . . . The U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers got the DNA data on Jan. 15, but didn't make
it public until hours after the Supreme Court's rejection of the
injunction.
NEW JERSEY
N.J. Court Revives Accutane Suicide Suit, Reversing Exclusion of
Expert Opinion
Mary Pat
Gallagher, New Jersey Law Journal
02-05-10 --
A New Jersey suit alleging Accutane caused a 19-year-old's suicide
is back on track, thanks to an appeals court ruling that gives the
plaintiffs another shot at admitting expert testimony that the acne
drug causes depression. . . . The state's Appellate Division on
Wednesday found that a flawed study, which led the trial court to
dismiss the case, made up only a small part of the basis for Dr. J.
Douglas Bremner's opinion. The panel remanded the case, Palazzolo
v. Hoffman La Roche, Inc., A-3789, for the trial court "to
consider whether Bremner should be allowed to testify on causation,
without reference to the study." . . . Since the anti-acne drug was
introduced in 1982, it has been the subject of myriad suits alleging
it caused birth defects, psychiatric problems and bowel disease. It
was withdrawn from the U.S. market in 2009, though generic versions
are still available.
Third-Party Sale Puts Product Maker Under N.J.'s
Long-Arm Jurisdiction
Michael
Booth, New Jersey Law Journal
02-04-10 --
Applying a liberal reading of the stream-of-commerce doctrine, a
divided New Jersey Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that a product
liability suit can be pursued against a foreign manufacturer whose
only contact with the state is that one of its products was sold
here through an independent distributor. . . . Justice Barry Albin,
writing for the 5-2 majority, said that given the nature of modern
international commerce and New Jersey's long-arm rule, there is no
reason why a foreign manufacturer cannot be held liable, even if it
has barely any contact here. . . . "The increasingly fast-paced
globalization of the world economy has removed national borders as
barriers to trade," Albin wrote. "Due process permits this State to
provide a jurisdictional forum for its citizens who are injured by
dangerous and defective products placed in the stream of commerce by
a foreign manufacturer that has targeted a geographical market that
includes New Jersey." . . . Chief Justice Stuart Rabner and Justices
Jaynee LaVecchia, Virginia Long and John Wallace Jr. joined in
Albin's opinion in
Nicastro v. McIntyre Machinery America Ltd, A-29-08.
N.J. Supreme Court rules schools can search cars of
students
By Mary
Fuchs/Statehouse Bureau
02-03-10 --
School officials can search students’ cars on school property if
they suspect them of illegal activity, the state Supreme Court
unanimously ruled today in a decision that further broadens
administrators’ investigatory rights. . . . Expanding the standard
of "reasonable suspicion" to students’ vehicles, the court said that
"represents the best way to vindicate each student’s right to be
free from unreasonable searches and to receive a thorough and
efficient education." . . . "Obviously the education process is
hampered when drugs and other illegal activities are present,"
Justice John E. Wallace Jr., wrote for the court.
"Indeed, the need for school officials to maintain safety, order,
and discipline is necessary whether school officials are addressing
concerns inside the school building or outside on the school parking
lot."
|
 |
Help Support Victims-of-Law on the web by
purchasing from its Advertisers |
NEW YORK
N.Y. Jury Finds Scientist Guilty of Trying to Kill Americans in
Afghanistan
Mark
Hamblett, New York Law Journal
02-04-10 --
A jury convicted a U.S.-educated Pakistani neuroscientist Wednesday
of trying to kill FBI agents and U.S. military personnel while she
was detained in a police compound in Afghanistan in 2008. . . .
Aafia Siddiqui, 37, was found guilty on all seven counts against her
by jurors who deliberated for less than two full days. She faces up
to life in prison when she is sentenced May 6. . . . Turning toward
spectators after the jury had left the courtroom, Siddiqui said,
"This is a verdict coming from Israel, not America -- your anger
should be directed where it belongs. I can testify to this and I
have proof." . . . Siddiqui was convicted of attempted murder of
U.S. nationals and attempted murder of U.S. officers and employees,
although the jury declined to find that she had acted with
premeditation on either count.
OREGON
Circuit judge resigns
Lynn Ashcroft was being investigated for reasons related to 2008
incident
By
Stacey Barchenger And Ruth Liao • Statesman Journal
02-04-10 --
Judge Lynn E. Ashcroft resigned his position on the Marion County
bench Wednesday in a one-sentence letter to the governor and Supreme
Court chief justice. . . . "I hereby submit my unconditional
resignation from the position of Circuit Court Judge for Marion
County, Oregon, to be effective February 2, 2010," his resignation
states. . . . Ashcroft stopped working in his judicial capacity Jan.
27. . . . In an interview Wednesday evening, Ashcroft said that he
resigned rather than undergo a public battle to defend himself. . .
. "If I can benefit the system by doing this, I will," he said. "The
justice system is for everybody, not just me."
TEXAS
Federal Jury Convicts Former El Paso Criminal District Court Judge
Manuel Barraza
Department of Justice Press Release
02-04-10 --
United States Attorney John E. Murphy and David Cuthbertson, Special
Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation–El Paso
Division, announced that a federal jury this morning found former El
Paso Criminal District Court Judge Manuel Joseph Barraza, aka Manny
Barraza, guilty of charges related to a bribery scheme. . . . The
jury convicted Barraza of two counts of wire fraud and the
deprivation of honest services and one count of making false
statements. The jury acquitted Barraza of one count of mail fraud. .
. . Evidence presented during trial revealed that beginning on or
about December 2008 and continuing and including February 26, 2009,
Barraza solicited, agreed to accept, and accepted bribes in the form
of cash money. He also solicited sex and agreed to accept a bribe of
engaging in sexual activity with women. These acts were all
committed in exchange for his influence and exercise of discretion
in his official capacity as an elected judge. In carrying out his
bribery scheme, Judge Barraza promised to intervene in a felony
criminal case filed by the State of Texas pending in state district
court in order to influence the outcome of the case.
Even judges should say ‘I'm sorry'
By Rick
Casey, Houston Chronicle Commentary
02-04-10 --
You may remember the case of Casey Price, the young woman who back
in 2008 was put on trial for driving while intoxicated and then
forced by the judge to undergo a drug test — after the jury came
back with a verdict of not guilty. . . . It was about as blatant an
abuse of judicial authority as I can remember. . . . The judge,
Carolyn Marks Johnson (who is retired and was sitting as a visiting
judge), ordered the drug test while the jury was deliberating and
told Johnson if it turned out positive she would give that
information to the jury. . . . The jury returned with its verdict
before the urine test could be arranged. At that point, the judge
had no more authority over Price than over any spectator in the
courtroom, yet she ordered her to have the test anyway. . . . Two
hours later and, to add insult to injury, an $11 charge to Price,
the test came back negative. . . . It has taken a year and a half,
but the judicial system's wheels of accountability have turned in
this matter, and the spectacle is not pretty.
Houston judge resigns on eve of recusal hearing
By Brian
Rogers Copyright 2010 Houston Chronicle
02-03-10 --
Harris County criminal Court-at-Law Judge Reagan Helm resigned this
week, more than six months after a judicial intervention in which he
agreed to retire because was he suffering from dementia, according
to the administrative judge over the county criminal courts. . . .
“He acknowledged he was having some medical issues and talked about
retirement,” County Court-at-Law Judge Jean Hughes said. She said
Helm told her it was dementia. . . . Helm, 68, agreed to retire in
September and would have received disability benefits, but changed
his mind, she said. . . . News of Helm's resignation came on the eve
of a recusal hearing in which the Harris County District Attorney's
Office wanted to remove him from “any and all” cases involving
accusations of domestic violence because of “deep-seated bias and
prejudice.”
UTAH
Hands off
Supreme Court should govern itself
Salt
Lake Tribune Editorial
02-04-10 --
We don't think they would get very far if Utah's judges or the
governor tried to tell the Republicans who run the Legislature whom
they should choose as their leaders. That's one reason we find
ludicrous Sen. Scott Jenkins' bill to give the governor the power to
choose the Utah Supreme Court's chief justice. . . . In Utah the
governor names a lieutenant governor and appoints officers to help
run the executive branch. The members of the Legislature choose
speaker of the House, Senate president and majority and minority
leaders. Jenkins, in fact, was elected by his peers to be majority
leader. . . . Similarly, the five justices who sit on the Supreme
Court are best able to select who among them is qualified to handle
this important job. Even more to the point are the bedrocks of
judicial independence and separation of powers. To give the
executive branch the power to choose the Supreme Court's chief
justice would upset this delicate balance.
WASHINGTON
Is Artist’s Suit Over Photo of His Bronze-Feet Sculpture Standing on
Solid Legal Ground?
By
Martha Neil, ABA Journal
02-05-10 --
A photographer in Washington state seemingly has an interesting
fair-use argument to make concerning his photograph which, as he
describes it, depicted "a woman dancing" on a public art work in
Seattle that features bronze footprints inlaid in concrete. . . .
His photograph, Mike Hipple says in a Mike Hipple Legal Defense Fund
blog post, showed only a small portion of the sculpture
by Jack Mackie. And if "a photograph taken on a public sidewalk,
showing a woman interacting with a piece of public art, paid for by
public funds" doesn't qualify as fair use, Hipple wonders, what
does? . . . But Mackie apparently disagreed with this analysis,
filing a copyright infringement suit in the Western District of
Washington last year against Hipple and the photo stock agency to
which he provided it for commercial use. Although Mackie declined to
discuss the merits of his case with the
Capital Hill Seattle Blog, it notes that artists can lose
copyright protection if they don't aggressively enforce over
infringement.
|
 
A
Victims-of-Law Advertiser |
February 2--February
3, 2010
FEDERAL
COURTS
'Law of Nature' or 'Invention'? Court Mulls Patentability of Genes
Mark
Fass, New York Law Journal
02-03-10 --
A federal judge in Manhattan heard arguments Tuesday in a lawsuit
questioning the patentability of human genes.
The case, Association for Molecular
Pathology v. U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, 09-civ-4515, centers
on whether genes, once separated from the lengthy DNA sequence,
are sufficiently "new and useful" to be deemed patentable
under federal patent law. . . . The genes in dispute in the present
case are BRCA1 and BRCA2, two genes closely associated with breast
and ovarian cancer. . . . At Tuesday's hearing before Southern
District
Judge Robert W. Sweet regarding the two sides' motions
for summary judgment, the lead attorney for the plaintiffs,
Christopher Hansen of the
American Civil Liberties Union, argued that the
defendants,
Myriad Genetics and the
University of Utah Research Foundation, had patented the
human body and "a law of nature." . . . "They uncovered a law of
nature. It is very much to their credit," Hansen said. "But
uncovering a law of nature is not creating an invention. Uncovering
a law of nature is not patentable."
DOJ Calls Ruling in International Extradition
Dispute 'Misguided'
Mike
Scarcella, The National Law Journal
02-03-10 --
Justice Department lawyers who handle extradition requests are
arguing that a federal judge's ruling in Washington, D.C., that
compels the government to search for and turn over favorable
evidence to lawyers for a fugitive creates damaging precedent that
hurts foreign relations. . . . DOJ lawyers handling the extradition
of Zhenli Ye Gon, who had been charged in the United States in a
drug trafficking conspiracy, on Tuesday in court criticized a ruling
in January by Magistrate John Facciola of the U.S. District Court
for the District of Columbia. . . . Justice attorneys filed
court papers (.pdf) Monday challenging the Jan. 8 ruling,
which requires the government to produce evidence that would negate
the showing of probable cause that the Mexican government has
offered in its effort to bring back Ye Gon to face charges there. Ye
Gon is charged in Mexico with crimes that include drug and weapons
offenses. He has been detained in the United States since his arrest
in suburban Maryland in July 2007.
Suit May Proceed Alleging Cancer Risk in J&J,
Wal-Mart Baby Bath Products
Similar suits are pending against Gerber Products Co.,
Kimberly-Clark and Procter & Gamble Distributing
Henry
Gottlieb, New Jersey Law Journal
02-03-10 --
A federal judge in Newark, N.J., has ruled plaintiffs can pursue a
class action suit alleging that Johnson & Johnson and Wal-Mart baby
bath products are unfit for sale because they contain a banned
chemical that could cause cancer. . . . U.S. District Judge Dennis
Cavanaugh denied the companies' motions to dismiss for failure to
state a claim, saying the plaintiffs had made a good enough case to
seek economic damages on theories that the companies committed
deceptive trade practices and breached an implied warranty. . . .
The allegations about Johnson & Johnson's Baby Shampoo and
Wal-Mart's Equate Tearless Baby Wash do not say anyone has been
harmed, and two of the three allegedly hazardous chemicals in the
products have not been banned by the Food and Drug Administration
for use in cosmetics.
|
A
Victims-of-Law Advertiser |
LAX 'millennium bomber' to be resentenced; 22 years
is too lenient, court rules
Carol J.
Williams, Los Angeles Times
02-02-10 --
The 22-year prison sentence given to would-be Los Angeles
International Airport bomber Ahmed Ressam is so lenient that it
constitutes procedural error and failure by the Seattle judge who
sentenced him to adequately protect the public, a federal appeals
court ruled Tuesday. . . . A divided three-judge panel of the U.S.
9th Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the Algerian's case transferred
to a different judge for resentencing, saying that U.S. District
Court Judge John C. Coughenour failed to heed federal sentencing
guidelines and a U.S. Supreme Court rebuke. . . . Ressam was
detained in Washington state in December 1999 when he attempted to
smuggle explosives into the United States on a ferry from Canada
with plans to detonate them at LAX. He initially cooperated with
interrogators and provided what Coughenour termed vital insight into
the workings of terrorist organizations like Al Qaeda.
Relief, Regret Greet Anticipated Move of 9/11 Trial
Mark
Hamblett, New York Law Journal
02-02-10 --
Judges, attorneys and court personnel at the Southern District
courthouse at 500 Pearl St. reacted with relief, and also regret,
now that it appears the trial of accused Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed and four co-defendants will not be held in lower
Manhattan. . . . There was also the recognition that, even though
the prosecution may not take place near Ground Zero, the intense
security planning already under way will pay off because the
Southern District will continue to handle its share of terrorism
trials. . . . Court personnel interviewed declined to speak for
attribution, noting that the U.S. Department of Justice has not yet
determined the location of the Mohammed trial, but several people
said they had been concerned that a proposed security lockdown
extending outwards from the Worth Street side of 500 Pearl would
make it increasingly difficult to conduct business as usual at the
courthouse.
At 1st Circuit, Unum Group Challenges Verdict Based
on Insureds' False Claims
Sheri
Qualters, The National Law Journal
02-02-10 --
In an appeal of a jury verdict against
insurer Unum Group, a panel of the 1st U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals repeatedly grilled a whistleblower's attorney. The lawyer
was seeking affirmation of the verdict, which found that Unum
violated the
False Claims Act by causing its insureds to file false
Social Security Disability Insurance claims. . . . On Momday, the
three-judge panel, which included retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice
David Souter, heard oral argument in U.S. ex. rel.
Loughren v. Unum Group, an appeal challenging the liability
standard for private insurance companies. . . . An October 2008 jury
verdict held Unum, the nation's largest private disability insurer,
liable under the False Claims Act for allegedly prompting two
insured individuals to submit Social Security Disability benefit
claims it knew were false.
High Court Campaign Finance Opinion Roils Dozens of
Cases
Marcia
Coyle, The National Law Journal
02-02-10 --
The U.S. Supreme Court's
landscape-altering ruling in
Citizens United v. FEC (pdf) is already triggering
aftershocks in some of the dozens of campaign finance-related
lawsuits in federal and state courts. . . . In SpeechNow.org v. FEC,
argued before a federal appellate court less than a week after the
ruling, the potential impact of the decision dominated questioning
in that challenge to limits on independent expenditure committees.
In two separate, high-profile cases targeting the federal ban on
soft money and a state campaign disclosure law, the courts have
ordered supplemental briefing on Citizens United's relevance. And
the Supreme Court this term is not yet finished in this area. The
justices will hear arguments in April on an appeal involving
Washington's petition disclosure law.
|

A
Victims-of-Law Advertiser |
IMMIGRATION
COURTS
Report Urges Overhaul of Immigrant Removal Adjudication System
Marcia
Coyle, The National Law Journal
02-03-10 --
Neither the Department of Homeland Security nor the nation's
immigration courts -- both overwhelmed by exploding caseloads and
inadequate resources -- are ensuring fair decisions and due process
for noncitizens, according to a top-to-bottom investigation of the
system for removing aliens from the United States. . . . A pro bono
team of 50 lawyers and legal assistants at Washington, D.C.'s
Arnold & Porter spent more than a year examining the
removal adjudication system at the request of the American Bar
Association's Commission on Immigration. . . . In a 500-plus-page
report to be released today, the law firm details its findings,
including inconsistent positions taken by DHS on asylum and other
issues, high levels of stress and burnout among immigration judges,
inefficient circuit court review of removal orders, unsupportable
disparities in decisions by immigration judges, a dramatic expansion
of the grounds for removing noncitizens based on "aggravated felony"
convictions, and too many judges who display bias or intemperate
behavior on the bench. An example of one judge's behavior and the
consequences it had for an immigrant family were
chronicled by The National Law Journal last month. . . .
The report also urges a major restructuring of the adjudication
system by elevating immigration courts to Article I status and makes
roughly 60 other recommendations, about half requiring action by
Congress and other non-legislative steps, to address the myriad
problems with the system.
Court: Part of Oklahoma immigrant law
enforceable now
By The
Associated Press The Oklahoman
02-02-10 --
A federal appeals court panel on Tuesday upheld much of an
injunction against Oklahoma's tough anti-illegal immigrant law but
said the state can now force public contractors to cross-check
employee names against a government list of eligible workers. . . .
In a divided opinion, a three-judge panel of the 10th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in Denver ruled that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce
and several other pro-business groups had legal standing to
challenge Oklahoma's immigration law. . . . The law sought to
subject businesses that hire illegal immigrants to financial
penalties, dictate who can and cannot be fired and require
contractors to withhold taxes for workers without proper
documentation. . . . The panel said that though the plaintiffs would
likely triumph with most of their claims, Oklahoma can direct
employers to a federal database of workers eligible to work in this
country. / You can access the ruling at
this link.
Fate of Obama’s aunt to be fought behind closed
doors
By
Laurel J. Sweet, Boston Herald
02-02-10 --
The illegal alien aunt of President Obama could learn this week
whether she can put down roots in Boston - or start packing her bags
for a one-way trip back to Kenya. . . . And, save for U.S.
Immigration Court Judge Leonard I. Shapiro, she’ll know before
anyone else. Zeituni Polly Onyango has persuaded Shapiro to bar the
public from her removal proceeding Thursday morning at the John F.
Kennedy Federal Building, though it’s unclear why. . . . “I assume
(Shapiro) thought it would be a three-ring circus. She’s the aunt of
the president of the United States - the most famous man in the
world,” said Mike Rogers, spokesman for the Ohio law firm defending
Onyango, 57, against the Department of Homeland Security.
ARIZONA
Maricopa County Sheriff's official faces hearing
Contempt case is tied to failure to transport inmates
by
Michael Kiefer, JJ Hensley and Yvonne Wingett The Arizona Republic
02-02-10 --
The Maricopa County Sheriff's Office is still failing to meet a
state-law mandate to transport county jail inmates to their court
hearings. . . . And a sheriff's deputy chief, who last fall was held
in contempt of court for the office's failure to follow the law,
will appear before a judge on Friday to answer nearly 200 new
counts. . . . The Sheriff's Office has struggled to get inmates in
court on time since last summer, and a series of steps that court
and sheriff's administrators took to alleviate the strain has done
little to help. . . . From Sept. 24, 2009, to Jan. 20, there were at
least 198 incidents in which inmates were not brought to court on
time or at all, and 19 Maricopa County Superior Court judicial
officers filed paperwork to have sheriff's Deputy Chief Dave Trombi,
the person in charge of transporting inmates, held in contempt. . .
. Some people accused of crimes are held in custody because they are
deemed a potential danger to society, but many are jailed only to be
sure that they appear for court hearings. Under state law, it is the
sole responsibility of the Sheriff's Office to bring in-custody
inmates to hearings.
CALIFORNIA
Judicial panel disciplines retired L.A. County judge
Brett C. Klein was censured and barred from presiding over cases
after he ordered that a lawyer in a class-action suit be paid
$125,000 in $10 gift cards to a women's fashion store.
By Jack Leonard, Los Angeles Times
02-03-10 --
A retired Los Angeles County judge who ordered that a lawyer be paid
in $10 gift cards from a women's fashion store as part of a legal
settlement was censured Tuesday and barred from presiding over court
cases. . . . The Commission on Judicial Performance accused Brett C.
Klein of showing bias, abusing his authority and "grandstanding to
the press" in a class-action lawsuit that he briefly presided over
last year. . . . The lawsuit accused a clothing store chain of
violating privacy laws by asking for personal identification
information when customers used credit cards to make purchases. . .
. As part of a settlement, which had been given preliminary approval
by a different judge, the two sides agreed that Windsor Fashions
would pay the customer who brought the suit $2,500 and her attorney
$125,000. Other customers who came forward as part of the suit would
each be given a $10 gift voucher, according to state disciplinary
records.
Guilty Verdict in San Francisco Mortgage Fraud Case
Wiretaps helped seal the deal, says one of the jurors at a woman's
federal trial
Dan
Levine, The Recorder
02-03-10 --
One mortgage fraud prosecution has shown, once again, why the feds
just love wiretaps. . . . Judy Yeung, the former head of American
Educational Foundation International, was found guilty Tuesday on
several counts of wire fraud and witness tampering. According to
juror Ken Hughes, the government's key witnesses had varying
credibility issues because of their history of deception before
deciding to cooperate with prosecutors. . . . But Yeung sounded
extremely savvy and knowledgeable about the fraud on recorded phone
calls, he said. Without the wiretaps, "it would have been very
difficult to come up with the verdict that we did," Hughes said.
San Francisco Mortgage Fraud Closings Draw Crowd
Dan
Levine, The Recorder
02-02-10 --
Some experienced white-collar hands assembled for closings Monday in
one of the few federal mortgage fraud cases to hit a Northern
California jury. . . . Judy Yeung, a Chinese-American woman well
known in political circles -- her business cards read "The Honorable
Lady of San Francisco" -- is accused of using straw buyers to obtain
fraudulent mortgages totaling $6.5 million. Yeung's case is fairly
representative of the Justice Department's local mortgage fraud
docket; since the housing market collapsed federal prosecutors
haven't brought any large-scale indictments against corporate
lenders in the Bay Area. . . . Assistant U.S. Attorney Susan Badger,
the Northern District's mortgage fraud coordinator, tried Yeung's
case, along with her colleague Jeffrey Rabkin. A pack of
white-collar AUSAs showed up in court to watch Rabkin deliver
closings. Prosecutors called several witnesses who cooperated with
the government, but their testimony was corroborated by wiretaps
featuring Yeung, Rabkin said.
California sex offender residency restrictions
upheld
Housing restrictions barring offenders from living near schools or
parks apply even to those convicted years before the law took
effect, state Supreme Court says.
By Maura
Dolan, Los Angeles Times.
02-01-10 --
The California Supreme Court upheld residency restrictions for sex
offenders Monday, ruling that thousands may be barred from living
near schools and parks even if their sex crimes were committed years
before the restrictions became law. . . . The state high court's 5-2
decision permits California to continue enforcing residency
restrictions on thousands of sex offenders who were paroled after
Proposition 83, known as "Jessica's Law," took effect in November
2006. . . . Four parolees challenged the residency rules, arguing
that there was no place where they could live and comply with the
law in the cities to which they had been paroled. The law bans sex
offenders from living within 2,000 feet of schools or parks where
children congregate. . . . Each challenger was convicted of a sex
crime requiring lifetime registration years before Proposition 83
passed, and none was on parole for a sex crime when Jessica's Law
took effect. The parolees contended that the state was illegally
applying the law retroactively.
DELAWARE
Court upholds state's death penalty
After three-year delay, judges allows executions to resume
By Sean
O'Sullivan • The News Journal of Wilmington
02-02-10 --
Delaware's death penalty was upheld as constitutional on Monday,
paving the way for executions -- on hold since May 2006 -- to
resume. . . . Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden said Monday he
was pleased the court ruled that Delaware is meeting its
constitutional obligations and that his office will be working with
Superior Court to begin "scheduling executions as appropriate." . .
. Biden said the three-year delay "caused uncertainty, and I'm glad
this has resolved that uncertainty." . . . In its 47-page opinion,
the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals warned Delaware about "the
worrisome course it appears to have taken at times" in executions.
DISTRICT OF
COLUMBIA
Woman Found Guilty of Stalking Judge
Jordan
Weissmann, The National Law Journal
02-03-10 --
Taylar Nuevelle, the woman
accused of stalking a D.C. magistrate judge, was
convicted of all three counts against her Tuesday, and was ordered
held without bond until sentencing on April 7. . . . Jurors found
Nuevelle guilty of unlawful entry, stalking and second degree
burglary. Prosecutors alleged that Nuevelle broke into the home of
her former girlfriend, Magistrate Judge Janet Albert of the D.C.
Superior Court, in an attempt to harass her after their breakup, and
inundated her with e-mails, text messages and phone calls. A
spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of
Columbia said Nuevelle could face a maximum of 16 years in prison.
KENTUCKY
Louisville Bar Association releases findings on judges' performance
By Ray
D'Alessio, WAVE
02-02-10 --
Do area judges make the grade? That was the question Tuesday as the
Louisville Bar Association released the findings of its yearly
evaluation. . . . "I think most of the time the scores are
relatively high," said Jim Lunger, Vice President of the
Thoroughbred Research Group.
To view the evaluation results, follow the links listed below:
Report of Findings
Comparison of Judges Summary Report
NEW JERSEY
NEW YORK
Snooping by Detective 'Legitimate' Part of Divorce Process, Judge
Finds
Noeleen
G. Walder, New York Law Journal
02-02-10 --
A man who hired a detective to trail his wife to a motel where she
was having an affair with a local priest was not stalking her, an
Orange County, N.Y., judge has ruled. . . . Forced to resign after
her husband turned over a recording of her and the priest to
officials at the church where she worked, the wife accused her
husband of violating an order of protection requiring him to stay
away from her home and place of employment. . . . But Family Court
Judge Debra J. Kiedaisch, who was sitting in the Supreme Court's
integrated domestic violence part, held that the husband, who only
handed over the tape at the urging of church officials, had the
right to gather evidence to defend himself in a divorce proceeding.
. . . "The hiring of a professional licensed private investigator in
a matrimonial action to gather evidence is for a proper and
legitimate purpose," the judge wrote in
Anonymous v. Anonymous.
N.Y. Chief Judge Rallies State Bar Backing for
Threatened Judiciary Budget
Joel
Stashenko, New York Law Journal
02-02-10 --
Facing the prospect of a budgetary showdown with Gov. David A.
Paterson, New York Court of Appeals Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman has
won support from the New York State Bar Association against what he
called the governor's "outrageous" criticism of the court system's
new spending proposal. . . . In his first speech to the State Bar's
House of Delegates as chief judge, a feisty Lippman on Friday
defended the judiciary's $2.7 billion spending plan, especially the
$183.5 million increase from the current year that
Paterson had blasted as "business as usual" in the face
of crushing state fiscal and economic problems. . . . The increase
in the judiciary's budget proposal contains $48 million for the
first pay raise for state judges since 1999.
PENNSYLVANIA
Judicial watchdog criticized over Luzerne scandal
By Amy
Worden, Philadelphia Inquirer Harrisburg Bureau
02-03-10 --
A special panel on the Luzerne County juvenile-court scandal
yesterday accused the state's judicial watchdog of failing to act on
complaints about one of the judges at the center of the scandal. . .
. "While the Judicial Conduct Board waited, 2,000 juveniles' rights
were violated," said panel member Kenneth J. Horoho said. "You had
red flags and you did nothing." . . . And to help guard against
misconduct, the president of the Pennsylvania Bar Association told
the panel, performance evaluations for judges would increase
accountability. Clifford E. Haines, a Philadelphia lawyer, said the
state should establish a commission that would issue "report cards"
on judges - as 17 other states do - to help "foster judicial
integrity and respect."
Judge Slashes Punitives, Upholds Jury's Finding in
Hormone Replacement Therapy Case
Amaris
Elliott-Engel, The Legal Intelligencer
02-03-10 --
In an opinion reducing punitive damages awarded to a breast cancer
survivor by almost $70 million, Senior Judge Norman Ackerman has
become the first Philadelphia Common Pleas Court judge to uphold a
jury finding that drugmaker Wyeth failed to warn a plaintiff's
prescribing physician of the dangers of breast cancer from using
Wyeth's hormonal drugs. . . . A Philadelphia jury awarded $75
million in punitive damages and $3.7 million in compensatory damages
last fall in Barton v. Wyeth. . . . Both the plaintiff and defendant
in Barton could claim wins and losses in Ackerman's Jan. 29 opinion.
Cross-appeals are expected, according to interviews and press
statements.
'Original victims' cheated in Luzerne scandal?
By Amy
Worden, Philadelphia Inquirer Harrisburg Bureau
02-02-10 --
The state's victim advocate yesterday urged a special panel not to
forget the thousands of "original victims" allegedly harmed by
juveniles whose cases were heard by judges at the center of the
Luzerne County criminal-justice scandal. . . . Carol L. Lavery, who
heads Pennsylvania's Office of the Victim Advocate, says she has
received letters from numerous victims - and parents of victims - of
juvenile offenders whose cases were vacated as a result of the "cash
for kids" corruption investigation. . . . Former Luzerne County
Court Judges Mark A. Ciavarella Jr. and Michael T. Conahan are
accused of collecting $2.6 million in kickbacks for sending
thousands of children to detention at private facilities. . . . The
two pleaded guilty last year to fraud charges, but a federal judge
threw out their plea agreements, saying the men had not accepted
responsibility. They are awaiting trial.
|
Barbara
Johnson, Author, Civil & Criminal Litigation Attorney
|
Amazon
is a
Victims-of-Law Advertiser
|
Attorney
Barbara Johnson believes:
-
Americans should have a common purpose
- Americans do not want bitter partisan debates
- Americans do not want "gender wars" and "culture wars"
- Americans want simple problems solved, without regard
to special interests.
In her bestseller,
Behind the Black Robes: Failed Justice, Attorney
Johnson covers every conceivable topic regarding judges,
their decisions, and how Americans are victimized by the
judicial system. Some of the subjects she hits on are
immunity and the pseudo Eleventh Amendment;
quasi-judicial, prosecutorial, and qualified Immunities,
which she terms “Protecting Judges, Parasites, the
Other Enemies of the People”; legal malpractice or
“foxes guarding the chicken coops”; problems with
transcription companies; intimidation and insolence of
judges; rape and date rape; child protection agency
cases and governmental kidnapping; fraud and complicity
by the Court; child custody; divorce; immigration fraud,
and so much more.
Of greatest concerns to her
are the immunity enjoyed by our judicial system, and the
federal annual bonuses to the States, of which she
believes, if abolished, our judicial ills would be cured
immediately.
Barbara Johnson is a
graduate of the New England School of Law: J.D., and
earned her B.A. from Bennington College, along with
attending Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT),
Center of International Relations, and Middlebury
College’s Russian Summer School.
She was awarded the West
Publishing Company Corpus Juris Secundum Series Award,
1987, for highest annual scholastic average, and had her
papers selected for the Nathan Burkan Memorial
Competition (sponsored by ASCAP: "Patent or Copyright
Protection for Computer Programs: A Traditional Legal
Comparative Analysis Overlayed with a Linguistic Theory"
by the Dean of New England Law School to Competition).
She has trial and appellate experience in Massachusetts
Superior, District, Probate & Family Courts, Appeals
Court, Supreme Judicial Court, U.S. District Court for
Massachusetts, has appearedd pro hac vice in the U.S.
District Courts in Concord, New Hampshire, and Portland,
Maine,and U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.
Mrs. Johnson now lives in
Costa Rica. |
|
The Courts:
Rochester resident puts American justice on trial
By Tim
Louis Macaluso, rochestercitynewspaper
11-25-09 --
In the opening pages of "Ordinary Justice: How America Holds Court,"
Amy Bach recounts the story of a Texas defense lawyer, Joe Frank
Cannon, who literally fell asleep during the trial of his client,
Calvin Burdine. . . . After being convicted of murder for shooting a
man during a convenience-store robbery, Burdine was sentenced to
death. But in a sadly comical turn of events, a panel of federal
appellate judges vigorously debated whether Burdine's attorney had
violated the Constitution by repeatedly falling asleep,
chin-to-chest, during his client's trial. . . . Burdine's death
sentence was overturned and he was granted a new trial. But the real
question, Bach says, is how did a defense lawyer sleep through a
murder trial without a single objection from the judge, prosecutor,
jurors, or courtroom witnesses? . . . After eight years of research,
Bach found that such cases are not extraordinary. Instead, she says,
they occur with disturbing regularity in courtrooms across the
country, and require surprisingly little effort to find.
|