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babylonsister

(171,065 posts)
Thu Jun 13, 2013, 12:54 PM Jun 2013

Judge Jones' troubles intensify

http://maddowblog.msnbc.com/_news/2013/06/13/18936891-judge-jones-troubles-intensify?lite

Judge Jones' troubles intensify
By Steve Benen
-
Thu Jun 13, 2013 11:05 AM EDT


We learned last week that Judge Edith Jones of the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals is under fire after a Federalist Society speech she delivered in February. According to affidavits from attendees, Jones said that racial groups like African Americans and Hispanics "do get involved in more violent crime" than "Anglos."

The conservative jurist, appointed by Reagan and considered for the Supreme Court by George W. Bush, is also alleged to have said that the defenses often offered in capital cases, including mental retardation and systemic racism, were "red herrings," and Mexicans would prefer to be on death row in the United States rather than in prison in Mexico.

It appears the complaints against Jones are being taken quite seriously.

Chief Justice John Roberts of the U.S. Supreme Court formally ordered on Wednesday that a rare public judicial misconduct complaint against 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Edith Jones be reviewed by officials in a different circuit -- one based in the nation's capital.

"I have selected the Judicial Council of the District of Columbia Circuit to accept the transfer and to exercise the powers of a judicial council with respect to the identified complaint and any pending or new complaints relating to the same subject matter," Roberts said in a letter addressed to the D.C. circuit's chief judge that was posted on the 5th Circuit's website.

It is only one of a handful of times in U.S. history that a federal circuit judge has been the subject of a public judicial misconduct complaint and a formal disciplinary review. Normally such matters are secret under federal law.... Chief Justice Roberts' letter, dated June 12, reports that the reassignment of the judicial misconduct complaint against Jones to jurists in Washington, D.C., came in response to a request for transfer from the current Chief Judge of the 5th Circuit, Carl E. Stewart.


What's more, this news comes a day after Ian Millhiser reported, "In a likely sign that the court is taking the complaint seriously, a panel that includes both Jones and the court's Chief Judge Carl E. Stewart just ordered a death penalty case transferred to another panel.... {T}his court's order may simply rest on the idea that a panel of three judges, one of whom is currently standing in judgment of the other and a third who has a history of tension with the second, is not likely to give the impression of impartial decision making."
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Judge Jones' troubles intensify (Original Post) babylonsister Jun 2013 OP
Usually judges are more prudent about what they say in public. Shrike47 Jun 2013 #1
R#2 & K for, and may the intensification intensify n/t UTUSN Jun 2013 #2
A few months ago I watched a federal judge dole out immigration sentences MindPilot Jun 2013 #3
Who was that judge? nt stevenleser Jun 2013 #4
I will PM you. MindPilot Jun 2013 #5
YOW that's one cold son of a bitch. n/t hootinholler Jun 2013 #6
Four years in federal prison for what? Spider Jerusalem Jun 2013 #8
K&R n/t Tx4obama Jun 2013 #7

Shrike47

(6,913 posts)
1. Usually judges are more prudent about what they say in public.
Thu Jun 13, 2013, 01:00 PM
Jun 2013

Of course, racists don't see themselves as racists and she may not understand what the problem is.

 

MindPilot

(12,693 posts)
3. A few months ago I watched a federal judge dole out immigration sentences
Thu Jun 13, 2013, 01:21 PM
Jun 2013

He made some horrible comments to the people he was sentencing. Give a guy three years in federal prison and deportation, commenting that "I know you didn't come here to rape and pillage, but we just can't have your kind in America." (by "your kind" he meant "Mexican&quot

In another case where a man who has been in the US since infancy--didn't even know he wasn't a citizen until he was picked up in a sweep--now in his 30's, owns a home, runs a business, has a wife and children. Four years in federal prison and deported to a country where he has only infrequently visited. The judge's dismissive parting comment as he coldly shattered this man's life, "You can use your time in prison to learn Spanish."

 

Spider Jerusalem

(21,786 posts)
8. Four years in federal prison for what?
Fri Jun 14, 2013, 02:28 AM
Jun 2013

Violations of immigration law are civil, not criminal, offences. The only possible criminal penalties that could have been imposed under applicable law: "knowingly entering into a marriage for the purpose of circumventing immigration law" and "knowingly establishing a commercial enterprise" for the same purpose. If that's what the conviction was for, it would appear that the defendant wasn't able to establish his ignorance of his non-citizen status to the satisfaction of the court.

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