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The Justice Business

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Posted on Jun 11, 2009

By Marie Cocco

    The appearance of extreme political impropriety, the Supreme Court has decided, is sometimes just too extreme.

    The circumstances of West Virginia’s chief justice, who refused to remove himself from deciding a case involving the company of a political contributor, is an “exceptional” example of why appearances count, according to the high court’s 5-4 ruling in a case that shines a brutal light on the spiral of campaign contributions that threaten to compromise too many state courts. 

    The case began with an aggrieved coal company owner who was angered by a lower court decision that had ordered him to pay $50 million in damages to competitors for fraudulent business practices and other malfeasance.

    Don Blankenship, chief of A.T. Massey Coal Co., spent $3 million to defeat an unfriendly Democratic judge and elect Republican Brent D. Benjamin as a replacement who would be expected to rule on the appeal. Blankenship got what common sense suggests he paid for: Benjamin refused to recuse himself from deciding the case and twice voted to overturn the verdict that would have cost his political benefactor’s company so much money.

    “Although there is no allegation of a quid pro quo agreement, the fact remains that Blankenship’s extraordinary contributions were made at a time when he had a vested stake in the outcome,” Justice Anthony M. Kennedy wrote for the majority. “Just as no man is allowed to be a judge in his own cause, similar fears of bias can arise when—without the consent of the other parties—a man chooses the judge in his own cause. And applying this principle to the judicial election process, there was here a serious, objective risk of actual bias that required Justice Benjamin’s recusal.”

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    The contributions in this case surely were extraordinary. Blankenship, by Kennedy’s account, spent more than the total amount expended by all other supporters of Benjamin—and three times the amount put forth by Benjamin’s own campaign committee.

    Yet there is nothing extraordinary anymore about the enormous sums of money being funneled into state judicial elections. “Big money is changing the character of judicial election campaigns,” the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School concluded in a research paper last year. “These campaigns are now high-stakes contests in which chambers of commerce, tort reform lobbyists, organized labor, plaintiffs’ lawyers and other, often much narrower interest groups spend substantial resources—frequently without disclosing the sources of their funding.”

    Only about a fifth of states with contested supreme court elections saw the use of television advertising in 2000. But in 2008, according to a Brennan Center draft report on more recent developments, television ads were aired in more than 85 percent of the judicial contests. And where there are television ads, there is money: About $19 million was spent on judicial election television ads last year, more than in any year except 2004, when there were more contested races.

    Not only are ads becoming more prolific and expensive. They are becoming nastier. “These ads are going deeper and deeper into the mud,” says Adam Skaggs, a counsel to the Brennan Center who has worked on the issue.

    So what’s the difference between the money and ad wars common in races for governor, legislatures, Congress and the presidency and those for state judgeships? Increasingly, the public sees none. This is the problem.

    The courts are supposed to be the branch of government that is removed from politics, not awash in them. They are the forums to which individuals who are increasingly—and justifiably—cynical about lawmakers in both parties and at all levels of government should be able to turn for a fair hearing of a dispute, and a ruling made on the merits.

    Yet even a survey of 2,428 state court judges published by the Brennan Center last year shows that jurists themselves don’t really believe campaign contributors have no influence over them. Nearly half of the judges said contributors have “a little” to “a great deal” of influence on their decisions. With 39 states now electing judges, the threat to impartial justice is frightening.

    The Supreme Court’s ruling in the West Virginia case sets only the broadest parameters for judges who should consider removing themselves from cases. It would be better if states established impartial panels, perhaps of retired judges, to decide all requests for a judge’s recusal.

    The alternative is the unreasonable and unpalatable probability of more outrageous examples of conflicted—and compromised—justice.

    Marie Cocco’s e-mail address is mariecocco(at)washpost.com.

    © 2009, Washington Post Writers Group


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By rockinrobin, June 13 at 10:34 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Exploitation is the “way” “democracy” works??? it is a CRIME folks; WE the PEOPLE are the TARGET; and the REASON why Congress does NOT abide by laws of Congress, laws of the USA & has declared “there is no such thing as international law” is that THIS GOV is a BUNCH of CRIMINALS and CROOKS; they CHANGE THE LAWS LITERALLY FOLKS: whenever they so choose to do so; LAST time was PRIOR to NOMINATION of who was going to RUN for PRES; Think ANY environmental laws or laws written at request of the PEOPLE are EVER FOLLOWED??? best think AGAIN, folks;
Sottomeyer, appearing via SATELLITE in Mahr vs ASHCROFT stated: with EACH administration the “rules and regulations” are changed: indicating need to CALL to find out HOW TO RULE; this was PRIOR I believe to OBAMA even being elected;
NO WONDER the PEOPLE want a CHANGE! It is NOT EVEN a 2 party system; cuz the AGENDA is to TARGET and HARM (us the people) and now on to GLOBALLY as “they have successfully gotten away with it in the USA for decades!”
BTW, they IGNORED usury laws just like they ignore the premeditated & purposely poisoning of the PEOPLE for $ for THEIR pockets as THEY OWN Monstanto, & Dow etc folks: along with the PHARMA; and the CORPS whom they have CRIMINALIZED: no one per the law can ever be held accountable for anything; and Scalia, looking into the cameras AFTER a “function” said with sneering contempt to US the PEOPLE: YOU wrote the laws (it is ALL our FAULT!)
And of course working with the Corps they INFLATE the prices; like they did HOUSING, TAXES, etc; while spending $100,000,000.00 living large & being in charge like HC. IN A MONTH FOLKS! not buying real estate etc; oh no; just fine wining & dining with friends; do whatever you want whenever you want however you want & NEVER be brought to JUSTICE! THIS is the AMERICAN WAY that they want inflicted on EVERY nation.

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By hippie4ever, June 13 at 3:07 am #

This is reprehensible but hardly new; judges are usually lawyers so one doesn’t expect virtuous behavior, and does expect renumeration in one form or another. It is wrong, unconstitutional and disgusting so a reasonable citizen can add it to his to-do list, but the flaw is within human nature. Lobbying wouldn’t be effective if people weren’t so easily bought. It seems virtually no one in Congress is honest—a mere handful will even discuss the problem. Greed is universal.

Even worse are many Administrative Law Judges, cheap hacks given position of power by unprincipled politicians. These positions are payoff and there is often no oversight, such as an election.

Some of these weasels actually failed the bar or later became disbarred, yet maintain their positions ajudicating many aspects of law, including employment and tenant issues. Their decisions often make a mockery of justice; for example an ALJ siding with a slumlord because he too is a slumlord; or an unemployment board ALJ siding against the plaintiff because it saves the state money. Why not? The ALJ is beyond the law.

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By bookluvr, June 12 at 12:53 pm #

And what’s good for our Judges is good for our Legislators!

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By nickmammano, June 12 at 11:03 am #

Since when is bribery “freedom of expression”?  Both of them, Blankenship AND Benjamin ought to be jailed.

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By Thomas Billis, June 11 at 10:23 pm #

Bribery by any other name would be so sweet.Recuse himself this judge is supposed to be in jail.If I hear the word brilliant to describe the best judge of 1850’s Scalia I think I will have a stroke.

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By Inherit The Wind, June 11 at 6:18 pm #

The Four Fascists of the End of Days of the USA all dissented.  Nothing wrong with buying judges—that’s “Freedom of expression” to Scalia, Thomas, Roberts and Alito.

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By Folktruther, June 11 at 2:52 pm #

This is why the cliche ‘the US is a nation of laws not men’ is drivel.  The rich bribe the judges, legally.  And four members of the Supreme Court think that is just fine.  The Democratic disguise for plutocracy has slipped so far that the judges don’t even maintain a pretense anymore.

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By ardee, June 11 at 6:31 am #

Wait a hold it! This damned ACTIVIST judge is a Republican!??! How can this be when everyone knows it is only Democratic judges who are such?

That a judge could be so out of touch with law and justice as to fail to recuse himself in such a blatant case sort of shows a bit too much about our supposedly rock solid system of judicial fairness.

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