I had to sue a judge today whom I am also investigating as a journalist in the Cornell quid pro quo scandal.
The "hero"'s name is Judge Mark G. Masler, judge Aherne's friend, read my two previous articles about her by clicking the articles in the right top corner.
You can read my lawsuit against Judge Masler here.
I am now fighting for the right of the public to be present at motion hearing in court where such motions involve issues of public concern.
This is the 2nd judge I have to sue this year doing the same trick - he schedules a "motion hearing" that nobody asked for, to intimidate a particular person behind closed doors or to concoct a forged transcript with the help of a slave court reporter, then, if members of the public apply to attend the virtual court hearing, he switches a public motion hearing to a closed-door "conference" that parties still have to attend on fear of sanctions.
So, the bulk of "sensitive issues" in the motion, including any misconduct of the judge, is not recorded by the stenographer, and the public is barred from observing the de facto motion hearing because it is now supposedly a "conference ".
I sued to block New York State judges, all of them, including Judge Masler, from ever doing this trick to the public and the press - yes, I am the press - again.
I will cover developments in this lawsuit.
Stay tuned.
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