I wrote that in his application, Mr. Gleason has shamelessly asked the court to have Mr. Neroni pay Mr. Gleason for Mr. Gleason's advocacy for a non-client, the wife of Judge Michael Coccoma, the Chief Administrative Judge of upstate New York, where Mr. Gleason was advocating to get for Ms. Coccoma free legal representation by New York State Attorney General's office, Judge Sharpe's son's employer, at the expense of taxpayers.
I have written that Ellen Coccoma was not Mr. Gleason's client and thus Mr. Gleason had no right to advocate for her in front of the court or claim legal fees for such advocacy.
I have written that the point of advocacy of Mr. Gleason on behalf of Ms. Coccoma was, in fact, to get for Ms. Coccoma free legal representation by the New York State Attorney General at taxpayers' expense.
I've written that Ellen Coccoma was sued for her misconduct as a private attorney in a private action where she invoked the powers of the People. I have written that Ellen Coccoma, sued as a private attorney, was not entitled to representation by the New York State Attorney General.
I wrote that Judge Gary Sharpe, the judge presiding over the case, was disgruntled in his decision by my pro se lawsuit filed in May of 2014 where Mr. Neroni did not participate and which was seeking from Judge Sharpe information as to his participation in the American Inns of Court (see my blog here, here and here) and all other similar organizations, which clearly included the State-Federal Judicial Council.
Now I am announcing that Judge Gary Sharpe has made it official and created a precedent that a private attorney like Mr. Gleason may advocate for a non-client and ask that a moneyed non-client is awarded free legal advocacy at the expense of taxpayers, and that a civil rights plaintiff must pay for such frivolous advocacy for a non-client.
Gary Sharpe awarded the entire shameless request of Mr. Gleason.
Assigned counsel for the rich and powerful, at the expense of taxpayers have been written by Gary Sharpe into law, and reinforced by legal fees against a person who contested it.
It only adds insult to injury that the assigned counsel for the rich was assigned to the wife of the powerful judge in New York State, that the assignment went to the New York State Attorney General's office where Gary Sharpe's son is employed, and that the sanctions came after Mr. Neroni inquired in another case, Neroni v. Becker about such employment of the judge's son and asked the judge to step down.
It only adds insult to injury that Mr. Neroni has asked the judge to recuse from this case in view of his obvious prior retaliation and award of legal fees in Neroni v. Becker for work completely unrelated to Mr. Neroni's claims.
It only adds insult to injury that this award has come after I have sued Judge Sharpe in his individual capacity, and the point of lawsuit was asking for the judge's possible involvement in organizations where Mr. Gleason's law firm and HHK (another law firm to which fees were awarded) were likely part of.
Judging by the fact that the judge relied upon four lawsuits:
- one of them still proceeding (Neroni v. Zayas),
- three dismissed without award of sanctions or finding of frivolous conduct (partial dismissal in Neroni v. Zayas, dismissals in Neroni v. Grannis, Bracci v. Becker), and
- one (Neroni v. Becker) de facto reversed on appeal when the 2nd Circuit remanded the case back to Gary Sharpe who already sanctioned Mr. Neroni for arguing against expansive application of the Younger abstention, specifically because the U.S. Supreme Court narrowed the application of the Younger abstention after Mr. Neroni was sanctioned under its previous broader version.
In Neroni v. Becker Gary Sharpe awarded against Mr. Neroni legal fees for review of O'Sullivan v. Hallock, which was not related to Mr. Neroni's case in any way, shape or form, and of several other cases that had nothing to do with Mr. Neroni.
As to the above dismissed or partially dismissed cases that the judge was referring to in his decision as to Mr. Neroni's alleged "bad faith", none of them with the exception of the remanded Neroni v. Becker (where the award of legal fees is still on appeal) ruled that the lawsuits were frivolous.
Judge Sharpe could not change those decisions made by other judges and now rule that those lawsuits were, in fact frivolous, for purposes of his new findings in a new case.
Moreover, the partial dismissal in Neroni v. Zayas was on jurisdictional grounds. If the court has no jurisdiction to decide a claim, it does not have jurisdiction to decide that the claim was frivolous, that is clear logic.
The dismissal of Bracci v. Becker and Neroni v. Grannis was, similarly, jurisdictional.
If the case was not decided on the merits, a court cannot consider the merits for purposes of deciding whether the case was frivolous.
It is an equal protection issue.
If the court refused to take jurisdiction to reach the merits of a case to protect a civil rights plaintiff, it cannot reach the merits of the case to protect a defendant in the same action.
I will address more specifically the essence of Neroni v. Grannis, Bracci v. Becker, and Neroni v. Becker, with documents from those cases, in more details in separate blogs.
I will show specifically that by dismissing civil rights lawsuits by law-trained civil rights plaintiffs the court forecloses the road to recovery to multiple New Yorkers defrauded by its own government and forecloses the hope of controlling rampant corruption and misconduct of public officials in the state of New York.
It is easy for the court to abuse its power and chill civil rights litigation by simply squashing a person who dared to raise sensitive issues of attorney and judicial misconduct in a civil rights lawsuit.
It appears that judge Gary L. Sharpe pays no attention to the constitutional oath of office that he took when he was confirmed as a federal judge for a lifetime. After all, what is to be done to him for his obvious misconduct and retaliation against a litigant? Who will discipline him? Statistics of discipline of federal judges shows that such discipline is practically non-existent in the United States.
As a Russian saying goes, "a craven will not take another craven's eye".
Yet, 42 U.S.C. 1988, the statute under which attorney fees were requested and awarded, was not meant as a sword against civil rights plaintiffs.
It was meant to encourage, not discourage civil rights litigation.
I already wrote on this blog that constitutional arguments may not be judged by the same criteria as the "frivolous" actions are judged - whether they fall into the "mainstream" thought or not.
Such an approach chills civil rights litigation into extinction.
Mr. Neroni - and any other potential civil rights litigant - were shown by the decision of Gary Sharpe in Neroni v. Coccoma on legal fees that there is no point raising issues of misconduct of the powerful attorneys, especially if they are related to judges.
Gary L. Sharpe, whose son works for the NYS Attorney General's office (who was awarded legal representation of Ellen Coccoma thanks to efforts of Attorney Gleason) elevated nepotism in the judicial system to the level of constitutional precedent.
So much for justice.
So much for fairness.
So much for the rule of law.
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