As I was advised today in a letter from a court, Judge Robert C. Mulvey, formerly the Chief Administrative Judge of the 6th Judicial District who fought tooth and claw to keep Judge Becker on my cases, and especially the Mokay case, even when Becker's conflicts of interest were apparent, has got a promotion.
Since March of 2016 he is the justice of Appellate Division 3rd Judicial Department.
Here is his official biography on the site of New York State Appellate Division 3rd Judicial Department:
Judge Mulvey as author of opinions on judicial ethics - one of the most unethical judges that I know - that's great.
It is not unusual that Cuomo promoted Mulvey higher - Cuomo needs to surround himself with unethical judges who owe him, just in case he needs to call in a favor.
As Becker called in a favor on Chief Judge Cardona of the same court - in several cases, and proudly told us so on the record.
I wonder how many more cases he talked to Cardona about.
But - most prominently for the coming Mokay appeal of my husband, involving issues of gross fraud on behalf of attorney Richard Harlem - comes the "Senator Seward" connection of Robert Mulvey.
I did not know that Robert Mulvey was "legislative counsel" to Senator Seward.
Richard Harlem actually is Senator Seward's landlord of many years.
Here is the connection.
Since Mulvey worked as a "legislative counsel" for Senator Seward in 1994-2000, and Senator Seward's district office is in Oneonta, NY, where Richard Harlem has been his landlord for decades (I checked through a FOIL request to NY State Senate), Mulvey inevitably knew Richard Harlem and his father Robert Harlem personally.
After all, the connection between Seward and Robert Harlem is unmistakable - given at least the number of Bills that Senator Seward put through the Senate "honoring" or "commemorating" Robert Harlem, without mentioning that he is the father of his longtime landlord Richard Harlem.
So, did Mulvey rush to the Appellate Division to fix the Mokay case, at the request of the cancer-stricken Senator Seward?
To help his recovery by rescuing his longtime friend - or his friend's (late judge Robert Harlem's) child?
Let's wait and see.
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