Judge Langton has a history of behavior making him grossly unfit for the bench - in addition to what attorney Myers raised.
Here is Judge Langton, on the right, in a 2005 picture.
In 2005, Judge Jeffrey Langdon was censured and suspended for 31 days (the horror!) for (1) after he pled guilty to driving under the influence, (2) sentenced to probation and (3) violated his term of probation. (The headline refers to another judge, I will run a separate blog dedicated to that particular male chauvinist pig in black robe compared to whom #JudgeAaronPersky is a paragon of propriety).
As to Judge Langdon, consider that usually when people violate probation, they are sent to jail.
Not so for Judge Langdon. The system protected him. Just a censure and a 31-day suspension from the bench.
Here is another article about Judge Langdon describing that he continued drinking in defiance of a court order.
Judge Langdon not only drank after the court prohibited him to do so, placing him on probation, but drunk to the point that he was found by police as "passed out" near his hotel room.
There was a recall effort at the time of Judge Langdon's censure, which apparently, was unsuccessful, so Judge Langdon continued on the bench.
When imposing the censure, the presiding judge reportedly stated to Judge Langdon: "Judge Langton, your past habitual intemperance is a constitutional basis for censure".
This is what Judge Langdon reportedly said at imposition of the discipline of censure:
"My actions, which I daily regret, fell far short of my ethical obligations," he said.
The judge said he isn't blaming his conduct "on alcoholism, job stress or personal misfortunes.
"I chose to drink and I sometimes chose to drink irresponsibly. ... I accept full responsibility and accountability for that misconduct and I alone am responsible for the consequences of my actions.
He said the court-ordered alcohol treatment program he completed gave him "the basic training I needed to start up the steep trail to a better, sober and spiritually centered life."
And, of course, in his statement he referred to God in his statement to the court, as judges do when they want to get some political capital or avoid accountability for misconduct, and claimed that the "experience" will make him a better person and a better judge.
Right.
By the way, the recall effort was supported by a pastor:
The pastor correctly stated that a judge who is drinking, driving and defying court orders by more drinking is an "unfortunate example to our your people and people who have a drinking problem".
That is an understatement of the century, especially for "people who have a drinking problem" and are sent to years in jail for the same offense that Judge Langdon was just censured and not jailed at all.
Apparently, all of the above statements were just bluff to appease the court and retain the job.
In 2012, whether drunk or not, Judge Langdon got involved in a reportedly documented ex parte communication.
An attorney of the party not included into the communication, asked him to recuse.
Judge Langdon refused.
The attorney - Robert Myers - appealed.
The appeal was denied.
The attorney filed a complaint with judiciary disciplinary Commission, the very body who was already very much acquainted with Judge Langdon.
The complaint was dismissed.
Apparently inspired by all of that support, Judge Langdon sanctioned attorney Robert Myers $10,000, and put into the amount of sanctions a consideration regarding Robert Myers' wife's income.
So, Robert Myers' wife, apparently, was made financially responsible for sanctions of her husband.
The history is silent as to whether Judge Langdon was drunk - as he has a habit to be - when making that retaliative decision.
So, let's check how many avenues were exhausted with no real discipline against Judge Langdon:
- Criminal proceedings - no real accountability (Judge Langdon's breath test when he was arrested for drunk driving was reportedly twice the legal limit in Montana, not a petty violation, a serious crime exposing motorists and passengers' lives to danger);
- Probation violation proceeding - no accountability at all, usually violators of probation go straight to jail, Judge Langdon didn't;
- Judicial disciplinary proceeding - resulting in a "censure", like a tongue-lashing, "go forth and do not sin again";
- A recall effort - not successful;
- A motion to recuse - when caught in documented ex parte communication; Judge Langdon chose to preside over that motion himself and deny it;
- Appeal of Judge Langdon's decision refusing to recuse - denied;
- A disciplinary complaint against Judge Langdon regarding the ex parte communication - dismissed, apparently, Montana, same as New York, considers ex parte communications as proper conduct for its judges - at least, for some of them.
Instead, Judge Langdon is allowed to:
1) decide a motion to recuse against himself;
2) quash a subpoena against himself;
3) punish an attorney for making a motion to recuse (for catching the judge red-handed in an ex parte communication, with documentary evidence of such ex parte communication) $10,000 based on attorney's behavior AFTER the proceedings in front of judge Langdon concluded.
All of the above indicate that Judge Langdon is not simply bias - he is enraged at attorney Myers and should never be near his cases.
There was one more way to get Judge Langdon off the bench - to defeat him in the re-election campaign.
That's what attorney Robert Myers undertook to do.
But, to defeat Judge Langdon, attorney Myers had to inform the voters why Judge Langdon is bad news.
So, that's what he did - he ran some campaign ads explaining just that, what Judge Langdon did.
Judge Langdon, whether drunk or sober, decided to play dirty with his political opponent - and immediately had his law clerk send the transcript of attorney Myers' campaign ads to the attorney disciplinary committee.
And, of course, attorney disciplinary authorities of the State of Montana did not look that the judge who referred the attorney was an alcoholic, or that the attorney was right all around that the judge engaged in misconduct (whether he was punished for it or not) and personal retaliation instead of doing his job.
Instead, the disciplinary authorities of the State of Montana targeted the judicial candidate Robert Myers and started a disciplinary investigation against him which, as we know from multiple recent cases of retaliation against attorneys who raise issues of judicial misconduct (#AndyOstrowski and #DonBailey in Pennsylvania, #PaulOgden in Indiana, #ChristineMire in Louisiana, myself in New York), can very well lead to suspension or total loss of law license and livelihood.
So - attorney Myers filed a federal lawsuit for injunctive relief.
The lawsuit raises important issues of 1st Amendment and judicial retaliation. I will report on the case and on the pending motions in the case(for preliminary injunctive relief by attorney Myers and to dismiss by disciplinary authorities) in separate blogs.
Yet, the issue remains that NO MATTER WHAT a judge does - in any state, I have been reviewing information about judicial misconduct across the country for several years - the system, the government which is OUT public servants, in OUR employ, financed by OUR money and who must act for OUT benefit, instead vigorously protects a seating alcoholic judge (who insists to commit misconduct, stifle witnesses and engages in retaliation against whistleblowers despite all of his pledges at the censure hearing to be a "better judge") and viciously attacks whistleblowers.
And, I do not see millions campaigning for recall and impeachment of Judge Langdon - or any other judges who engage in retaliation against whistleblowers of their misconduct.
Instead, we see young future elite lawyers of America argue for continuing support of "judicial discretion" -
- that's the discretion Judge Langdon used to refuse to recuse when caught in the ex parte communication,
- that's the discretion the appellate court used in denying the appeal from that refusal and allowing Judge Langdon to proceed on the case,
- that's the discretion judicial disciplinary authorities used in not prosecuting judge Langdon and dismissing attorney Myers' complaint against him, and
- that's the discretion the attorney disciplinary authorities (who claim quasi-judicial power and absolute judicial immunity in federal court) use to prosecute attorney Myers and not attorney Langdon.
Yet, we do not see open letters from law students condemning THAT use - or, rather, gross abuse, of judicial discretion.
It is up to us, the people, to root out the bad apples like Judge Langdon.
And that should start from opposing discipline against Robert Myers in the media.
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