The incident reportedly happened on September 25, 2017, reportedly in front of witnesses.
Yet, the judge was not indicted yet - and I doubt that he ever will be - because he is a judge.
If anybody else would have trespassed on Peter Labuda's property over his objection, and then "accidentally" run him over in his ATV causing broken bones, he would have been in jail by now and indicted for a trespass and a felony assault.
But, not so when the alleged assaulter is a County judge.
The local state police refused to conduct a field sobriety test or force Labuda into a chemical (blood) test, through a warrant if necessary.
The local prosecutor recused, turning the case over to the New York State Attorney General (who, by law, is also acting as the judge's own attorney in civil rights proceedings - Public Officers Law Section 17).
The New York State Attorney General reportedly attended the trial in Family Court, in the Family Offense (Family Court Act Article 8) petition that Peter Labuda filed in Family Court, obviously upset that the criminal investigation of his brother-judge gets nowhere.
Yet, as impatient as Peter Labuda was to get justice against his brother, he may have shot himself in the foot by having filed the Family Offense petition.
First, one of the most cowardly of judges, Gary Rosa, was assigned to the case. Rosa would not rule in a way that would amount to a political misstep at any time, that has been already proven time and again.
Second, there is no jury trial in Family Court, so Gary Rosa was the only factfinder in the case.
To expect that Gary Rosa would have rendered anything than a politically motivated decision in this politically charged case where, extraordinarily, NYS Attorney General's office was present during a Family Court trial, was obviously futile.
Here is the decision of Judge Gary Rosa, made on March 8, 2017 dismissing Peter Labuda's family offense petition against his brother. I will review it in detail below.
Third, the decision of Gary Rosa most likely will have the so-called "collateral estoppel" effect upon criminal proceedings. If a judge could not find even by preponderance of the evidence that Judge Labuda did anything entitling his brother to an order of protection, then, most likely, there will be no indictment at all, as the prosecution will argue that there is no way to hold Judge Labuda to a higher standard.
So, how did Judge Rosa arrive to his extraordinary findings that the petition needs to be dismissed because both Peter Labuda who had the audacity to prohibit his brother-judge to trespass and ride his ATV on Peter Labuda's property and was "accidentally" run over for it on the ATV, and judge Frank Labuda whose alcohol level at the time of the "accident" the state police refused to check, a 71-year-old man (Peter Labuda) and a 69-year-old man (Frank Labuda) were simply acting as "arrogant adolescents", nothing more?
Let's look.
First, Judge Rosa confirms injuries that Peter Labuda did suffer - broken ribs and broken "fibula" bone requiring 48 hours of hospitalization:
Rosa then confirms that there was a conflict between the brothers prior to the incident of September 25, 2016 when Judge Frank Labuda refused to talk to his brother Peter Labuda in a coffee shop in town for a supposedly unknown reason.
Then, on September 25, 2016, Peter Labuda forbid Frank Labuda to ride his ATV on Peter Labuda's property.
Frank Labuda, claiming he has a "right of way" - which Judge Rosa confirms was not established at trial by documentary evidence (there was no right of way in the deed for Frank Labuda to cross over Peter Labuda's property) trespassed on Peter Labuda's property over objection of Peter Labuda.
Of course, Judge Rosa avoids at all costs to call that conduct a "trespass", because trespass is both a tort and a criminal offense, and especially a trespass that resulted in serious injuries to the objecting landowner.
Surprisingly, Rosa reflected in his decision the "investigation" by the police that was obviously meant to produce as little incriminating evidence against Judge Labuda and give Judge Labuda as many loopholes to break criminal charges against him as possible.
Here is how these discrepancies look in a table format, with comments, for clearer view of why Peter Labuda was concerned about lack of impartiality in the investigation:
Police interview of Peter Labuda
|
Police interview of Judge Frank Labuda
|
Consequences of interview techniques
|
|
How many people
interviewed
|
3
|
2
|
See below
|
Did Chief of Police
participate in the interview? Y/N
|
Y
|
N
|
Absence of Chief Blake Muthig at the interview of Judge Labuda shows
that the emphasis was put on the interview of the victim, and not of the
judge, and that the complaint against the judge was not taken seriously; also
Chief Muthig may have distanced from the investigation of judge Labuda
because Chief
Muthig obviously knew the judge personally and relied on the judge in the
past and in the future to sign warrants presented by Chief Muthig to the
judge – under such circumstances Sullivan County police should have
recused from the entire investigation instantly and allowed a neutral
investigator to handle the investigation from the very beginning.
|
Who specifically
interviewed
|
Chief Blake Muthig
Lieutenant Pratti
Detective Sergeant Peter Ramos
|
Lieutenant Pratti
Detective Sergeant Peter Ramos
|
See above
|
Place of interview
|
Hospital
|
Judge’s own home
|
Peter Labuda was hospitalized for only 48 hours, and may have been in
pain and discomfort when interviewed by the police for 1.5 hours; the police
obviously could have waited for Peter Labuda to come home before being interviewed,
but did not do that, while Judge Labuda was given the deference of having
being interviewed in the comfort of his own home.
|
The length of the
interview
|
1.5 hours
|
0.5 hour
|
It is obvious that the interview of the victim was
more detailed and vigorous (aggressive) than the interview of the alleged
offender (judge), showing potential bias of the investigators in favor of the
alleged offender/judge.
|
Was the interview
video or audio recorded? Y/N
|
Y
|
N
|
Not audiotaping or videotaping the interview gave Judge Labuda, but
not his brother, an opportunity to impeach police officers testifying about
the contents of his statement to the police
|
Who wrote the
statement?
|
Detective Ramos
|
The subject of the interview, alleged offender/judge
|
|
Miranda warnings
reflected in written statement? Y/N
|
Y
|
N
|
Not recording Miranda warnings gave Judge Frank Labuda an opening in
the future potential criminal proceedings to claim that his statement was
involuntary and in violation of his Miranda rights, and allowed Judge Labuda,
but not his brother, a chance to deny contents of certain statements and that
he made statements under coercion
|
And here is where the lying-to-fix-the-case starts:
Since the Sheriff's office obviously knew Judge Labuda personally and depended on his good graces in signing search and arrest warrants for the police - and thus absolve them of monetary individual liability for potential civil rights violations involved in such searches - his entire office was disqualified from handling the investigation.
When an investigator is partial and should be disqualified, investigator's "discretion" no longer is a valid argument, and investigator's use of "discretion" no longer applies.
Yet, Rosa continued to pretend that "the decision to test or not test respondent for the presence of alcohol lies within the discretion of the sheriff's office".
Rosa uses the fact that Judge Labuda was on private property (while not saying that he was trespassing on his brother's property over his brother's direct and clear objection) in Judge Labuda's favor, that he was not on public highway. That does not eliminate the necessity and the right of the police to compel the alleged suspect of a vehicular assault, through a judicial warrant, if necessary, submission to a chemical test to verify what role, if anything, alcohol or illegal drugs may have played in incident.
That was not done, and this interesting use of "discretion", which Rosa admitted was "in deference" of the criminal suspects status of a judge, should have been used as bias and interpreted against judge Labuda and against credibility of police witnesses - but obviously, it wasn't by Judge Rosa.
Rosa's decision also reflects that Judge Labuda was upset that his brother's daughter (Judge Labuda's own niece) and his brother's girlfriend (an attorney) notified local newspapers of the incident. That shows two things:
- first, that the judge, more than anything, is upset about publicity surrounding the case. He obviously would not care one bit presiding over a criminal case where the local police would publicize the case and thus potentially jeopardize rights of any other criminal defendant to a fair trial and an untainted jury pool. When it concerned Judge Labuda personally, the perspective changed, and he complained about it - a complaint that even the chicken Gary Rosa considered as irrelevant to the proceedings.
- Second, but implicating his brother's girlfriend (an attorney) in his complaint, judge Labuda potentially threatened her and her law license, in a not so subtle way. I will continue to monitor this female attorney's fate for some time to see if she would suffer any repercussions after this incident, after daring to complain about the judge, sue the judge in Family Court for Family offense petition, and notify local newspapers about the judge's misconduct.
Then, Gary Rosa engaged in analysis of underlying criminal statutes that, if violated (under the more lighter preponderance-of-the-evidence standard in Family Court proceedings) would have entitled Peter Labuda to the only remedy a Family offense petition in New York Family Courts would afford him - a permanent order of protection against his brother-judge Frank Labuda.
Gary Rosa analyzed potential violation by Judge Frank Labuda of 10 criminal statutes:
Judge Rosa engages in an interesting analysis of whether judge's brother had exceedingly long arms (literally) to be able to reach out and grab the throttle cable in order to trigger the ATV upon which Judge Labuda was sitting to get of hand brake and in full gear.
Here is the overview of all criminal statutes violations of which Judge Rosa refused to find against judge Frank Labuda:
NN
|
Name of statute
|
Section of the Penal Law
|
Elements of crimes in relevant subsections of
Penal Law
|
Designation:
Violation, misdemeanor or felony, and Maximum
jail/prison term, if any
|
Resolution by Judge Rosa
|
Comments
|
1
|
Harassment in the 1st Degree
|
A person is guilty of harassment in the first degree when he
or she intentionally and repeatedly
harasses another person by following such person in or about a public place
or places or by engaging in a course of conduct or by repeatedly committing acts which places
such person in reasonable fear of physical injury.
|
B misdemeanor, 6
months in the local County jail
|
A single event does
not constitute a course of conduct
|
There were two
events, not one – Judge Labuda first allegedly “nicked” his brother on the
way up his property, and then ran him over on the way down. That would satisfy PL 240.25.
|
|
2
|
Harassment in the 2nd degree
|
Subsection 1: He or she strikes, shoves, kicks or otherwise subjects such other person to physical
contact, or attempts or threatens to do the same - See more at:
|
A violation, up to 15 days in the
local County jail
|
Rosa did not analyze application of
this statute, but refused to believe that Judge Labuda acted with intent to
harm his brother – without an explanation of such a finding
|
PL 240.26(1) was clearly satisfied,
had Gary Rosa believed petitioner and his witnesses
|
|
3
|
Assault in the 2nd degree
|
1. With intent to cause serious physical injury to another
person, he causes such
injury to such person or to a third person; or
2. With intent to cause physical
injury to another person, he causes such injury to such person or to a third person by means of a deadly weapon or
a dangerous instrument; or
4. He recklessly causes serious physical injury to
another person by means
of a deadly weapon or a dangerous instrument; or
6. In the course of
and in furtherance of the
commission or attempted commission of a felony, other than a felony defined in article one
hundred thirty which requires corroboration for conviction, or of immediate flight therefrom, he, or another
participant if there be any, causes physical injury to a person other than one of the
participants.
|
Class D felony, 4
to 7 years in state prison, automatic disbarment without a hearing on collateral estoppel grounds
for attorney Frank Labuda if found against him
|
Same as above
|
||
4
|
Assault in the 3rd degree
|
|
1.
With intent to cause physical injury to another person, he causes such
injury to such person or to a third person; or
|
Class A misdemeanor, up to 1 year in
the local county jail
|
Same as above
|
|
5
|
Assault in the 3rd degree
|
|
2. He recklessly
causes physical injury to another person
|
Same as above
|
Same as above + Rosa
ruled that Judge Labuda’s behavior was not reckless “under the circumstances”,
without an explanation for such finding
|
|
6
|
Assault in the 3rd degree
|
|
With criminal negligence, he
causes physical injury to another person by means of a deadly weapon
or a dangerous instrument
|
Same as above
|
Rosa refused to recognize judge Labuda’s
criminal negligence in running over his brother, causing broken bones, and
refused to recognize that Judge Labuda was drunk for “lack of evidence”
|
Here is where police Chief’s refusal
to run alcohol tests on Judge Labuda helped the judge
|
7
|
Menacing in the 3rd degree
|
A person is guilty of
menacing in the third degree when, by physical menace, he or she
intentionally places or attempts to place
another person in fear of
death, imminent serious physical injury or physical injury.
|
Class B misdemeanor
punishable by up to 6 months in local county jail
|
Rosa downplayed the
judge’s brother’s fear by claiming that, had he been in fear of injury, he would
not have stood in front of a running ATV
|
It is quite plausible
for the petitioner to consider running over him by an ATV to be a death
threat for the future,
especially given the judge’s power and the extreme deference/bias of the police
in investigation against the judge, but Rosa refused to acknowledge such a
possibility
|
|
8
|
Menacing in the 2nd degree
|
He or she intentionally places or
attempts to place another person
in reasonable fear of physical injury,
serious physical injury or death
by displaying a deadly weapon,
dangerous instrument or what appears to be a pistol, revolver, rifle,
shotgun, machine gun or other firearm
|
Class A misdemeanor punishable by a
year in local county jail
|
Same as above
|
Same as above
|
|
9
|
Reckless endangerment in the 2nd
degree
|
A person is guilty of
reckless endangerment in the second degree when
he recklessly engages
in conduct which creates a substantial
risk of serious physical injury to another person.
|
Class A misdemeanor
punishable by up to a year in the local county jail
|
Rosa rejected,
without an explanation, that Judge Labuda’s behavior was reckless “under the
circumstances”.
|
There was no
plausible explanation other than that judge Labuda intentionally took the ATV
off gear (and that he was drunk), as to why an otherwise mechanically sound
ATV would go beserk, get off hand brake and do that that mechanical mishap
would happen exactly at the time when Judge Labuda’s brother with whom Judge
Labuda was in a raging conflict, was standing in front of him
|
|
10
|
Reckless endangerment in the 1st
degree
|
A person is guilty of reckless endangerment
in the first degree when,
under circumstances evincing a depraved
indifference to human life, he recklessly engages in conduct which creates a grave risk of death
to another person.
|
A class D felony punishable by 4 to 7
years in state prison and automatic disbarment for attorneys
|
Judge Rosa, having found that there
was no reckless endangerment, did not go further to analyze whether judge
Labuda acted with depraved indifference to human life
|
Same as above
|
I can see how judge Labuda's brother - and the public - may feel about the "verdict" of Judge Rosa facing a 71-year-old victim of a potentially drunk (the evidence was obviously intentionally not obtained - not through chemical tests, not through field tests and not through audio or video recorded interview right after the incident which could have shown whether the judge appeared to be under the influence of alcohol).
There is a lot of arrogance in this case, but that arrogance was definitely not of the victim.
There was arrogance of a judge who ran onto his brother's land over his prohibition, because he felt that, as a judge and local king, he is above the law and nobody can tell him what to do.
There was arrogance of the local police who refused to follow their own rules of investigation when a judge was accused of crimes that caused grievous injuries to his brother, refused to collect evidence that the judge was potentially drunk (audio, video, field sobriety tests or chemical tests), and grilled the victim 3 times longer than the judge.
And, there was a tremendous arrogance on behalf of Judge Gary Rosa who lectured to the injured elderly man upon whose property his brother-judge first trespassed and then injured him on his own property, that his stance of confronting his brother for trespassing was actually an act of "arrogance", "childishness" and not "acting his age".
The gall of Judge Gary Rosa blaming the victim for his grievous injuries clearly caused by the trespasser judge is mind-boggling.
So, what now?
I still believe that the case should be submitted to a grand jury, and that the New York State Attorney General, as a counsel representing Judge Labuda under Public Officers Law 17, should recuse, and a special prosecutor be appointed, from out of state if necessary.
The dismissal hinged on the findings of a single fact-finder, himself a judge and thus extremely deferential to his own "brother"-judge:
- Rosa found that there was one "event" for purposes of "course of conduct" regarding the harassment charge; the grand jury and the trial jury may find otherwise;
- Rosa found that he could not find that Judge Labuda intentionally ran over his brother; the grant jury and the trial jury may find otherwise;
- Rosa found that he does not find "reckless endangerment" or even "criminal negligence" "under the circumstances" - without an explanation as to why, and under extremely suspicious circumstances; the grand jury and the trial jury may find otherwise;
- Rosa found that there was "no evidence" presented that Judge Labuda was drunk; as much as the police made sure that no field sobriety tests were made, no breathalyzer or blood tests were made, and no audio or video-interview of judge Labuda right after the "incident" was conducted, documenting how he looked, the grand jury and the trial jury, relying on circumstantial evidence and witness testimony, can still find otherwise.
Whether this case will be submitted to the grand jury is a big question.
If it isn't, if the NYS Attorney General decides that his own biased opinion as to whether to charge or not to charge his own client with a crime, and the "deferential" (biased) opinion of Judge Rosa may substitute for the decision of 23 grand jurors to charge or not to charge, and of 12 trial jurors to convict or not to convict Judge Labuda under the circumstances - the public will see a loud and clear message that Judge Labuda, and any other judges in New York state, are above the law if they commit even a violent crime against an elderly person that resulted in grievous injuries which will, probably, never heal completely considering the victim's age.
If Judge Labuda is not charged, will he now emerge as a victor from his paid administrative leave, and will continue to preside over criminal proceedings that he himself escaped because of his judicial status, teaching criminal defendants, their attorneys and the public what the real rule of law is like in the State of New York?
Or, will Labuda be quietly wisked into some kind of early resignation or retirement?
In any event - what a circus "adjudication" by Judge Gary Rosa was.
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