THE EVOLUTION OF JUDICIAL TYRANNY IN THE UNITED STATES:
"If the judges interpret the laws themselves, and suffer none else to interpret, they may easily make, of the laws, [a shredded] shipman's hose!" - King James I of England, around 1616.
“No class of the community ought to be allowed freer scope in the expression or publication of opinions as to the capacity, impartiality or integrity of judges than members of the bar. They have the best opportunities of observing and forming a correct judgment. They are in constant attendance on the courts. Hundreds of those who are called on to vote never enter a court-house, or if they do, it is only at intervals as jurors, witnesses or parties. To say that an attorney can only act or speak on this subject under liability to be called to account and to be deprived of his profession and livelihood by the very judge or judges whom he may consider it his duty to attack and expose, is a position too monstrous to be entertained for a moment under our present system,” Justice Sharwood in Ex Parte Steinman and Hensel, 95 Pa 220, 238-39 (1880).
“This case illustrates to me the serious consequences to the Bar itself of not affording the full protections of the First Amendment to its applicants for admission. For this record shows that [the rejected attorney candidate] has many of the qualities that are needed in the American Bar. It shows not only that [the rejected attorney candidate] has followed a high moral, ethical and patriotic course in all of the activities of his life, but also that he combines these more common virtues with the uncommon virtue of courage to stand by his principles at any cost.
It is such men as these who have most greatly honored the profession of the law. The legal profession will lose much of its nobility and its glory if it is not constantly replenished with lawyers like these. To force the Bar to become a group of thoroughly orthodox, time-serving, government-fearing individuals is to humiliate and degrade it.” In Re Anastaplo, 18 Ill. 2d 182, 163 N.E.2d 429 (1959), cert. granted, 362 U.S. 968 (1960), affirmed over strong dissent, 366 U.S. 82 (1961), Justice Black, Chief Justice Douglas and Justice Brennan, dissenting.
" I do not believe that the practice of law is a "privilege" which empowers Government to deny lawyers their constitutional rights. The mere fact that a lawyer has important responsibilities in society does not require or even permit the State to deprive him of those protections of freedom set out in the Bill of Rights for the precise purpose of insuring the independence of the individual against the Government and those acting for the Government”. Lathrop v Donohue, 367 US 820 (1961), Justice Black, dissenting.
"The legal profession must take great care not to emulate the many occupational groups that have managed to convert licensure from a sharp weapon of public defense into blunt instrument of self-enrichment". Walter Gellhorn, "The Abuse of Occupational Licensing", University of Chicago Law Review, Volume 44 Issue 1, September of 1976.
“Because the law requires that judges no matter how corrupt, who do not act in the clear absence of jurisdiction while performing a judicial act, are immune from suit, former Judge Ciavarella will escape liability for the vast majority of his conduct in this action. This is, to be sure, against the popular will, but it is the very oath which he is alleged to have so indecently, cavalierly, baselessly and willfully violated for personal gain that requires this Court to find him immune from suit”, District Judge A. Richard Caputo in H.T., et al, v. Ciavarella, Jr, et al, Case No. 3:09-cv-00286-ARC in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, Document 336, page 18, November 20, 2009. This is about judges who were sentencing kids to juvenile detention for kickbacks.
Thursday, March 10, 2016
It does not matter which one of the Neronis to punish - part next
Gary L. Sharpe of the NDNY punished my husband for my conduct in lawful actions unrelated to my husband, and for actions of my friend in her pro se proceedings unrelated to both of us.
Gary L. Sharpe of NDNY punished me for actions of my husband unrelated to me.
Carl F. Becker of Delaware County Supreme Court punished me for actions of my husband that led to his disbarment (before I was admitted to the bar) and for my husband's motion to recuse in an environmental administrative proceedings where I was not allowed to participate as a party, before I became an attorney.
The 2nd Department heaped it all together and claimed I am a party in my husband's pro se actions where he was the only party.
The 3rd Department joined my already disbarred husband as a party to my disciplinary proceedings in 2014 in its order of transfer to the 4th Department.
The 4th Department suspended me from the practice of law for actions of my husband at the time I was not admitted to the bar in 2008, even after its Committee withdrew the charge.
On March 3, 2016, in Neroni v Follender, the Appellate Division 3rd Department, against whom my husband just filed a motion for sanctions for frivolous conduct in the U.S. District of New York, retaliated against me by stating, on page 2 of the decision, "[t]he action culminated in a default judgment against plaintiff's [that is me] clients and an award of sanctions for frivolous conduct against plaintiff; both determinations were affirmed by this court".
That statement was an intricate combination of truth and lies.
The action that culminated in a default judgment was against my husband's clients, I was not an attorney at the time the motion for that default judgment as made and did not represent those people at that time. The 3rd Department knew about it, but still piled it all up into one heap, whether it was about my husband or myself, does not matter.
I was an attorney for those people only on motions to vacate the default judgment and on appeals from denials of such motions.
The 3rd Department did not - and could not - affirm the judgment of default, such judgments are not appealable. The 3rd Department dismissed that appeal specifically on those reasons, which means that the judgment of default was not affirmed on appeal.
The sanctions imposed upon me for making motions to vacate were imposed for allegedly delaying satisfaction of money judgment, which the 3rd Department affirmed in 2012.
The "delaying" was the motion to compel attorney Jonathan Follender to do what statutory law required him to do in the first place - make the record of a case where he obtained a default judgment complete by, if not filing the transcript of deposition of an expert that he did not properly notice to Mr. Neroni as the attorney on the case, then at least to disclose the identity of the testifying expert and the court stenographer, so that I would be able to obtain that transcript myself.
The motion was denied, so the default judgment based on incomplete record in the underlying case is not valid until now, but I stand punished multiple times, and my law license suspended, for trying to make the record of a court case complete, as required by statutory law, where attorney Jonathan Follender continues to conceal the identity of the expert and of the stenographer who took the deposition that Mr. Follender never filed with the court, but instead obtained a default judgment without a full record.
The sanctions in Neroni v Follender were imposed upon me for suing people who first said I caused the delay in satisfaction of money judgment and then said that I caused premature satisfaction of that same judgment, asking for more sanctions.
The defendants asked for sanctions for suing them. Sanctions were granted and affirmed by the 3rd Department on appeal. So, I was sanctioned, and lost my law license, for delaying satisfaction of a money judgment and for causing that satisfaction too soon.
It appears that in New York, sanctions for frivolous conduct depend entirely upon the identity of those against whom the sanctions are requested.
If that is a judge or a relative of a judge, or a connected attorney, courts will bend over backwards to invent ways not to sanction.
If it is an attorney they want punished, financially bled and gone, they will bend over backwards to ignore evidence that attorney's claims are legitimate and will sanction the attorney anyway.
And especially if people to be sanctioned are Frederick Neroni or Tatiana Neroni. We have laws personally carved out against us in the State of New York.
Judiciary Law 487 gutted and evidence put on its head for the benefit of a private attorney who is also a judge
Wednesday, March 9, 2016
A no-public-bidding 33-million-dollar contract of New York Unified Court system with a non-profit. Budget constraints and personnel cuts, right...
UPL is practicing law without a license, and is a criminal statute that must be applied blindly, without looking at the identity of the person. That is not what is happening in New York which applies UPL to suspended and disbarred attorneys differently than to never-licensed individuals.
Practicing without a license means practicing where you never had a license, or practicing when you had a license, but it was suspended or revoked.
Yet, New York applies one set of rules to those who never had a license and another, stricter set of rules, to those who lost their law licenses. In other words, in New York, what is a crime of UPL to those who lost their licenses, is not the crime of UPL for those who never had it - and the "Legal Hand", endorsed by New York's Chief Judge is one of the examples.
Yet, exploration of the "Legal Hand" program brought me into something, I think, bigger that unconstitutional application of UPL laws.
When I researched the program, I found that it was handled by the so-called "Center for Court Innovation", a "public charity", a non-profit organization.
Back in law school, I took a course in non-profit organizations from a professor who was extremely distrusting to these entities. To give you an idea, the professor told us that he never donates to a single charity before they answer two of his questions (and most never do):
1) financial reports of the charity;
2) percentage of income of the charity dedicated to its declared mission (example: how much money does a children's cancer research institute dedicate to children's cancer research?) Could be as little as 1% of collected funds, or less - there is no set limit for that.
Following my professor's tip, I started to ask these questions to charities who call for donations. They usually refused to provide financial disclosures, refused to answer the question as to the percentage and quite often became belligerrent as to why I ask all those questions instead of just doing "the right thing" - just give them the money.
Well, while researching the webpage of the Center for Court Innovation, a public charity (a tax-exempt non-profit corporation otherwise known as the Fund for the City of New York, Inc.), I found this spectacular statement:
Yes, it was declared that this non-profit was "founded as a public/private partnership" with the New York State Unified Court System.
That put the "partnership" within the reach of Freedom of Information Law, at least, on the Court Administration's side.
I filed a FOIL request with the New York State Office of Court Administration in December of 2015 and asked for information about the "partnership".
Here is my FOIL request:
The Court Administration answered with its usual tactic - "we will answer within 20 days", even though the law is clear that they should provide information within 5 business days, unless information is substantial and not easy to find.
Instead of complying with the law, governmental entities in New York (it is a universal trick) first give you a "20 day run-around", then take a lot more than 20 days to respond in the hope that you will forget.
In my case, I made the FOIL request by e-mail on December 23, 2015, and, until yesterday, did not have any responses. So, I wrote again and threatened with a lawsuit and legal fees against those individuals who are stalling release of records, in case I am represented in the lawsuit by a licensed attorney (New York conveniently suspended my own law license so that I could not sue for stalling my own FOIL requests, after I made in October of 2015 a FOIL request that the Court Administration is still stalling - about members, founding documents and other records pertaining to the so-called "New York State-Federal Judicial Council", a shadow organization influencing New York and federal courts).
After my e-mail yesterday, New York office of Court Administration reacted nearly instantly (showing that 20 days were not really necessary to respond), but gave me not documents pertaining to the formation of a "partnership" that, according to available information, existed since at least 1990s, and, according to the papers filed by the Fund with IRS, since 1982 (the "ruling" year).
The only documents pertaining to that so-called "private-public" partnership that New York Court Administration released to me so far is - guess - a CONTRACT for the period of 2014 to 2018 between New York Court Administration and the Center for Court Innovation, approved by:
- The court administration
- New York Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli
- New York Attorney General
Of course, I contested the incomplete disclosure with the following e-mail:
But, guess what was the amount of the contract between the New York Unified Court System and the Center for Court Innovation for the years 2014 to 2018 approved by the New York State Comptroller and New York State Attorney General?
33 million 763 thousand and 419 dollars, ladies and gentlemen, of taxpayers' money, are pledged to be diverted by the New York Unified Court System to "independent research" and some "projects" where, I am sure, relatives and friends are employed by the droves - and that is at the time of budget cuts, when the court claims too high caseloads, cuts personnel, and asks from the New York State Legislature an ADDITIONAL budget for increase of salaries of judges.
And here are the names of people who approved the contract:
Of course I will apply to the NYS Senate immediately asking to disaffirm the findings of the commission for judicial pay raises as a need for additional budget for such raises (not that our corrupt Senate will listen to me, of course, but I will at least make the record) - because the budget is right there, only it is used for "contractors", which should be investigated as to employment of relatives and friends of judges.
If New York Unified Court system has extra money to splurge on "contractors" to do "independent research" for them, it definitely must have money to fund such pesky things as (first as priority) indigent defense and then (last priority) judicial salaries.
That the contract is open-ended, its terms which are not contained in the contract itself, but are attached in an "appendix" allows a non-profit corporation to practically to run the New York State court system, and many of its programs, and to influence the courts' decision-making process.
Since it has been approved by the State Comptroller and State Attorney General, apparently, state authorities cannot investigate the project for public corruption, because they are themselves involved in it and will look like idiots for approving it in the first place.
To learn for what exactly did the New York Court system is going to pay nearly 34 million dollars of your money over the years 2014 to 2018 - stay tuned.
Tuesday, March 8, 2016
The Oklahoma State Supreme Court contributes to accelerating demise of attorney regulation
The government verifies, we are explained, for the benefits of consumers, that licensed attorneys should have the right qualifications and skills to practice.
For that purpose, rigorous standards are set for certification of law schools, and for licensing examinations for attorneys called "bar examinations".
And, certifications of educational institutions and licensing exams exist - remember? - to protect the consumer from unqualified providers.
So, what if law schools cannot get certified by those rigorous standards? They must then close - the logical answer.
So, what if law students cannot pass that bar exam (a pass or fail test)? They must then be denied the law license. Anything else undermines the declaration that attorney licensing is done for protection of consumers.
Well, the Oklahoma Supreme Court just helped show the America public what a sham attorney regulation is, by lowering the bar for the statewide attorney licensing - because law graduates increasingly fail to pass it, despite the fact that previous generations of law students (of better educational caliber, obviously) could and did pass it in higher numbers.
Is it a protection for consumers at all if attorney candidates who cannot prove their skills in order to gain the right to represent their clients are simply forgiving the fact that they cannot prove their skills to the required standards, and the standard is simply dropped so that they can meet it?
Why take the bar exam at all then if it is a chameleon test, to be suited to the body of students taking it.
They say - do not blame the mirror for your face.
Do not blame the result of the bar exam for your own lack of knowledge.
Not any more.
Now that the Oklahoma bar exam is changed from a real-life mirror to a magic mirror.
Instead of reflecting to the consumers that those who passed the test possess the required skills to represent them, now the simplified Oklahoma bar tests insults all future bar takers and puts into all consumers doubts as to whether all future Oklahoma bar takers idiots who are unable to satisfy rigorous standards that previous attorneys could satisfy.
Therefore, in Oklahoma, the price of attorneys admitted to the bar in the "pre-dumb bar exam era" will go up and it will be even more difficult for the "post-dumb bar exam era" attorneys to find a job.
If regulation of the legal profession is dying, the courts should not insult those still trying to join it by lowering the test standards to all applicants, as if all of them are unable to meet the previous standards.
In any event, consumers of legal services, beware.
If the previous bar exam was not a guarantee of quality of legal representation, the dumber bar exam leaves a gaping question as to why attorney regulation continues to exist at all.
The U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon does not engage in pajama discrimnation against pro se litigants - and it is a very lonely court in that
The "good pajama discrimination" happened in one of the U.S. District courts in Ohio where the court told an out-of-the-country litigant that (1) they have a rule by which pro se litigants must file on paper and by mail, while only those represented by counsel file electronically and that (2) the pro se litigant in question filed by mail before in the same lawsuit and such filing did not appear to deter him from filing, so he can just as well continue to file it the same way in the future.
After posting the blog about the "good pajama discrimination" in a federal court in Ohio, I found a case in the U.S. District Court in the District of Oregon where an e-filing application by a pro se litigant was granted - without a word of opposition or reproach.
Kudoz, the U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon - at least on the issue of e-filing, this court leads the country in non-discrimination against pro se litigants.
But, so far that I could find, only one federal court only that I have found so far sees absolutely no need to burden their own clerks with scanning and e-filing on behalf of pro se litigants when such pro se litigants are perfectly capable to do that themselves, while other courts prefer to create unnecessary work, give pro se litigants less time and make it more costly for them to litigate in federal court, while the others insist on discriminating against pro se litigants as their "discretionary right"?
So, do judges have discretionary rights to discriminate and make access to court more difficult to one class of litigants over others?
Right to indigent criminal defense - for a price in South Dakota
That's what they say in the movies.
But, if you are a criminal defendant in the State of South Dakota, and if you cannot pay for your legal defense, one will be provided to you, still at a price of $92/hour - even if you are acquitted.
Does it make any sense?
No.
Does it violate established constitutional right to counsel in criminal cases? Most certainly.
So why do folks in the South Dakota government who are responsible for charging indigent criminal defendant $92/hour for a public defender are doing it?
Because, if the person is poor, the person will not be able to sue for violation of his or her rights, that's why.
Disgusting.
Monday, March 7, 2016
I am starting to publish materials of my disciplinary proceedings - here is my cross-motion to dismiss, raising constitutional issues and describing Judge Carl F. Becker's misconduct in detail
Before, when I published evidence of misconduct and fabrication of transcripts in my proceedings, I was charged with criminal contempt of court - for violating my own privacy (charges were dismissed sua sponte by the court, but not after putting stress on me for 4.5 months and driving me out of the State of New York to prevent further harassment).
Now that there is not a single reason not to consider the materials of my disciplinary proceedings public, but knowing that the court will not make it public even if the law says they are public (as the court already did before, on multiple occasions), I am staring to publish those materials (there are a lot of them) myself.
It is a lot of work, I have to scan a lot of documentary exhibits, misconduct of the judge upon whose sanctions my law license was ultimately suspended was legendary and spanned many years, many cases and was targeting many attorneys, not just myself.
Since Becker ultimately ran from the bench and was allowed to use "early retirement" to hide his misconduct and was not disciplined in any way, I think these materials must be published as a matter of public service, so that people know at least the small extent of his misconduct - in my case and in cases that I knew and complained about.
The public should also be able to see how New York courts squash criticism of judicial misconduct and misconduct of politically connected attorneys.
The motion I am publishing today was made in March of 2014 to the New York State Supreme Court, Appellate Division 3rd Judicial Department.
The 3rd Department did not know what to do with it and transferred it, in an ex parte manner, as a hot potato, to the 4th Department.
The 4th Department did not know what to do with it either, and, probably, it was just too much to read for the lazy court, so the 4th Department did the following with this motion:
1) denied it without an explanation or reasoning in September of 2014 - I made a motion to vacate, renew and rehear, as allowed by law, and for a REASONED decision.
Enraged by that, the 4th Department then
2) denied the motion once again, once again without an explanation and reasoning (the motion was raising constitutional issues of public importance, but treaded too much, I guess, on protected turf that the court had a self-interest not to reach), but with an imposition of an anti-filing injunction (without notice or opportunity to be heard on that) and with a sealing order aimed against me, even though the sealing order was based on the statute that protects my privacy that I did not need,
then
3) the, one of the charges that I sought to dismiss and that the 4th Department denied to dismiss - twice, without an explanation or reasoning, but with an anti-filing injunction against me for asking for it - was withdrawn by the Committee and one other charge that I sought to dismiss, and the motion was denied twice without an explanation or reasoning, was ultimately granted.
No sense in all of that at all.
The charges that were sustained were clearly unsustainable, as my Affidavit/Memorandum of Law in support of this motion says.
There are over 100 documentary exhibits supporting the motion. They are referenced in the affidavit. It takes a lot of time to scan them, but I will do that.
At this time, I am publishing the Affidavit/Memorandum of Law only, so that it gives people an idea what exactly I was punished for by suspension of my law license for 2 years, and why the 4th Department and its attorney disciplinary Committee fought tooth and claw to deny me my right to an open public disciplinary proceeding.
Especially because my order of suspension mentions only that I was suspended because "a judge" sanctioned me "for frivolous conduct", but does not mention that the "frivolous conduct" was making motions to recuse that same judge for egregious misconduct - or that that judge, Carl F. Becker recused from one of my cases BEFORE he sanctioned me and AFTER he sanctioned me, and then quickly "retired" before his term was out under circumstances suggested that he ran from the bench before he was booted from there (the NYS Judicial Conduct Commission's annual report for 2015 mentioned that several judges went off the bench during investigation without making public that the reasons were disciplinary, and I there are reasons to believe that Becker was one of them).
The motion was scanned in 4 batches because of my scanner's limitations.
Here is the motion:
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Supporting documentary exhibits to this motion will be scanned and published at a later time, when I have time to do that (again, it is a lot of work), but I will do that.
My disciplinary case has startling similarities with the recent disciplinary case in Louisiana, also against a female attorney, Christine Mire, also because of motions to recuse a judge, see my blogs on the matter here and here.
I did not finish covering Christine Mire's case either, I will post some more analysis of some additional materials I was able to obtain in that case shortly.
Stay tuned.