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.


Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Texas fights the FDA to get 1,000 vials to kill its 244 death row prisoners - mostly black and Hispanic, likely by torture

In an astonishing move, the Texas indicted Attorney General Ken Paxton sued the FDA for an injunction to force the FDA to permit Texas the import of execution drugs that are not allowed for use in humans.

Where the effect of a drug in a human is not known, the use of a drug in a human, even for execution purposes, should be prohibited - as it can result in torture, in "cruel and unusual punishment" in violation of the 8th Amendment.

Importing a new drug is clearly federally regulated activity under interstate commerce.


While sodium thiopental is reportedly used in European countries for legal voluntary euthanasia, there are clear protocols as to dosages and conditions of administration of sodium thiopental for those purposes.

Moreover, autopsies of prisoners executed in the U.S. reportedly showed that concentrations of thiopental sodium in the bloodsteam of executed prisoners were insufficient to cause unconsciousness.

In other words, prisoners who were executed with the use of thiopental sodium, remained conscious and may have been subjected to torturous deaths, in violation of the 8th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

The standoff between the FDA and the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) is that TDCJ bought and had shipped 1000 vials of thiopental sodium to execute its condemned prisoners, these people who are mostly black and Hispanic.

Even though the Texas Attorney General tried to keep his lawsuit clinical, and not focus on the actual elephant in the room, the issue that the 1000 vials that the FDA held in detention since July of 2015 and ruled, in a preliminary ruling, that the 1000 vials labeled only as "thiopental sodium" and "for law enforcement purposes" are unapproved and mislabeled new drugs - are meant to kill 258 people.

I copied and analyzed the list of Texas death row inmates, and the "clinically sterile" analysis of Texas AG in his lawsuit seeking opportunity to kill off these people as fast as possible started to appear less than sterile.

Here is the gender and race distribution of people on the Texas death row list:

Out of 243 people currently on the Texas death row, there are 6 women and 237 men (2% of death row inmates), 3 white, 2 African American and 1 Hispanic.

Out of 237 men on the Texas death row, there are:


  • 1 Asian;
  • 105 African American (44% of men);
  • 64 Hispanics (27% of men);
  • 4 "other";
  • 63 whites (27% of men)
So, here are racial proportions of populations in Texas as of 2010 Census:


  • African American - 11.8%;
  • Hispanic - 37.6%
  • White non-Hispanic - 45.3%.

And here is the racial proportions on Texas death row - the people that Texas AG Ken Paxton pushes a federal court to allow him to allow him to kill of faster:

  • African American - 44%;
  • Hispanic - 27%; and
  • White non-Hispanic - 27%
The proportion of African Americans on Texas death row is 4 times (!!) higher than the proportion of African Americans in the population of Texas.

The proportion of Hispanics are 30% (nearly 1/3) higher in the death row inmates than in the general population of Texas (27 constitutes 70% of 37.6).

And, the proportion of whites among the death row inmates is 41% lower (nearly 1/2) of the whites in the general population of Texas.

So, where the number of whites in the Texas death row list is nearly twice lower than their percentage in the state's population, while the number of African Americans is 4 times higher than their percentage in the state's population, the probability of getting a death sentence in Texas is 8 times higher for an African American than for a white.

And, of course, the prosecutor who seeks to kill off Texas' proof of racism in handing out death sentencing, is also white, here is his photo:




Age of condemned to death prisoners at the time of the offense

Racism is not the only problem with the Texas death row though.

Yet another problem is sentencing to death, and now trying to kill off, people who, by modern standards of many states, would not be considered mature enough to buy and drink alcohol - a lot of Texas death row inmates are young people between 18 and 21, and a lot are in their 20s.

There are 7 death row inmates in Texas who were condemned to death for committing their crimes at the age of 18:


The two far right columns I added to the Texas table.

In many states (New York one of them), people under 21 are not only not allowed to drink alcohol, but are also considered children for purposes of child support.

Note that, out of 7 18-year-old males condemned to death and still on death row in Texas - whom Ken Paxton pushes to kill off fast,


  • only 1 (14%) are white;
  • 2 (28%) are Hispanic; and
  • the remaining 4 (58%) are black - indicating, if anything, no compassion in likely predominantly white juries to black teenagers, as opposed to white and Hispanic teenagers
These people, children who committed their crimes at the age of 18, have been on death row from 11 to 24 years by now, and Paxton still pushes to kill them off as fast as possible - before the U.S. Supreme Court comes around and pronounces the death penalty unconstitutional, as it has been done in all other civilized countries in the world.

Out of 15 19-year-old males (at the time of offense) condemned to death and still on death row in Texas:


999393 Offender Information Braziel, Jr. Alvin 3/16/1975 M Black 8/9/2001 Dallas 9/21/1993             19 16
999137 Offender Information Wardlow Billy 11/25/1974 M White 2/13/1995 Titus 6/14/1993             19 22
999291 Offender Information Rocha Felix 5/7/1976 M Hispanic 12/16/1998 Harris 11/26/1994             19 19
999226 Offender Information Guidry Howard 4/15/1976 M Black 4/16/1997 Harris 11/19/1994             19 20
999599 Offender Information Hall Paul 2/18/1993 M Asian 10/9/2015 Brazos 10/20/2011             19 2
577 Offender Information Earvin Harvey 4/7/1958 M Black 10/26/1977 Angelina 12/12/1976             19 40
999423 Offender Information Davis Irving 9/17/1982 M Black 7/18/2002 El Paso 6/4/2001             19 15
999562 Offender Information Robinson Cortne 12/15/1990 M Black 3/23/2011 Harrison 9/20/2009             19 6
999192 Offender Information Melendez Pablo 11/16/1975 M Hispanic 5/21/1996 Tarrant 9/1/1994             19 21
999490 Offender Information Ramirez Juan 3/11/1984 M Hispanic 12/23/2004 Hidalgo 1/5/2003             19 13
999319 Offender Information Vasquez Richard 4/17/1979 M Hispanic 6/24/1999 Nueces 3/5/1998             19 18
999279 Offender Information Murphy Julius 10/25/1978 M Black 8/18/1998 Bowie 9/19/1997             19 19
999558 Offender Information Milam Blaine 12/12/1989 M White 6/11/2010 Rusk 12/2/2008             19 7
999590 Offender Information Balderas Juan 9/2/1986 M Hispanic 3/25/2014 Harris 12/15/2005             19 3
999330 Offender Information Haynes Anthony 1/22/1979 M Black 11/3/1999 Harris 5/22/1998             19 18

there are:
  • 1 Asian;
  • 2 whites;
  • 5 Hispanics, and
  • 7 African-Americans
who already served from 3 to 22 years on death row.

Out of 25 20-year old males (at the time of the offense) on the Texas death row:

999549 Offender Information Broadnax James 10/30/1988 M Black 9/2/2009 Dallas 6/19/2008             20 8
999388 Offender Information Woodard Robert 6/17/1980 M Black 6/20/2001 Harris 2/12/2000             20 16
999541 Offender Information Norman LeJames 11/26/1985 M Black 12/12/2008 Jackson 8/24/2005             20 9
999144 Offender Information Sheppard Erica 9/1/1973 F Black 4/25/1995 Harris 6/30/1993             20 22
999000 Offender Information Brewer Brent 5/26/1970 M White 6/4/1991 Randall 4/26/1990             20 26
999420 Offender Information Williams Perry 9/22/1980 M Black 6/25/2002 Harris 9/17/2000             20 15
999145 Offender Information Ruiz Roland 7/4/1972 M Hispanic 5/4/1995 Bexar 7/14/1992             20 22
999544 Offender Information Ramirez John 6/29/1984 M Hispanic 2/13/2009 Nueces 7/19/2004             20 8
928 Offender Information Rivers Warren 3/31/1967 M Black 12/29/1988 Harris 5/3/1987             20 29
999498 Offender Information Mendoza Moises 1/26/1984 M Hispanic 7/1/2005 Collin 3/18/2004             20 12
999379 Offender Information Jones Quintin 7/15/1979 M Black 3/16/2001 Tarrant 9/11/1999             20 16
999519 Offender Information Ramey Ker'sean 6/4/1985 M Black 1/31/2007 Jackson 8/24/2005             20 10
999411 Offender Information Pruett Robert 9/18/1979 M White 4/30/2002 Bee 12/17/1999             20 15
999383 Offender Information Howard Jamaal 2/8/1980 M Black 4/26/2001 Hardin 5/12/2000             20 16
999260 Offender Information Tong Chuong 10/21/1976 M Other 4/1/1998 Harris 4/6/1997             20 19


there are:


  • 1 "other";
  • 2 (8%)  whites;
  • 3 Hispanics and
  • 19 (75%) African Americans
In this age group, there are 9.5 TIMES more African Americans than whites on Texas death row among the 20-year-olds, while there are 4 times more whites than African Americans in Texas population.

The perception that an African American young man is more guilty than a white young man in the same situation is apparently very strong amongst Texas trial juries that must necessarily represent the "cross-section" of the Texas population, in other words, with predominance of white jurors condemning black youths to death 19 times time more (in this age group) than white young men.

Age group 21-25 (at the time of offense) - out of 79 death row inmates:

  • 1 "other";
  • 19 whites;
  • 22 Hispanics; and
  • 37 African Americans
These people have served so far from 2 months (Amos Wells III, black, 23 at the time of offense) to 41 years (Raymond Riles, black, 25 at the time of offense) on death row.

Age group 20 to 30 - 121 death row inmates in Texas:

  • 2 "others";
  • 31 whites;
  • 36 Hispanics; and
  • 52 blacks
who have served so far on death row from 2 months to 41 years;


In the age group 30 to 40 (at the time of the offense) among 61 yet-unexecuted Texas death row inmates there are:

1 "other";
20 whites;
15 Hispanics, and
25 blacks

who have so far served on death row from 7 months to 33 years.

Age group 40 to 50 (at the time of offense) - out of 19 death row inmates:

  • 4 Hispanics;
  • 6 blacks, and
  • 9 whites - the only age group where whites outnumber blacks, but still not in the same proportion as they appear in the population

Age group of 50 and over at the time of offense - out of 4 death row inmates there are:

  • 1 white and
  • 3 blacks

Now, when more and more questions arise as to mistakes and fraud of prosecutors who, shielded by "absolute prosecutorial immunity", drum and drum wrongful convictions - including death sentences - in order to climb higher in their careers, often towards judgeships, and when death penalty is abolished in all civilized countries but the U.S.,

Texas managed to get 1,000 vials to kill its 243 predominantly non-white death row inmates, a great number of among them - youngsters condemned to death at the time they are deemed by law not mature enough to buy and consume alcohol, and are considered children for purposes of child support in many states.

Why Texas urgently needs 1,000 vials to kill 243 inmates, while many of these inmates appeals are not yet exhausted, is a mystery that Ken Paxton did not explain in this lawsuit to the federal court.

But, it is clear that, with the recent finding by Lancet that when U.S. jurisdictions execute their condemned prisoners with thiopental sodium, the prisoners remain conscious throughout the execution, and thus are likely submitted to torture - in violation of the 8th Amendment.

Texas did not explain to the federal court,

  • why it urgently needs 1,000, while it has only 243 death row inmates, and many of them still did not exhaust their appellate process; and
  • what will be the procedure and dosage Texas will use for execution - because the procedure and dosage does not appear on the labeling.

It is interesting why the white Attorney General (recently indicted for fraud) pushes to kill off the predominantly non-white death row inmates, and what is the urgency for such government killing - other than the government tries to "race to the death chamber" ahead of opponents of the death penalty, and tries to execute people before the death penalty is officially declared unconstitutional, as it should have been done long time ago.

In any event, FDA in this case is in its own right not to allow import of a drug labeled only as "thiopental sodium", "for law enforcement purposes", a labeling that provides no indication whatsoever as to whether Texas is going to use the drug for execution, or for execution/slow torture of its inmates.

While concluding this article, I cannot shake the thought that, 100 years from now, when the death penalty will be, hopefully, long abolished, Ken Paxton's "clinical" plea to the court to stop the FDA from "interfering" with Texas' "lawful law enforcement procedures" will be read as it should be - with astonishment, horror and shame for our past.

Yet, now it is our present.

Which should be made out past - and there are 8 people on the U.S. Supreme Court who can do it any time, but still linger.

I wonder, why.



Tuesday, January 3, 2017

Appellate Division 3rd Department Attorney Grievance Committee claims that fraud upon the court is not attorney misconduct - for those attorneys who work for the government

In 2011, Appellate Division, 3rd Judicial Department, on application of its Attorney Grievance Committee, disbarred an attorney.

The disbarment was based upon the Petition that stated as its basis to request disbarment, among other things, the contents of the attorney's disciplinary file, which the Attorney Grievance Committee did not make part of the record.

The attorney made several applications for access to contents of the record based on which he was disbarred.

The Attorney Grievance Committee refused to provide such records.

So, the attorney sued.

During litigation, the Attorney Grievance Committee's (AGC's) counsel, Assistant New York State Attorney General Bruce Boivin, told me (I represented the Plaintiff) that the ACG does not have the file I am trying to get.

Well, if they do not have the file, the order of disbarment must be voided, since it was based on claims under oath, of the Committee, made upon existence of the file.

Federal U.S. District Judge (Senior Status) Lawrence E. Kahn whose own law license and livelihood is in the hands of defendant ACG who appeared in front of him (because without that license he cannot be a judge)




dismissed the case stating that:


  • an attorney does not have a constitutional right of access to his own disciplinary file upon which he was denied his law license and livelihood, that
  • the order of disbarment is final (even if fraudulent - which he did not mention) and, thus, the U.S. District Court lacks jurisdiction, under the judicially created Rooker-Feldman doctrine, to review the case, and
  • ACG, and its now former attorney Steven Zayas, is absolutely immune from lawsuit for denying access to the file.
Right after the dismissal, while the appeal was pending, Monica Duffy was made by the then-Chief Judge of New York Court System Jonathan Lippman a member of the State Commission for Attorney Discipline.

As a member of the Commission, Monica Duffy authorized three public hearings to be held by the Commission, and made impassioned personal statements in one of the hearings that there is NO selective non-prosecution of prosecutors and that all attorneys, notwithstanding their "area of practice" are equally prosecuted by the ACG:







 Of course, when making those impassioned statements, Duffy knew she was lying, and did it with audacity, in full knowledge that, in the absence of mechanisms in the ACG to investigate and prosecute their own attorneys for misconduct, nobody will ever discipline her for that lie.

After all, she engaged in professional misconduct in several disciplinary cases I know of, to the point of fraud upon the court, and stalled complaints against herself.  Moreover, when given a chance as a member of the Commission on attorney discipline to put in a mechanism of disqualification of ACG members and attorneys for conflict of interest, she did not do that - protecting herself from discipline.

Duffy's Commission also issued a report recommending to allow appeals of dismissals by ACG, and, based on the report, new rules of attorney discipline were issued by the New York State 4 Appellate Departments, now "allowing" a very limited appeal of dismissals of complaints against attorneys.

At that point, I criticized the measure as not a measure at all, because of the absolute discretion not to investigate, which will be used by ACG to continue to do what it is doing - whitewashing government-employed attorneys and attorneys with connections to the rich and powerful, and using attorney discipline as a tool to target and strip of ability to earn a living critics of the government, especially civil rights attorneys and critics of the judiciary.

And, back in Neroni v Zayas, since 2013, I was arguing that the lack of indication on ACG's "form letters" refusing to investigate or prosecute an attorney of any archive numbers or any identification numbers indicates that ACG, coupled with ACG refusal to give access to their archives after claiming to the court, and obtaining orders of discipline based on their "records" - which obviously do not exist - indicates that ACG shreds all complaints against attorneys ACG is supposed to protect and pursues claims only against attorneys ACG is supposed to target.

When complaints against "protected" attorneys are shredded, ACG thus destroys, for the future, the opportunity to do what it does to "unprotected" attorneys - claiming that it had complaints against such attorneys in the past.

As a comparison, New York State Commission for Judicial Conduct, which also operates as a shredder of complaints against judges, at least assigns numbers to its form letters refusing to investigate a complaint, thus allowing to, at least for Commission's own purposes, track how many complaints were lodged against a particular judge.

Here is proof that Monica Duffy, when preparing the "report" for "new fair and effective rules" of attorney discipline, was mocking the public and wasting taxpayer money while never intending to change her corrupt ways.


I also filed a complaint against Follender with the New York Judicial Conduct Commission (because Follender is also a part-time town justice) and with criminal authorities, asking to prosecute him for several crimes, including felonies.

The felony investigation still proceeds.

The proof that I provided to ACG is documentary and IRREFUTABLE.

It is IRREFUTABLE that Follender committed a crime of fraud upon the court.

The ACG does not have to wait until the criminal investigation is complete and until the criminal court pronounces its decision - violation of rules of professional conduct is complete on the face of the record.

So, what did ACG do?

Did it start a sua sponte disciplinary proceedings against Jonathan Follender?

Oh, no.

It did exactly what the public criticized it for in public hearings in 2015 - selective non-prosecution of Jonathan Follender  as a private attorney because he is also a judge.

Monica Duffy sent me a form letter claiming that, as a matter of discretion (her own choice) she refuses to even INVESTIGATE my complaint.

She also used very interesting - and diametrically opposite - statements:

  1. Duffy relied on the new rules that Duffy helped create, 22 NYCRR 1240, specifically on 22 NYCRR 1240.7(d)(1)(I), which allows, according to Duffy, to "decline to investigate".  Declining to investigate is declining to review or analyze.
Yet, in the next phrase, Duffy states that there was a review on the merits:

2. "After a careful review, it was determined that your complaint does not involve behavior constituting professional misconduct".




So, according to Duffy, when an attorney, for purposes of personal financial benefit, files with the court a fraudulent judgement for over $10,000 not authorized by court, that behavior does not constitute professional misconduct.

In other words, fraud upon the court does not constitute, to Duffy and ACG, professional misconduct. 

Which is diametrically opposite to what Duffy's Committee stated to the court in pursuing sua sponte proceedings against my husband, for actions that did not constitute fraud upon the court, because the agreement in the judgment of divorce that he supposedly violated was not in writing, as was required by the Statute of Frauds, and was unenforceable, and because there is no cause of action in New York for interfering with prospective rights of inheritance of third parties - not that the law mattered in any way for the committee that had an order to take my husband's license no matter what the law said.

Here is some more evidence of the conceptual mess that reigns in Duffy's head:

1) fraud upon the court IS attorney misconduct - for purposes of bringing a sua sponte disciplinary proceedings against my husband, who filed a complaint against Robert Harlem (a retired judge) and Richard Harlem to the same ACG, and ACG's member John Casey made a choice - to accept subjects of Robert Harlem and Richard Harlem as his law firms' paying clients in litigation against my husband, and to prosecute and take the license of my husband, a complainant against Case's clients and an opponent suing them - for fraud upon the court;  John Casey's law firms (two, in succession) have been the Harlems' private attorneys for 6 years so far;

2) to claim that an attorney is liable for fraud upon the court for making fraudulent claims in litigation is punishable by frivolous conduct sanctions and loss of a law license - that is what Duffy claimed in a motion for a summary judgment in my disciplinary proceedings, including an order of sanctions imposed upon me by corrupt Judge Tormey whom Follender requested to sanction me for suing Follender because I sued Tormey in federal court (a lot of logic involved) - and Tormey obliged.

Tormey also ruled that Follender, a private attorney in the action, has ABSOLUTE JUDICIAL IMMUNITY for any untrue statements he made to the court - thus voiding Judiciary Law 487 by creating a jurisdictional bar for civil actions to prosecute private attorneys for fraud upon the court.

3) When I immediately moved in my husband's proceedings to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction because now the same court (a different judge) claimed that fraud upon the court is non-prosecutable, barred by absolute JUDICIAL immunity - I was laughed at by Judge Dowd, who claimed I should have realized that what Judge Tormey said by granting Follender absolute judicial immunity against Judiciary Law 487 was "mere dicta".

4) When I sued ACG's attorney Steven Zayas for fraud upon the court - claiming that I neglected two clients in 2008 when I was not an attorney and could not have any clients as an attorney - the case was dismissed based on "absolute quasi-judicial immunity", claiming that Judiciary Law 487 is inapplicable to government attorneys.

5) When I sued on behalf of my husband in federal court challenging constitutionality of Judiciary Law 487 that absolves from accountability under that law a large group of attorneys working for the government, the same Duffy asked to dismiss the action, and it was dismissed, "for failure to state a claim" - by the same Judge Kahn, whose own law license and livelihood was in the hands of 3rd Department's ACG.

6) Now, Duffy claims that she does not see fraud upon the court in anything that Follender did, even though what Follender did is a fraud upon the court - irrefutably so, based on the documents I provided: a court order saying that a money judgment must be entered for $1,756, and Follender making it a judgment of over $10,000 with 9% interest - as she did not see any fraud in her own fraud upon the court in my disciplinary case where she refusd to investigate and prosecute HERSELF.


It is interesting to mention that, while declining to investigate Follender, Duffy misrepresents the very same rules that she helped create.

First of all, Duffy has no "discretion" to decline to investigate despite 22 NYCRR 1240(d)(1)(I) she relied upon - because she herself is disqualified from review of my complaints.


Duffy, who engaged in fraud upon the court in my husband's disciplinary case and in my case, who claimed to the court that she is relying on contents of her "file" but is refusing to reveal the contents of her "file", while her attorney Bruce Boivin claims that there is no "file", and who is, at this time, the subject of an unresolved complaint by me against herself - cannot, as a matter of due process of law, review and deny investigation to me, she must seek assignment of a special prosecutor for both my complaint against her, and my complaint against Follender.

Duffy disqualified herself from review of all complaints made by me and my husband in June of 2014 as being unable to be unbiased towards us, as subject of disciplinary proceedings, or as complainants, and the only reason why I filed my complaint against Follender with ACG3 was because it was the right venue - ACG4 previously refused to review a complaint against an attorney from my husband claimed it first needed to be filed with ACG3.

Of course, she will now be claiming, if I raise this issue, that I do not have a right to appellate review of dismissals of my complaint against an attorney, based on the decision of another judge of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of New York, Judge Mae D'Agostino, who made a decision in favor of New York judiciary while failing to disclose that at the time of presiding over the case she was member of and Chairperson of, a secret-membership organization where state judges, defendants in the action, were members of a group that she was Chairperson of, and were making decisions about cases with D'Agostino ex parte, behind closed doors.

The federal court system now fights my FOIA request for lists of members of D'Agostino's secret organization, by the way.







So, D'Agostino relied on the 2nd Circuit (while both courts are part of the case-fixing ring of state and federal judges, and are currently fighting to block my FOIA request to reveal lists of members of that criminal ring, called the New York State-Federal Judicial Council) in claiming that a victim of judicial misconduct, a public citizen, a member of a popular sovereign (We the People) lacks "a judicially cognizable interest in the prosecution or nonprosecution of another".

That was from the ruling made in 2013.

But, didn't it all change in 2015 when Duffy's Commission introduced a new rule - that a victim of attorney misconduct CAN now appeal the dismissal, and thus now DOES have "a judicially cognizable interest in the prosecution or nonprosecution of another"?

That was the illusion that the "new rules" of attorney discipline were supposed to create.

The rules provide for a right to appeal dismissal or non-investigation of complaints against attorneys - in response to a public outcry in public hearings in 2015 that attorney disciplinary committees are whitewashing and refusing to investigate and prosecute misconduct of government-employed attorneys.



The subsection (3) above is the one that Duffy relied upon at the end of her write-off letter:

In her write-off letter, Duffy claimed that my written request for review (appeal) "must be based on information and/or argument not previously presented to the Committee".

22 NYCRR 1240.7(e)(3) does not have such a restricting requirement - Duffy invented it after the fact, legislating post-factum while at the same time acting as an investigator, prosecutor and adjudicator in the matter - a conflation of all possible roles in violation of the separation of powers principle.

And, the "review" (appeal) ends within the Committee - the investigator, prosecutor, legislator and adjudicator - the Committee that is immune for anything wrong it may be doing.

No further appeal is allowed - and, if you sue, you will bump back into what D'Agostino and the 2nd Circuit (after discussions through New York State-Federal Judicial Council, in cahoots with state judges and their secret "advisors" that they refuse to disclose) said: you have no "judicially cognizable" right to appeal the dismissal or declining to investigate.

What conclusion can we all, as citizens, draw from all of this mess?

1) There should not be situations where the authority to:

  • legislate;
  • investigate;
  • prosecute and/or
  • adjudicate - in all and any combinations of those 4 functions - be vested into the same governmental body, and especially into the body where members of the Committee are "unpaid volunteers", whose own business and livelihood depends on approval or disapproval by the judiciary
In other words - members of the Committee have a conflict of interest in whether to investigate or prosecute a private attorney (Follender) who is also a judge.  A panel of people who have nothing to do with the legal profession or the judiciary should, separately, investigate or make the decision whether to prosecute or not prosecute.

2) The so-called "prosecutorial discretion" as to whether to bring or not to bring charges where the complaint is clearly meritorious, should be eliminated - if somebody violated the law, no matter what kind of law, that person MUST be prosecuted.

Because prosecutorial discretion has long become the equivalent of prosecutorial corruption.

Had my husband, or I, been a part-time justice, Duffy would never have prosecuted us.

Yet, since we were not, and, instead, we complained about judges, our law licenses were taken, and all public officials involved play run-around as to applicability of fraud upon the court, Judiciary Law 487, to us, mere mortals, and to the sky-dwellers, attorneys connected with the government.

So that attorneys who commit fraud upon the court invariably come out without any accountability, and even win against whistleblowers, in our case - even having their cronies take the whistleblowers' law licenses in exchange (as it happened with Harlems) for bribery of the prosecutor, John Casey, by hiring him and paying his law firms tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees at the time he was supposed to prosecute the Harlems.

I did not exhaust all the arsenal of legal remedies against Follender though, and the case of his disciplinary proceedings is not yet closed.

I still have a 6-year statute of limitations to sue him for fraud upon the court, and to turn him back in after a jury verdict of fraud upon him - which I am confident I can obtain from a civil jury.

And, the criminal state case against Follender is still out.

But, that's my personal case.

Hundreds of people file criminal and disciplinary complaints in New York and around the country against well-connected attorneys, judges and other public officials.

Most of the complaints are routinely nixed as a matter of "prosecutorial discretion", and the public is denied an elementary right to appeal that conduct.

My suggestion to the public is to:

  1. demand from their legal representatives in the legislatures passing of a legislature that 
    1. would abolish the so-called "prosecutorial discretion",
    2. would put the matter of decisions whether to bring or not to bring charges outside of the "self-regulating" legal profession and judiciary, into the hands of lay and neutral public panels, with members of the panels having no connection to the legal profession or judges; and
    3. would vest the complainants with a state right to appeal dismissals.
Actually, New Yorkers can demand putting these issues, as well as the repeal of prosecutorial and judicial immunity and governmental immunities of any kind, up for vote in the 2017 constitutional referendum, to amend the New York State Constitutional.

This is NOT about me only - this is about the public who tried, without any positive result, back in 2015, to assert in public hearings that there is no proper right to appeal improper dismissals of meritorious complaints against the government.

For us, "mere mortals", the "protections" created by "disciplinary" or "ethics" commissions by the government are just pulling wool over our eyes - an illusion.

It shouldn't be an illusion.

We the People can expect true accountability for misconduct - of government attorneys, prosecutors and judges.

Government officials must be held accountable for any wrongdoing in office, and whether to prosecute or not prosecute them should not be within the hands of individuals who have financial interests in the way they use their "discretion".

Whether to be or not to be ethical, should not be a matter of Duffy's, or anybody else's, corrupt discretion.























Kudoz to Kansas #JudgeEvelynWilson for her bravery. A judge accused of "slandering veterans" for stating the obvious - that the military teaches soldiers how to kill people

Sometimes, the show-off respect to the veterans of the military in this country borders on the bizarre.

We still have homeless veterans - showing that the country DOES NOT respect its veterans appropriately.

We still have teens arranging, and "hundreds" attending indigent veterans' funerals, with press reports about it, while there are no press reports of the same teens and the same "hundreds" helping those veterans not to be alone, and not to die alone while they were still alive.

But, the veteran status is often used to advance political gains, protect people in power from accountability, or raise "politically correct" issues of the day.

For example, it is likely the respect to the veteran PA Judge Ronald Castille (former Philadelphia DA) that prevented him, despite his raging misconduct and "flagrant conflict of interest", from being taken off the bench and disbarred for his "role" in Williams v Pennsylvania, for
  • having his office obtain a murder conviction, of a black man, Terrance Williams, for killing the perpetrator of sexual abuse upon him when he was a child, based on fraudulent testimony and based on hiding the Brady material from the defense;
  • seeking and obtaining his death sentence,
  • being elected based on the claims of "being tough on crime" and using that death sentence as a statistic that elected him to the bench, and then
  • repeatedly - for 4 times, without a recusal, denying the man habeas corpus petitions, and in the last denial, lashing out at his defenders for doing their jobs.


Yet, in Kansas, an appellate court, while affirming the sentence imposed by a judge, recently blasted a sentencing judge for stating the obvious, when revoking probation and imposing a 68-month (5 years 8 months') sentence against a person where:

The judge considered, in the context of the threat to kill somebody, that the defendant was, in fact, very capable of killing that person because he was professionally trained by the military to kill - which was the truth:



So, that was a military veteran who was given the leniency of probation instead of prison sentence, and who blew it by violating conditions of probation, and engaged in dangerous conduct.

And, somehow the judge was criticized - by an appellate court no less for "unnecessarily slanderous" comment that the court attributed to all those who served in the military.

Yet, what exactly was slanderous?

That our military personnel is not taught how to kill?

What then does the training of our military personnel include?  Crocheting?

In combat, it is "kill or be killed", and soldiers are taught how to survive - yes, by killing people and by defending their country.

But, when they come home, and engage in civilian professions, there is no denying that their skills of how to kill people remain with them.

And, thus, if a military veteran, a person professionally trained to kill in order to defend his country, is trying to use those skills against the public - like this particular military veteran did:




- his military training MUST be considered an aggravating factor, whatever the politically correct crowd says.

Imagine yourself in the place of defendant's victims: his ex-wife and her "family members".

Imagine that your ex-husband, a military veteran who - yes, was trained to kill, and knows how to kill using various weapons - threatened to kill you and your family, and was arrested with a machete in his car, in violation of his conditions of probation.

He did not know of conditions of probation?

He did not know the law does not allow him to threaten to kill people?

He did not know he is not allowed to have weapons in his car?

Of course he did know - otherwise he would have been held in competent to stand trial.

How else should the judge have considered defendant's military experience? 

A machete is a dangerous weapon in anybody's hands, and especially so in the hands of a trained soldier - yes, who was trained to kill, not to crochet with it.

What IS slanderous is assuming that all military veterans will turn their skills of how to kill people against their fellow citizens in civilian life and against their family, or former family members, as it happened here.

Because, condemning a judge for considering the "trained to kill" factor against the military veteran who DID break the law as a slander against ALL military veterans, implies that all military veterans also commit crimes.  And that is what is truly slanderous.

Let's give veterans their respect where it belongs.

Let's help them get treatment when they need it.

Let's make it so that there are no homeless veterans in this country.

But, let's not allow the veteran status to escape accountability for breaking the law.





Sunday, January 1, 2017

Andrew Cuomo's New Year's Eve veto on the criminal defense act and the need for deregulation of the legal profession

On New Year's Eve, New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo has dealt a blow to a bipartisan bill seeking to ensure constitutionally required effective assistance of counsel for criminal defendants and removal of funding for such criminal defense from counties to the state, see, for example, an article about the New York State House passing the bill.

Here is how the bill was passing through New York State Senate, to see the full text of the bill, check the box "text" when you follow the link



The bipartisan bill was introduced, and passed through both chambers of the New York State Legislature, in response to a settlement in a class action against several upstate counties that could not provide counsel to indigent criminal defendants at arraignments.

Instead, a month ago Cuomo signed into law another bill providing for a "group counsel" at arraignments - who will perfunctorily appear at arraignments of all criminal defendants horded into one court and will trigger for them the time for discovery and motions, while providing no meaningful assistance, since the measure did not provide additional funding and would not relieve the overload.

It is apparent that Cuomo's signing one bill, but vetoing the other, was based on at least two major considerations:


  • money; and
  • power.
The vetoed bill would have required to shift at least a part, if not all, funding of indigent criminal defense in the state from counties that have to raise property taxes and foreclose on homes of people who cannot pay them in order to satisfy the mandate to fund criminal defense.

Apparently, Cuomo did not want the State of New York to fund criminal defense out of its own budget, and preferred to continue to saddle counties - and through counties, homeowners - with the criminal defense funding, even though, as the settled class lawsuit showed, and as numbers of New Yorkers running from the state lately (because of high property taxes) keep showing, funding criminal defense through taxes upon homeowners is a bad idea:


  • both for homeowners who cannot afford it and prefer to leave the state rather than remain and lose their homes through inordinately high taxes, and
  • for criminal defendants who 
    • do not get properly funded criminal defense, and
    • who continue to get assigned counsel who are dependent upon the presiding judge for handouts of future assignments, and, because most judges are pro-prosecution and consider discovery, motions and pre-trial hearings that assigned counsel may ask for an unnecessary nuisance, assigned counsel who would pester a judge with motions and requests for pre-trial hearings, most likely will not get further assignments - it happens all the time in New York.
So, money and power.

Yet, the solution is quite on the surface - it is already contained in the U.S. Supreme Court decision Johnson v Avery of some 48 years ago, and was developed and pointed out by professor Ilya Somin last year - it is:

  • allowing representation by an unlicensed counsel of the criminal defendants' choice, and
  • creating an independent State Public Defenders' office with its separate budget - same as prosecutor's offices with a budget, and/or
  • voucherizing assigned criminal defense - giving the criminal defendant a voucher to choose his/her own criminal defense representative (licensed or unlicensed), for the exact same amount of money per hour, irrespective of education, training, licensing or certification.
This way, assigning counsel to indigent criminal defendants will be removed from the power of presiding judges, will stop being the "stick-and-carrot" of the local criminal defense bar, and will allow indigent defendants to have court representatives of their choice, those who truly work for their clients, and not those who are favored by a certain judge for reasons unrelated to their performance.

Yet, many judges consider choosing attorneys for the poor, and thus holding the local bar on a financial leash, as their own important personal perk - I've heard that many times from the recently retired Judge Becker who yelled at my clients that they will either have the judge choose their assigned counsel for them, or, if they choose me as counsel retained with their friends or extended family's money, the judge will not allow them money for experts and investigators, even though they do qualify for it under the law.

Lawsuits against judges based on such "selective assignment" process universally get dismissed by federal courts on "absolute judicial immunity" grounds protecting the judge from liability for malicious and even corrupt acts in the assignment process - where assignments may be granted out for election campaign contributions or behind-the-scenes agreement with the judge (who is usually a former prosecutor) that the assigned counsel will not raise too much waves in defense of his/her client and will allow the prosecution the boon of at least some conviction, whether it was warranted by the law and the facts of the case or not.

Such assigned counsel usually:

  • routinely do not ask for a felony hearing within 144 hours of detention of their indigent client, thus:
    • depriving their indigent clients of an opportunity to be released from jail for free, without bail;
    • depriving their indigent clients of an opportunity to get information in felony cases at the earliest stages of the case, when the prosecution did not yet have time to coach their witnesses as to how to lie under oath;
  • routinely do not ask for discovery; and
  • routinely do not make motions, especially motion to disqualify the prosecutor or the judge for misconduct or bias, or to dismiss, or for any other numerous reasons that an omnibus motion in a criminal case may be brought;
  • routinely do not make necessary objections at trial, making appeals impossible.
When an indigent criminal defendant is then convicted as a result of neglect or a complete sellout by the assigned counsel who was concerned more about his/her own future assignments from the same judge and from other judges, than doing their duty for their client, New York state law then protects the assigned defense attorneys, and not their clients/victims - by not allowing their clients to sue them for malpractice unless they overturn the conviction (a near impossibility), the very conviction that would not have happened but for the assigned counsel neglect or sellout.

And, appellate court are extremely liberal in deciding what conduct of a criminal defense attorney constitutes, or does not constitute constitutionally acceptable representation, in order not only to have the conviction stand, but also to protect the assigned counsel favored by the judge from liability.

As a contrast, an attorney in a civil case in New York can be sued for malpractice without a prior condition that the court decision that was the result of the attorney's malpractice be first overturned. 

Putting a member of the County's establishment who, most likely, will consider the wishes of judges anyway in order to assign counsel - like the Onondaga County did a little earlier than Cuomo vetoed the bill - will not provide to indigent defendants either a court representative of their choice, or a skilled or independent court representative, for a simple reason.

The person "chosen" to head the "program" of assignment has been entrenched in the county for 17 years, Kathleen Dougherty, represented the County as its deputy attorney, and was thus part of the problem with providing counsel for indigent criminal defendants which resulted in a class lawsuit, and was part of the problem with selectively racist solitary confinement of juvenile delinquents in the County that is now challenged by a new class lawsuit by NYCLU.

Putting the fox in charge of the chicken coup is never a good idea.

Cuomo is a personal friend of New York Chief Judge Janet DiFiore, a recent prosecutor whose office is so entangled with the local judicially that her Assistant District Attorneys handled plea allocutions and recited waivers of constitutional rights instead of the judge - despite challenges of such practices in motions (I personally filed such a motion on behalf of a client, seeking to disqualify DiFiore's office because of that, and other misconduct).

DiFiore's office was also in cohouts with assigned counsel (I have proof) in order to sell out the client and have the client plead guilty to bogus charges - and do it quickly, before an independent counsel would come in.

DiFiore, as a prosecutor, is aware of the usual incestous relationships of the District Attorneys with presiding judges, who usually assign, following DA's lead, direct requests or "good relationships" with the judge, attorneys who would not put up a fight on behalf of their clients, or who would simply sell them out - thus helping prosecution.

Of course, giving indigent criminal defendants vouchers to choose their own counsel will eliminate the sinecures where assigned counsel are assigned, at $75 an hour, for contributions to the judicial election campaign, or for wining and dining the judge, or for giving jobs or recommendations to judge's relatives or friends, or to those attorneys who will silently agree with the implied requirement to do nothing for their client and multiply convictions, so that the DA himself will become a judge, running on the usual platform of "being tough on crime".

Instead, those who truly do their job for their clients - whether they do or do not have the necessary approval from the judiciary through either licensing or assignments - will be able to provide representation in court, whether the presiding judge, or the state judiciary, or the connected attorneys in the attorney disciplinary committees appointed by the judiciary, like these court representatives or not.

Voucherization of the criminal defense, coupled with allowing unlicensed individuals to provide representation in court, will eliminate a lot of corruption in courts - and especially because unlicensed individuals may not lose a license, and thus be sanctioned for raising the "sensitive" issues on behalf of their clients (such as police, prosecutorial and/or judicial misconduct) that the fear-seized defense bar at this time will not raise, for self-preservation reasons, for fear to lose their licenses and livelihoods, completely controlled by the judiciary.

It is apparent that Cuomo's veto is:

  • anti-fairness;
  • anti-requirement of constitutional effective assistance of counsel;
  • anti-settlement decision requiring New York to comply with the 6th Amendment right to counsel for indigent defendants;
  • anti- Johnson v Avery, because, if the State of New York cannot properly fund indigent criminal defense, it cannot enforce its attorney regulation and prohibit representation of criminal defendants by unlicensed court representatives of their choice - and especially that people under New York law are PRESUMED to know the law; and
  • anti-homeowners who are already losing their homes in tax foreclosures in order to fund financial mandates put upon counties, including the criminal defense funding mandate
but

pro-preservation of judicial control of the identity of court representatives for the criminal defendants.

It is apparent that the legal establishment, and Cuomo is part of it, will not cede its grip on putting indigents, and minority indigents, in jail by controlling who is allowed to represent the poor and how such representation will be funded.

I understand that there are budgetary concerns as to how the state will fund criminal defense for the indigents.

Yet, there were no budgetary concerns this year for dramatic raises in salaries for both judges and prosecutors, raises that were voted for by attorneys whose financial well-being is dependent on the judiciary, and who were thus disqualified by their partiality from legislating on the subject.

In the triangle of prosecutor-judge-defender - the defender is the only one whose office was not established and whose salaries were not tied to judicial salaries and were not raised.

Here is the official funding request/budget by New York State Courts for 2016-2017:



Nearly 2 billion dollars for the court system.

Nearly 80% of people unable to afford an attorney to represent them in those courts, and the Chief Judges of the State of New York repeatedly lament the justice gap and, as the former Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman said in one of his addresses to graduating law students where I was personally present, we should close our courthouses if we cannot provide proper access to justice to the poor.

Yet, courthouses, marble, granite and all, built by graft and evidence of shamelessness of the State judiciary, lavishing upon taxpayer money in the time of ongoing budgetary crisis and the "justice gap", are very much open.  To rich litigants.

And judges and prosecutors received their salary raises to sit like kings on thrones - and wields kingly power - out of those marble taxpayer-backed palaces - and do it with disdain to the poor.

And, salary increases, and renovations of marble palaces for the judiciary are happening while close friend of the Chief Judge Governor Cuomo nixes the bill that would have give the necessary funding to provide constitutionally required court representation for the poor in criminal court. 

Salary increases, by the way, were given to judges because judges claimed that they are entitled to raises of their salaries to $200,000 as a compensation for having to preside over cases of pro se litigants, in other words, of the poor (who are supposedly dumb and their dumbness affects the judges' tender sensibilities, requiring salary increases as a compensation for additional stress).  And, they get what they wanted.

Yet, only 25 million dollars out of the entire budget of over $2 billion dollars is requested in the New York State court budget for the indigent defense fund - while the State Legislature, through a the bill that passed both House and Senate, and died by veto at the hand of Cuomo, friend of New York Chief Judge DiFiore - indicated that $800,000 - instead of $25,000 provided in the court budget - is needed.

The remaining $775,000 will be paid by New York homeowners, some of whom will lose their homes if they are unable to pay.

Meanwhile, Governor Andrew Cuomo repeatedly finds money for pet projects of his various rich friends - the friends who Preet Bharara keeps investigating and catching, without touching Cuomo himself.

That money should be instead channeled for criminal defense.

If at least some of the funding burden is lifted off New York State's homeowners, maybe they will have an incentive to stay instead of leaving the state in droves.

As it is now, Cuomo's veto perpetuated New York's ongoing violations of indigent criminal defendants' 6th Amendment right to effective representation of counsel.  

It was done allegedly out of budgetary concerns - so the $800 million dollars that the indigent criminal defenses could, but did not receive from state budget, will be squeezed out of homeowners, to the point of foreclosure and sale of their homes and leaving them homeless.

Great measure and great motivation, Governor Cuomo.

Additionally to be thrown out of their homes because they cannot fund the County's mandate for indigent criminal defense, New York taxpayers will also have to pay now for more 6th Amendment violation lawsuits.  

And settlements in such lawsuits may amount to more than the needed funding for the voucher/State Public Defender office.

I bet, under such circumstances, the exodus from New York State will continue.