



a republican with b@@@
now hopefully delay goes after earl
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20051101/D8DJUIA80.html
Moderators: rtb, kmax, SonomaCat
I'm a little confused by this as well. A judge who may or may not have been biased against Delay was removed from the case, and not by reason of any alleged wrongdoing on his or the prosecutor's part. How exactly do you think that's going to help Delay "go after" the prosecutor?Hell's Bells wrote:![]()
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a republican with b@@@
now hopefully delay goes after earl
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20051101/D8DJUIA80.html
Delay is a slimeball but I have to respectfully disagree with you regarding your assessment regarding "who a judge donates cash to doesn't impact the law". This is all partisan fueled regardless of who's being prosecuted, who's defending, and who's presiding over the case. In my opinion, it's hard to find a judge these days who doesn't at least slightly legislate from the bench and impose their ideological slant. Ruth Bader Ginsburg is a former lawyer with the ACLU (I think that was her role with that group) and well known for her liberal beliefs and tendancies. On the other end, you have Scalia, Thomas, and now Alito who are of the right fringe. I don't have a detailed source of all of their written decisions, but they didn't become known as "being from the left or being from the right" for nothing. If there was no impact on the law, then you wouldn't be seeing the democrats raising oh holy hell over the nomination of Alito.Bay Area Cat wrote:Strange. You're cheering on a guy who is clearly unethical as opposed to wanting that sort of person out of the party you cheer for. Rather than asking your party to aspire to something better, you want them to just keep playing partisan politics in order to score some strange political points that just drag the whole system down. No wonder ethics are so lacking in government. If partisans have no desire to police their own and are only worried about increasing their power by any means necessary, the result is corruption.
Gee, I guess I shouldn't be shocked at the level of unethical activities in the news these days by politicians.
And before you recite the DeLay-written talking points that declare that the charges against DeLay are just partisan attack job on a noble and incredibly honest and upstanding man ... check out some nonfiction literature for a change of pace.
It's also strange that you consider this a victory for DeLay of some sort. He's getting a new judge ... but the facts haven't changed, and who a judge donates cash to doesn't impact the law. If he's guilty of a crime, he'll get convicted. If he's merely guilty of unethical activities, then he'll resume his post in the House and be protected from the ethics committee by his party ... and the whole nation will be worse off for it.
Just thought I'd mention that I almost had a "coffee on the monitor" moment because of censure being referred to as aBay Area Cat wrote:He has a long list of censures (I'm not sure if that's the right term, but it amounts to getting a) from the ethics committee for stunts he's pulled in the past.
We're not talking Supreme Court here, though. This is just a criminal case. If they were debating legal theory, then yes, I agree that ideology matters a great deal.lifeloyalsigmsu wrote:Delay is a slimeball but I have to respectfully disagree with you regarding your assessment regarding "who a judge donates cash to doesn't impact the law". This is all partisan fueled regardless of who's being prosecuted, who's defending, and who's presiding over the case. In my opinion, it's hard to find a judge these days who doesn't at least slightly legislate from the bench and impose their ideological slant. Ruth Bader Ginsburg is a former lawyer with the ACLU (I think that was her role with that group) and well known for her liberal beliefs and tendancies. On the other end, you have Scalia, Thomas, and now Alito who are of the right fringe. I don't have a detailed source of all of their written decisions, but they didn't become known as "being from the left or being from the right" for nothing. If there was no impact on the law, then you wouldn't be seeing the democrats raising oh holy hell over the nomination of Alito.Bay Area Cat wrote:Strange. You're cheering on a guy who is clearly unethical as opposed to wanting that sort of person out of the party you cheer for. Rather than asking your party to aspire to something better, you want them to just keep playing partisan politics in order to score some strange political points that just drag the whole system down. No wonder ethics are so lacking in government. If partisans have no desire to police their own and are only worried about increasing their power by any means necessary, the result is corruption.
Gee, I guess I shouldn't be shocked at the level of unethical activities in the news these days by politicians.
And before you recite the DeLay-written talking points that declare that the charges against DeLay are just partisan attack job on a noble and incredibly honest and upstanding man ... check out some nonfiction literature for a change of pace.
It's also strange that you consider this a victory for DeLay of some sort. He's getting a new judge ... but the facts haven't changed, and who a judge donates cash to doesn't impact the law. If he's guilty of a crime, he'll get convicted. If he's merely guilty of unethical activities, then he'll resume his post in the House and be protected from the ethics committee by his party ... and the whole nation will be worse off for it.
it does if your donations are a potential cause for conflict and you know itBay Area Cat wrote:We're not talking Supreme Court here, though. This is just a criminal case. If they were debating legal theory, then yes, I agree that ideology matters a great deal.lifeloyalsigmsu wrote:Delay is a slimeball but I have to respectfully disagree with you regarding your assessment regarding "who a judge donates cash to doesn't impact the law". This is all partisan fueled regardless of who's being prosecuted, who's defending, and who's presiding over the case. In my opinion, it's hard to find a judge these days who doesn't at least slightly legislate from the bench and impose their ideological slant. Ruth Bader Ginsburg is a former lawyer with the ACLU (I think that was her role with that group) and well known for her liberal beliefs and tendancies. On the other end, you have Scalia, Thomas, and now Alito who are of the right fringe. I don't have a detailed source of all of their written decisions, but they didn't become known as "being from the left or being from the right" for nothing. If there was no impact on the law, then you wouldn't be seeing the democrats raising oh holy hell over the nomination of Alito.Bay Area Cat wrote:Strange. You're cheering on a guy who is clearly unethical as opposed to wanting that sort of person out of the party you cheer for. Rather than asking your party to aspire to something better, you want them to just keep playing partisan politics in order to score some strange political points that just drag the whole system down. No wonder ethics are so lacking in government. If partisans have no desire to police their own and are only worried about increasing their power by any means necessary, the result is corruption.
Gee, I guess I shouldn't be shocked at the level of unethical activities in the news these days by politicians.
And before you recite the DeLay-written talking points that declare that the charges against DeLay are just partisan attack job on a noble and incredibly honest and upstanding man ... check out some nonfiction literature for a change of pace.
It's also strange that you consider this a victory for DeLay of some sort. He's getting a new judge ... but the facts haven't changed, and who a judge donates cash to doesn't impact the law. If he's guilty of a crime, he'll get convicted. If he's merely guilty of unethical activities, then he'll resume his post in the House and be protected from the ethics committee by his party ... and the whole nation will be worse off for it.
Whether a person donates to a Democrat or a Republican for President should not have a huge impact on a criminal case, however. I think this is just a show being put on by DeLay to play up his attempt at convincing people that this is a partisan witchhunt and is hoping that people lose sight of the fact that he broke the law.
Well since it's a criminal case, then ideology might be as much, if not more, important. I only used the example of the Supreme Court Justices as an example that despite some of them having well known ideologies, be they left leaning or right leaning, they still ascended to the highest court in the land.Bay Area Cat wrote:We're not talking Supreme Court here, though. This is just a criminal case. If they were debating legal theory, then yes, I agree that ideology matters a great deal.lifeloyalsigmsu wrote:Delay is a slimeball but I have to respectfully disagree with you regarding your assessment regarding "who a judge donates cash to doesn't impact the law". This is all partisan fueled regardless of who's being prosecuted, who's defending, and who's presiding over the case. In my opinion, it's hard to find a judge these days who doesn't at least slightly legislate from the bench and impose their ideological slant. Ruth Bader Ginsburg is a former lawyer with the ACLU (I think that was her role with that group) and well known for her liberal beliefs and tendancies. On the other end, you have Scalia, Thomas, and now Alito who are of the right fringe. I don't have a detailed source of all of their written decisions, but they didn't become known as "being from the left or being from the right" for nothing. If there was no impact on the law, then you wouldn't be seeing the democrats raising oh holy hell over the nomination of Alito.Bay Area Cat wrote:Strange. You're cheering on a guy who is clearly unethical as opposed to wanting that sort of person out of the party you cheer for. Rather than asking your party to aspire to something better, you want them to just keep playing partisan politics in order to score some strange political points that just drag the whole system down. No wonder ethics are so lacking in government. If partisans have no desire to police their own and are only worried about increasing their power by any means necessary, the result is corruption.
Gee, I guess I shouldn't be shocked at the level of unethical activities in the news these days by politicians.
And before you recite the DeLay-written talking points that declare that the charges against DeLay are just partisan attack job on a noble and incredibly honest and upstanding man ... check out some nonfiction literature for a change of pace.
It's also strange that you consider this a victory for DeLay of some sort. He's getting a new judge ... but the facts haven't changed, and who a judge donates cash to doesn't impact the law. If he's guilty of a crime, he'll get convicted. If he's merely guilty of unethical activities, then he'll resume his post in the House and be protected from the ethics committee by his party ... and the whole nation will be worse off for it.
Whether a person donates to a Democrat or a Republican for President should not have a huge impact on a criminal case, however. I think this is just a show being put on by DeLay to play up his attempt at convincing people that this is a partisan witchhunt and is hoping that people lose sight of the fact that he broke the law.
were no talkin about known slants were talkin about conflict of interest herelifeloyalsigmsu wrote:Well since it's a criminal case, then ideology might be as much, if not more, important. I only used the example of the Supreme Court Justices as an example that despite some of them having well known ideologies, be they left leaning or right leaning, they still ascended to the highest court in the land.Bay Area Cat wrote:We're not talking Supreme Court here, though. This is just a criminal case. If they were debating legal theory, then yes, I agree that ideology matters a great deal.lifeloyalsigmsu wrote:Delay is a slimeball but I have to respectfully disagree with you regarding your assessment regarding "who a judge donates cash to doesn't impact the law". This is all partisan fueled regardless of who's being prosecuted, who's defending, and who's presiding over the case. In my opinion, it's hard to find a judge these days who doesn't at least slightly legislate from the bench and impose their ideological slant. Ruth Bader Ginsburg is a former lawyer with the ACLU (I think that was her role with that group) and well known for her liberal beliefs and tendancies. On the other end, you have Scalia, Thomas, and now Alito who are of the right fringe. I don't have a detailed source of all of their written decisions, but they didn't become known as "being from the left or being from the right" for nothing. If there was no impact on the law, then you wouldn't be seeing the democrats raising oh holy hell over the nomination of Alito.Bay Area Cat wrote:Strange. You're cheering on a guy who is clearly unethical as opposed to wanting that sort of person out of the party you cheer for. Rather than asking your party to aspire to something better, you want them to just keep playing partisan politics in order to score some strange political points that just drag the whole system down. No wonder ethics are so lacking in government. If partisans have no desire to police their own and are only worried about increasing their power by any means necessary, the result is corruption.
Gee, I guess I shouldn't be shocked at the level of unethical activities in the news these days by politicians.
And before you recite the DeLay-written talking points that declare that the charges against DeLay are just partisan attack job on a noble and incredibly honest and upstanding man ... check out some nonfiction literature for a change of pace.
It's also strange that you consider this a victory for DeLay of some sort. He's getting a new judge ... but the facts haven't changed, and who a judge donates cash to doesn't impact the law. If he's guilty of a crime, he'll get convicted. If he's merely guilty of unethical activities, then he'll resume his post in the House and be protected from the ethics committee by his party ... and the whole nation will be worse off for it.
Whether a person donates to a Democrat or a Republican for President should not have a huge impact on a criminal case, however. I think this is just a show being put on by DeLay to play up his attempt at convincing people that this is a partisan witchhunt and is hoping that people lose sight of the fact that he broke the law.
This is purely a smoke and mirrors attempt by DeLay and his defenders. Having a judge known to donate to Dems is just one of the many reasons and excuses that he will get away with and allow himself to buy time or get off on technicalities. Bring in someone with no known slants (if they even exist) and have them preside over the trial. Having a prosecutor and a judge who are both well known Dem supporters certainly won't help the prosecuting side's cause for this case to actually go to trial within a reasonable amount of time. By doing that, it will only lend "credence" to DeLay and Co. theory that it's a witchhunt.
I'll weigh in with a couple posts here. I think BAC's point (which I agree with) is that a judge's ideology is not nearly as important at the trial level as it is in an appellate court, period (regardless of whether the case is criminal or civil). The fact is that, during a trial, the only role the judge plays is: (1) ruling on counsel's objections and otherwise deciding what items will be admitted to evidence, and (2) ruling on the jury instructions. I'm not saying those responsibilities are not important; they are, but the fact is that even the most biased judge imaginable can only have a limited impact on a case's outcome.lifeloyalsigmsu wrote:Well since it's a criminal case, then ideology might be as much, if not more, important. I only used the example of the Supreme Court Justices as an example that despite some of them having well known ideologies, be they left leaning or right leaning, they still ascended to the highest court in the land.
I try not to nitpick about things like this, but because it is relevant to the discussion, I am going to in this case.Hell's Bells wrote:were no talkin about known slants were talkin about conflict of interest here
Look BAC, don't get all pissy just because someone has an opinion that differs from yours.Bay Area Cat wrote:It's a "conflict of interest" for a judge to be an American involved in the political process? Would it also be a conflict of interest if the judge voted for Bush? According to you, it must be. So if a guy murders a family of four, apparently all he must do is make a strong political statement during the trial on way or another, and every judge in the land that has ever cast a ballot or uttered a political opinion must recuse themselves from the case. In that void, the criminal must be freed by default.
Come on ... let's quit fearing the monster in the closet or under the bed. Judges have a job to do, and virtually all of them do it blindly, as they are supposed to do.
trueGrizlaw wrote:I try not to nitpick about things like this, but because it is relevant to the discussion, I am going to in this case.Hell's Bells wrote:were no talkin about known slants were talkin about conflict of interest here
PLEASE, PLEASE don't use legal phrases like "conflict of interest" loosely. The fact that the judge made contributions to the Dems might indicate that he is biased, and it might indicate the removing him from the case is appropriate, but it does not, in any sense, create a conflict of interest.
A conflict of interest would arise if the defendant was a former client of the judge, or if there was some other legally significant relationship between the judge and a party to the case. It does not arise simply because the judge is a member of the opposite political party, or because he contributed money to the opposite political party, or because he was overheard at a bar one night making comparisons between the defendant's mother and members of the canine world. Those things might be evidence of bias, and they might indicate that the judge should be removed to prevent any appearance of impropriety (although they may certainly be mitigated by other factors), but they do not create a conflict of interest.
The reason I care about this is because insinuating that the judge did not recuse himself in a case where there is a true conflict of interest implies that the judge himself is guilty of some wrongdoing, and there is no indication that that is the case here.
All we have here is a judge that legally made some political contributions, period. I'd have to think about whether or not I think that alone should be grounds for removing the judge from the case (I clerked in two different federal courts, and in federal courts, judges and law clerks are all prohibited from making any political contributions, so I tend to approach the issue from the perspective that judges making political contributions is not a positive thing; however, the fact that it is legal to do so in Texas state courts does change the equities of the situation somewhat). Regardless, though, any discussion of "conflict of interest" does have to be excised from the discussion.
/rant off
--GL
ugh...must...resist...no...can't...Hell's Bells wrote:therefore we have our conflict of interest
arent they along the lines of the same darn thingGrizlaw wrote:ugh...must...resist...no...can't...Hell's Bells wrote:therefore we have our conflict of interest
Just stop using the phrase "conflict of interest," and I'll agree (more or less) with everything you've said. The judge was removed because his impartiality was called into question, NOT because there was a conflict of interest. Those two might seem the same to you, but they are not...
We're arguing over semantics here, but the misuse of the phrase "conflict of interest" is like fingernails on a chalkboard to me.