Archive for January 23, 2009

Careful what you wish for

Someone needs to explain to me why this case ever made it to SCOTUS. Actually, I have several questions:

  1. What are you asking for, exactly?
  2. Is this a case of getting too greedy or too literal?
  3. Did anyone consider the ramifications of an unfavorable decision in this case? (Let me spell it out for you: it could spell complete evisceration of a well-established and solidly pro-defense line of cases starting with Santobello)
  4. How do you get selected to argue in front of SCOTUS and then produce a complete clunker [pdf] (and not just one counsel – both!)?
  5. Does anyone think either lawyer has any clue as to what is being asked of them?

I fear that Puckett might win the battle, but lose the war. That would be bad news for all of us.

Scrutinizing the scrutiny

Judicial reconfirmations in Connecticut have usually been a low-key affair, so it was newsworthy last week when an all out battle erupted on the floor of the Senate during the reconfirmation of Judge Patricia Swords.

Judge Swords, just finishing up her first 8 year term a judge of the Superior Court, made it through the Judiciary Committee by a margin of 4 votes, despite the testimony [pdf] of a prominent criminal defense attorney regarding her behavior in a murder case where she declined to grant a continuance when the lead counsel had suffered a soon to be fatal brain injury just two days prior to the start of trial. Her reconfirmation made it through the House of Representatives pretty easily (100-41 or so), but stalled in the Senate, where the votes were pretty evenly decided.

After a vigorous debate on the floor of the Senate, during which Senators questioned the anonymous comments submitted by the defense bar opposing her reconfirmation (one of them likened these comments to blog posts – ha!) and used misinformed logic such as the number of decisions upheld on appeal. If I remember correctly, one of the Senators, in her defense, asked something along the lines of whether we should…well…judge a judge based on demeanor or accuracy in the law.

Anyone who has practiced law should know that not everything a judge does on the bench or behind the scenes that questions their impartiality in a case is appealable.

The judge was eventually confirmed by a vote of 19-18, the tiebreaking vote being cast by the Lt. Governor. But this reconfirmation battle raised some interesting questions, and rightly so.

Related Posts with Thumbnails