The vast majority of judges are honorable people dedicated to doing the right thing. And then there are the very few who give all the rest of us a bad name, as illustrated by a story from Reuters. In the past dozen years, state and local judges have repeatedly escaped public accountability for misdeeds that have victimized thousands. Nine of 10 kept their jobs, a Reuters investigation found – including an Alabama judge who unlawfully jailed hundreds of poor people, many of them Black, over traffic fines.
By MICHAEL BERENS and JOHN SHIFFMAN in MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA
Filed June 30, 2020, noon GMT
Judge Les Hayes once sentenced a single mother to 496 days behind bars for failing to pay traffic tickets. The sentence was so stiff it exceeded the jail time Alabama allows for negligent homicide.
Marquita Johnson, who was locked up in April 2012, says the impact of her time in jail endures today. Johnson’s three children were cast into foster care while she was incarcerated. One daughter was molested, state records show. Another was physically abused.
“Judge Hayes took away my life and didn’t care how my children suffered,” said Johnson, now 36. “My girls will never be the same.”
Fellow inmates found her sentence hard to believe. “They had a nickname for me: The Woman with All the Days,” Johnson said. “That’s what they called me: The Woman with All the Days. There were people who had committed real crimes who got out before me.”
For the full story:
https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/usa-judges-misconduct/
“Disfavoring Justice,” https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3311172, discusses the seemingly never-ending inclination of some judges to exploit the judicial office for personal gain.
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