Yvonne Lewis |
A
Brooklyn judge with nearly 30 years on the bench resigned after being
accused of improperly approving payments to her clerk for the clerk’s
work as a court-appointed lawyer, officials announced on Thursday.
The
judge, Yvonne Lewis of State Supreme Court, had also been charged with
improperly presiding over guardianship cases in which her clerk,
Kimberly L. Detherage, was also the court-appointed guardian.
“A
judge shouldn’t play any role in any fiduciary case at the point that
the person she hires is involved,” said Robert H. Tembeckjian,
administrator of the State Commission on Judicial Conduct, which disciplines judges in New York.
Fiduciary
cases in State Supreme Court, where judges have the power to assign
private lawyers to lucrative posts as guardians for the young, elderly
or infirm, have long been a magnet for patronage and the appearance of conflicts of interest — and the subject of periodic reform efforts.
Justice
Lewis, 70, was elected to Civil Court in 1987 and has been an elected
State Supreme Court justice since 1991. Her current term would have
expired at the end of 2016.
She hired Ms. Detherage as her law clerk in 2009, the commission said. In 2013, after an article in The New York Post,
the commission began investigating allegations that Justice Lewis had
approved payments to Ms. Detherage for work she did as a guardian on
cases being heard by other judges.
The
commission said it opened a second investigation last year after the
inspector general of the state courts alleged that Justice Lewis
improperly presided over three cases where Ms. Detherage worked as a
guardian and approved a guardianship payment to Ms. Detherage after
hiring her as her full-time clerk.
“The moment she hires Detherage, she has to take herself off any matter involving Detherage,” Mr. Tembeckjian said.
The
commission declined to reveal the amounts of the payments to Ms.
Detherage that Justice Lewis was charged with improperly approving;
figures for those payments could not be found on the state court system website.
From
2003 to 2008, before hiring Ms. Detherage, the website shows, Justice
Lewis appointed her in at least 26 cases and approved at least $97,000
in fees.
Justice
Lewis “denied certain aspects of the complaints and offered
explanations as to certain aspects of the complaints,” according to a stipulation
signed by her and the commission. The commission said it had not
evaluated those denials and explanations because the judge’s
resignation, which takes effect on Dec. 31, ended the case.
Justice
Lewis’s lawyer, Deborah A. Scalise, said in a statement that if the
commission had continued its investigation, “Justice Lewis is confident”
that the charges “would be dismissed.”
Mr. Tembeckjian disagreed. “Had the matter proceeded, there would have been formal discipline,” he said.
Ms.
Detherage left Justice Lewis’s employ in 2013 and is now in private
practice, Mr. Tembeckjian said. She could not immediately be reached for
comment.
Ms. Detherage has also been the pastor of St. Mark A.M.E. Church
in Queens since 2010, a position that court officials said was full
time and could have conflicted with her full-time job as a law clerk.
Correction: October 16, 2015
An earlier version of this article misidentified the job of Kimberly L. Detherage in one reference. As the article correctly notes elsewhere, Ms. Detherage was a law clerk, not a court clerk.
An earlier version of this article misidentified the job of Kimberly L. Detherage in one reference. As the article correctly notes elsewhere, Ms. Detherage was a law clerk, not a court clerk.
Full Article & Source:
Brooklyn Judge Resigning Amid Questions About Payments to Her Clerk
1 comment:
Are they reviewing all the cases these two were involved in?
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