Two more Philadelphia judges have been kicked off the bench, the latest development in an FBI probe of judicial corruption here.
The Pennsylvania Court of Judicial Discipline ruled on Friday that
Municipal Court Judge Dawn Segal and Common Pleas Court Judge Angeles
Roca be removed from office for their involvement in separate
case-fixing schemes.
Lawyers for both judges say they are appealing the decisions to the state Supreme Court.
In October, the disciplinary court found that Roca had unethically
intervened in a tax case involving her son by calling then-Municipal
Court Judge Joseph Waters Jr., who reached out to Segal, who then
reversed herself and issued a ruling favorable to Roca's son.
Waters was sentenced in January 2015 to two years in prison for
fixing cases on behalf of campaign donors and political allies. He was
released about a month ago.
In July, the court found Segal guilty of seven violations of judicial ethics rules, including bringing the court into disrepute.
"I got something in front of you at 1 o'clock today," Waters told
Segal in an intercepted 2011 phone conversation in which he asked for
favorable treatment of a politically connected defendant appearing
before her.
"Oh, OK. OK," Segal responded, according to the disciplinary panel.
Wiretaps also captured Segal telling Waters she had helped him with her rulings.
In Segal's case, the court acknowledged that Segal had been
approached by Waters, "a corrupt judge."
And, the court said, Roca at
first had only sought advice from Waters before the conversation
extended to intervening in her son's case. But neither judge stood up to
Waters, the court said.
"As we have said in more detail in prior decisions, when it comes to
corrupt acts and the derogation of a fair and just judicial process, a
judge must have 'the willingness to stand up for what was right and buck
a corrupt tide,'" the court wrote in both rulings.
Roca and Segal, both Democrats, had been on unpaid suspension. If the
rulings stand, they would be ineligible to hold judicial office in the
future.
"I'm very disturbed by the decision," Roca's attorney, Samuel Stretton, said Tuesday.
Stretton said he was appealing the ruling because the disciplinary
court ignored case law and treated Roca's and Segal's cases too
similarly.
Segal's lawyer, Stuart Haimowitz, said he also is appealing.
"Judge Segal expected to be sanctioned for what she did. We hoped and
expected the Court of Judicial Discipline to have considered Judge
Segal's actual conduct and its own precedent when it imposed its
sanction," Haimowitz said in a statement Tuesday. "Instead, it appears
it took a 'get rid of them all' approach. In so doing, the citizens of
Philadelphia County lost a good judge."
Stretton and Haimowitz had sought suspensions for the judges.
In addition to Waters, who pleaded guilty to mail and wire fraud,
Municipal Court Judge Joseph O'Neill pleaded guilty in May to federal
charges connected to the judicial case-fixing scandal.
O'Neill admitted he lied to FBI agents who were investigating special
treatment he gave to a Democratic fund-raiser in 2011, at Waters'
request.
"He's a friend of mine, so if you can, take a hard look at it," Waters told O'Neill in a conversation caught on an FBI wiretap.
"No problem," O'Neill replied.
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2 Philly judges removed from bench for ethics violations
It seems like we see alot of articles about bad judges in PA.
ReplyDeleteHow would you like to be under guardianship in PA?
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