An Otsego County judge was publicly
admonished by a state commission on Thursday for entering a local
resident’s home without permission and posting photos of it on Facebook.
William Fisher, a justice of the
Worcester Town Court, agreed to the admonition by the State Commission
on Judicial Conduct and pledged to be more careful about his social
media use in the future, according to the commission’s decision.
The home Fisher entered previously belonged to relatives of his wife, who was a co-executrix of the estate, the commission said.
The home was sold in 2012 to a person
not named in the decision. The buyer was behind on mortgage payments
when Fisher entered her home without giving notice in January 2015, the
commission said.
He took several photos of the home,
which the commission said was in a state of disorder. He posted seven of
those photos using his wife’s Facebook account with a caption that said
his wife’s relatives “are turning over in their graves.”
The post was visible to the public, including the buyer who took screenshots of it on her phone.
In March 2017, the commission requested court records about three
occasions when the buyer’s then-domestic partner was a defendant before
the Worcester Town Court. The buyer was not mentioned in the letter.
Fisher replied to the commission’s
request with the records along with several Facebook posts by the buyer,
where she asked her friends to contact the commission about him, the
commission said.
One month later, Fisher posted photos
to his personal Facebook account from when he entered the buyer’s home
without permission. He wrote in the post about how she had previously
fallen behind on mortgage payments.
Fisher told the commission in July
2017 that he would immediately remove the post. He did not take the
photos down until November 2017 and the post itself was public until
February 2018.
“Judges carry with them the mantle of
judicial office both on and off the bench,” said Robert Tembeckjian,
administrator of the commission. “They must therefore always be mindful
that inappropriate personal behavior may undermine public confidence in
the judiciary and result in discipline, as it did here for Judge
Fisher.”
Fisher has been a justice in Worcester
Town Court since 1991. Michael Breen, an attorney with a practice in
Middleburgh, New York, who represented Fisher, declined to comment on
Thursday.
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Upstate NY Judge Admonished for Entering Resident's Home, Sharing Photos on Facebook
He agreed to he more careful? He knew better when he did it.
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