trump can whine all he wants, won't change that he was found liable in court for sexual abuse
Georgia Ag has drifted away from posting and new lawyer with TDS has appeared - hmmm…..Antoninus said:
At a campaign rally in Rome, Georgia, Trump said:Reported in NewsweekQuote:
Lewis Kaplan, the judge in the Carroll defamation cases, is "a terrible person, a terrible judge" and "highly corrupt."
So, now he is defaming a federal judge.
This guy just CANNOT stop stepping on his own johnson.
So far this week, I have been misidentified as GeorgiaAg, Lot-Y and KeithDB.AgDad121619 said:
Georgia Ag has drifted away from posting and new lawyer with TDS has appeared - hmmm…..
by a jury, not by this judge being so heavily criticized.Old McDonald said:
trump can whine all he wants, won't change that he was found liable in court for sexual abuse
So Trump was correct. The judge is corrupt. Maybe you should do your research before assuming he defamed the judge. You wouldn't want to defame him before you had all the evidence.Antoninus said:It says that it would be foolish to voice any opinions about a multi-year dispute and a 40-page pleading that I have never seen before.RogerFurlong said:What does Civil Law 101 say about this corruption?richardag said:Damn. Thanks for the post.nortex97 said:Oh well so sorry to get the wrong communist show trial sham bull**** mixed up. You got me.Antoninus said:HOLY CRAP.nortex97 said:
The Seinfeld skit video introduction really took the mask off the charade, imho. His wife's posts and absurd gym pictures only added to the hilarity.
You don't even know which case we are discussing ... or which judge.
But don't let that stop you. Please carry on.
Perhaps for hack 'judge' Kaplan he was referring to this complaint as to his corruption:But yeah, because he wears a black robe at work we should never allow public discourse as to his plausible/documented/obvious/in-your-face history of corruption. He's not political at all.Quote:
NEW YORKSeptember 1, 2020Dozens of legal organizations around the world representing more than 500,000 lawyers along with over 200 individual lawyers today submitted a judicial complaint documenting a series of shocking violations of the judicial code of conduct by United States Judge Lewis A. Kaplan targeting human rights lawyer Steven Donziger after he helped Indigenous peoples win a historic judgment against Chevron in Ecuador to clean up the pollution caused by decades of oil drilling with no environmental controls.
The complaint was formally filed by the National Lawyers Guild in conjunction with the International Association of Democratic Lawyers (IADL). IADL was founded in Paris in 1946 to fight to uphold the rule of law around the world and has consultative status with UN agencies.
Five pages in length with a 40-page appendix with 15 exhibits, the complaint is to be turned over to the chief judge in the federal appellate court in New York that oversees the trial court where Kaplan sits. The complaint is signed by an unprecedented number of legal organizations from approximately 80 countries collectively representing 500,000 lawyers.
The Chief Judge of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, Robert Katzmann, has a duty to read the complaint and determine whether he will appoint a committee to investigate and issue findings.
The complaint could result in a censure of Kaplan or even his removal from the bench.
"We wrote this judicial complaint after studying the record in this case and coming to the conclusion that Judge Kaplan has been acting as a de facto lawyer for Chevron in this litigation. He has shown a shocking pattern of escalating efforts to harm Mr. Donziger for his advocacy of the rights of indigenous people in Ecuador spanning a 10-year period," said Jeanne Mirer, the President of the IADL. "The violations constitute a clear breach of the norms set out in the judicial canon of ethics that govern the behavior of judges in the United States. We believe the complaint demands urgent investigation by Judge Katzmann to stop this pattern of abuse and to prevent a highly regarded human rights lawyer from being unjustly convicted."
The complaint documents what its authors say is a pattern of ethics violations committed by Judge Kaplan, a former tobacco industry lawyer. Kaplan denied Donziger a jury, put in place a series of highly unusual courtroom tactics, severely restricted Donziger's ability to mount a defense, and through his had picked judge to try him for criminal contempt has had him detained him at home for more than one year on contempt charges that were rejected by the U.S. Attorney, and allowed him to be prosecuted by a private law firm that has Chevron as a client. He also imposed enormous fines on Donziger without a jury finding that have all but bankrupted him.
Clown world.
Kaplan should never have been allowed on the bench. His law license should have been yanked after that corrupt behavior.
On its face, it LOOKS like sour grapes in support of an unsuccessful litigant.
So far, Judge Kaplan is corrupt because:barbacoa taco said:by a jury, not by this judge being so heavily criticized.Old McDonald said:
trump can whine all he wants, won't change that he was found liable in court for sexual abuse
Trump got his day in court.
No one else has managed anything.CoachtobeNamed$$$ said:
Speaking TRUTH is stepping on your johnson? You have issues.
How about the appearance of impropriety in how he handled attorney Steven Donziger in the Chevron case? He refered the lawyer to SDNY for charges. SDNY declined to prosecute him. Undeterred, Judge Kaplan did this.Antoninus said:No one else has managed anything.CoachtobeNamed$$$ said:
Speaking TRUTH is stepping on your johnson? You have issues.
Perhaps YOU can provide us with a specific instance (supported by evidence) of allegedly-corrupt behavior by Judge Kaplan.
That sounds pretty sus to me.Quote:
In the U.S. justice system, federal prosecutors typically have the exclusive power to charge people with crimes, but unknown to most of the public, there are a vanishingly small number of exceptions.
So learned environmental attorney Steven Donziger, who has been fighting for his life, livelihood and liberty in a decades-long battle to hold Chevron liable for oil contamination to the Ecuadorean Amazon.
"This is a serious, serious case, OK," Donziger acknowledged last week during a bail hearing. "This is criminal. I get it. It is highly serious. I've been dealing with the civil up to this point."
Though the case is captioned United States of America v. Steven Donziger, prosecutors from the Southern District of New York declined to take up the case, and so a federal judge drafted criminal contempt charges and appointed private counsel to lead Donziger's prosecution on July 30.
The lead counsel for the "government," Seward & Kissel partner Rita Glavin, declined to comment.
Courthouse News reached out to five former federal prosecutors including veterans from the Southern District of New York, District of Alabama and the Northern District of California seeking precedent for the maneuver.
Despite a combined total of more than 70 years of experience, only one ex-prosecutor contacted had ever heard of a judge-appointed private prosecution for criminal contempt. That case, filed by an Alabama judge against another crusading plaintiff's attorney, was ultimately dismissed.
Highly unusual in every other respect, Donziger's appearance last Tuesday had all of the trappings of a typical bail hearing.
LINKQuote:
In 1993, attorneys in New York filed a lawsuit on behalf of thousands of indigenous and campesino rainforest residents, who claimed that Texaco, which Chevron would later acquire, left their jungle homes an oil-strewn disaster. Nobody doubts that the legacy of drilling left the Ecuadorean jungle dotted with petroleum pools, but the battles over liability for that pollution have stretched across three continents and more than a dozen jurisdictions.
The environmental case itself migrated to Lago Agrio, Ecuador where a judge slapped Chevron with a $9.8 billion judgment but Chevron brought new litigation in New York.
"Our L-T [long-term] strategy is to demonize Donziger," Chevron wrote in an internal memo in 2009.
Asserting violations of U.S. anti-racketeering law, Chevron accused Donziger of bribing a judge, ghostwriting the multibillion-dollar judgment against it and cooking scientific studies.
In 2014, U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan labeled Donziger's conduct "criminal" in a nearly 500-page ruling affirming most of Chevron's allegations against him.
The U.S. Attorney's office for the Southern District of New York has declined the ruling's invitation to prosecute Donziger for more than half a decade, and Donziger vehemently denies the allegations against him as a retaliatory campaign by one of the world's most powerful companies to destroy him. On top of his criminal charges, Donziger faces ongoing disbarment proceedings and may have to pay Chevron millions in attorneys' fees.
Antoninus said:No one else has managed anything.CoachtobeNamed$$$ said:
Speaking TRUTH is stepping on your johnson? You have issues.
Perhaps YOU can provide us with a specific instance (supported by evidence) of allegedly-corrupt behavior by Judge Kaplan.
TexAgs91 said:Antoninus said:
At a campaign rally in Rome, Georgia, Trump said:Quote:
Lewis Kaplan, the judge in the Carroll defamation cases, is "a terrible person, a terrible judge" and "highly corrupt."
Read the link I already posted and do your own research.Antoninus said:
Do we have responsive briefing? Was it resolved?
you know as well as I do that one side's pleading is usually about 90% sunshine pumping for its case.
that is rare air you are keepingAntoninus said:So far this week, I have been misidentified as GeorgiaAg, Lot-Y and KeithDB.AgDad121619 said:
Georgia Ag has drifted away from posting and new lawyer with TDS has appeared - hmmm…..
Keep 'em comin'. This is fun.
Criminal SOL had long since run so no prosecution allowed. Law was changed on civil cases to grant a one time (year) only extension of sexual assault/abuse could be brought no matter how many decades old.Jack Ruby said:
Lawfare.
How exactly is one "liable" of sexual assault, but not "guilty"
aggiehawg said:Criminal SOL had long since run so no prosecution allowed. Law was changed on civil cases to grant a one time (year) only extension of sexual assault/abuse could be brought no matter how many decades old.Jack Ruby said:
Lawfare.
How exactly is one "liable" of sexual assault, but not "guilty"
That's how.
The former is civil, the latter is criminal.Jack Ruby said:
Lawfare.
How exactly is one "liable" of sexual assault, but not "guilty"
The sexual assault case was tried first, with a finding that the assault did take place. That finding "carried forward" into the subsequent defamation case.TXAggie2011 said:
To be clear, the vast majority of the monetary damages from the lawsuits were for defamation, which has nothing to do with the one year law for sexual assault claims. The defamation could have been brought (and were brought) without the one year window.
It's nice that you're much more analytical in trying to dismiss any claim Trump might have for defamation than you are at tossing out claims of possible defamation that Trump might have done.Antoninus said:It doesn't. But it is not a question of whether there was enough evidence to convict Trump of a felony. The question is whether the evidence was adequate to negate the mens rea requirements for a defamation claim against a public figure.Ag with kids said:
Did any of that evidence result in his conviction for corruption? Seems to me that just because you CITE evidence, doesn't make corruption fact.Impossible to say, without the facts specific to each case.Quote:
But, take it a step further...there are MANY people that have accused Trump of corruption WITHOUT even citing evidence. So, are THEY liable for defamation?
Again, could Trump state a cause of action? Maybe. Could it survive the motion to dismiss? No way to know without more facts.
That's how a lot of jurisdictions in the south used to deal with colored people. Well, the jury found you guilty...Obviously that means you were.Antoninus said:You are just re-trying a case that a jury has already decided. All of that was presented to the jury, and they were not convinced.annie88 said:
The loon couldn't remember the year. No rape victim ever forgets the days and time, much less the year.
But sure.
The dress she claimed to have on wasn't in production the few years she guessed at.
Wasn't going to even try for the case before George Conway and his ilk pushed her.
And that's only a few of the BS things in the trial.AGAIN, what evidence of "corruption" exists? Who bribed Kaplan? HOW do you contend he had a legal conflict of interest?Quote:
Quit defending this corruption. It's truly gross. Don't be a George Stephanopoulos..
Hell, show me even an evidentiary ruling that you think was clearly wrong, and we can look at THAT.
I'm sorry, but as far as I can see, the complaints boil down to the fact that the jury accepted clearly-ADMISSIBLE (though disputed) evidence as "true," when you think it was false.
I try to avoid stupid tropes like "clown world," but did you seriously just compare Donald J Trump to Blacks in the American South during the Jim Crow era?Ag with kids said:That's how a lot of jurisdictions in the south used to deal with colored people. Well, the jury found you guilty...Obviously that means you were.Quote:
I'm sorry, but as far as I can see, the complaints boil down to the fact that the jury accepted clearly-ADMISSIBLE (though disputed) evidence as "true," when you think it was false.
Some Junkie Cosmonaut said:bobbranco said:
How's the trolling progressing today?
He reminds me of a famous law student turned attorney from the old school rivalries board (not the new complete garbage "old rivalries" board that took it's place after texags murdered it for some odd reason).
No...I didn't.Antoninus said:I try to avoid stupid tropes like "clown world," but did you seriously just compare Donald J Trump to Blacks in the American South during the Jim Crow era?Ag with kids said:That's how a lot of jurisdictions in the south used to deal with colored people. Well, the jury found you guilty...Obviously that means you were.Quote:
I'm sorry, but as far as I can see, the complaints boil down to the fact that the jury accepted clearly-ADMISSIBLE (though disputed) evidence as "true," when you think it was false.
Quote:
the complaints boil down to the fact that the jury accepted clearly-ADMISSIBLE (though disputed) evidence as "true," when you think it was false.
Quote:
Well, the jury found you guilty...Obviously that means you were.
Every = 1Antoninus said:
She did win every case.
my assessment of Carroll, set forth clearly above, is that her evidence on the assault was pretty thin, and that I would not have found in her favor.aggiehawg said:
Bless your heart. You do keep trying...so hard...to defend E. Jean Carroll...your personal heroine.
So she's what 77-78? Call her maybe?
Jack Ruby said:
Lawfare.
How exactly is one "liable" of sexual assault, but not "guilty"