Tampilkan postingan dengan label Williamson County. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Williamson County. Tampilkan semua postingan

Sabtu, 12 Mei 2012

Morton attorney: How John Bradley fought to keep Michael Morton in prison

As primary season heats up, Williamson County District Attorney John Bradley has been repeatedly forced on the campaign trail to defend his role opposing DNA evidence and the release of exculpatory evidence under open records during habeas proceeding challenging Michael Morton's false conviction. But Bradley's statements have strayed so far from the facts, says Morton's attorney John Raley, that the Houston lawyer felt compelled to issue a corrective "Open Letter to Williamson County." In it, he details how and why Morton remained in prison around 2,400 extra days because Mr. Bradley fought testing using every possible means, all the while denigrating Morton in comments to the press. Bradley for a time even opposed Morton's exoneration, a fact he repeatedly obfuscates, after DNA testing pointed to Mark Allen Norwood as a suspect!  Here's the remarkable letter in fulll, it speaks for itself:
Open Letter To Williamson County:
I have resisted becoming involved in the upcoming election for District Attorney of Williamson County, because I believe that the decision should be made by local citizens. However, I have become increasingly concerned about statements made by Mr. Bradley regarding the Michael Morton case, and now feel the need to set the record straight. In doing so, I am not speaking on behalf of my dear friend and pro bono client for the last eight years, Michael Morton, nor am I speaking on behalf of my co-counsel with the Innocence Project who fought with me so long for DNA testing. I am speaking personally, and am not endorsing any candidate.
The world now knows that Michael is, and always has been, innocent.  His dear wife was murdered in their home while he was at work, just as he has always maintained.  When Michael was formally exonerated last fall, Mr. Bradley called to apologize to me and asked that I convey his apology to Michael. I hoped at the time of the call that Mr. Bradley had learned from this experience and had changed. However, I am concerned from reading recent statements by Mr. Bradley during the campaign that he is retracting his previous admission of responsibility for decisions that kept Michael in prison an extra six years and eight months. 
On February 11, 2005, we filed our motion for DNA testing of, among other things, a bloody bandana found behind the Morton home after Christine’s murder. Such testing would cost the State of Texas nothing, because the Innocence Project offered to (and later did) pay for it completely. In 2005, and in virtually every brief and argument since, in state trial and appellate courts and in federal court, we contended that the bandana was found behind the house along the likely escape route of the murderer. We also pointed out that the bandana (1) may contain the blood of Christine Morton, (2) may also contain the DNA by blood, sweat, or skin cells of the murderer, and (3) the DNA of the murderer may lead to a hit on the national databank of known offenders. [Note: we did not know at the time that the DA’s trial file from 1987 contained a description of a stranger seen the days before the murder, driving an old van, and walking around behind the Morton house – exactly where the bandana was found. Michael’s 1987 trial defense counsel have signed affidavits that they never were made aware of this key document and other critical investigative documents that would have been used in Michael’s defense.] Contrary to Mr. Bradley’s statements during the campaign, there are no valid chain of custody issues or contamination issues regarding the bandana.  The bandana was seen by law enforcement on the very spot it was found by Christine’s brother and immediately handed to law enforcement for safekeeping. Following protocol, it would have been placed in a separate bag. There is no evidence otherwise. The blood, one day after the murder, would have dried. But the DNA was there, waiting like a time capsule to be tested.
I am not a criminal lawyer, but I come from a law enforcement family. I sought the advice of my father, a retired prosecutor, and he recommended that I call Mr. Bradley on a personal level to see whether he would agree to the testing, or at least not oppose it.  I made several such efforts, even driving from Houston to Georgetown for a meeting with Mr. Bradley and my co-counsel from the Innocence Project, but all such efforts were rebuffed. 
Instead of agreeing to a simple test, that can only reveal the truth, that would be free to the State, Mr. Bradley spent countless hours and taxpayer dollars opposing the testing every way he possibly could. It cannot reasonably be denied that if the murder happened in 2005, the bandana would have been DNA tested as part of law enforcement’s efforts to identify the murderer. The technology was not available in 1987, but it is now. There is no good reason not to allow DNA testing to reveal the truth – whatever it is. When I asked Mr. Bradley why he was fighting so strongly against DNA  testing, he said “it would muddy the waters.” I responded, “Mr. Bradley, truth clarifies.”  I tried to explain to Mr. Bradley the many flaws in the State’s presentation at trial against Michael, but Mr. Bradley was not interested in hearing about it. I tried to hand him the two lie detector tests Michael passed shortly after his wife’s murder, and he refused to look at them.
During this time, Mr. Bradley publically belittled our efforts, saying the bandana was “irrelevant”, that we were “grasping at straws”, and that we were searching for a “mystery killer.” He wrote letters to the parole board opposing a parole for Michael (who had by that time spent 23 years in prison) because Michael had not “accepted responsibility for the murder of his wife by mercilessly beating her to death.” He told the media: “The public might want to remain skeptical of a defendant who to this day doesn’t accept responsibility.” Around this time, Michael was informed that he would be likely paroled if he would “show remorse for his crime.”  
Michael Morton is one of the finest men I know.  He is a man of honor and integrity. He refused to lie to get out of prison. He said “All I have left is my actual innocence. And if I have to stay in prison the rest of my life, I am not giving that up.” 
When we finally obtained testing of the bandana, after many years of strenuous opposition by Mr. Bradley, the highly sophisticated technology revealed (1) Christine Morton’s blood, (2) the DNA of a man who is not Michael, which when run through the databanks of known offenders (3) led to a direct hit on Mark Allen Norwood, who has a long criminal record in several states for, among other things, breaking and entering residences and assault with intent to murder.   Thus, the DNA testing Mr. Bradley fought against  so long not only proved Michael is, according to the State of Texas, “actually innocent” --  it also led directly to the arrest and indictment of Mark Allen Norwood, who is now awaiting trial for the murder of Christine Morton. 
Even after the hit on Norwood, Mr. Bradley’s office continued to fight against Michael’s exoneration, and Mr. Bradley publicly discounted the bandana’s importance. Our office and the Innocence Project informed the Travis County District Attorney that a cold case in Austin of the murder of Debra Jan Baker, who was killed in her bed exactly the same way as Christine, might be linked to Norwood because he lived nearby at the time. They investigated and found important evidence, which they shared with Judge Sid Harle who was, at that time, presiding over the Morton case. Mr. Bradley could no longer oppose Michael’s exoneration, and a few days later backed down and agreed to Michael’s release.
I am hopeful people remember that when an innocent man is convicted of murder and wrongfully incarcerated, that means that the real murderer is allowed to go free and commit other crimes.  Resistance to an honest search for the truth through DNA testing only prolongs the time that the the real murderer (or rapist, or other form of serious criminal) may be at large.   People like to talk about being “tough on crime.” I propose, rather, being “smart on crime” – making sure that the guilty party is the one who is caught and eventually convicted.  That’s what keeps our streets safe, and is what prosecutors should strive for. Although Mr. Bradley did not try the case that wrongfully sent Michael to prison and let the murderer go free, he is largely responsible, in my opinion, for adding the last six years and eight months to Michael’s tragic story. For nearly 2,400 additional days, the cell doors clanged shut on an innocent man. At one time Mr. Bradley accepted responsibility for his role. I hope he has not changed his mind about that.  
Truth and justice are more important than winning an election.
John W. Raley
Via the Wilco Watchdog.


Selasa, 01 Mei 2012

Central Texas races hinge on public perception of prosecutorial influence

According to recent campaign disclsures, challenger Jana Duty has "lapped" incumbent William County District Attorney John Bradley in fundraising. She had $115,000 on hand as of the most recent reporting  period compared to $35,000 for the incumbent, reported the Austin Statesman.

That's a substantial lead, but it's probably not TV money and not enough to make the race a slam dunk. If you want John Bradley ousted as District Attorney, you might consider helping Ms. Duty add to that lead. Or, obviously, if you'd prefer to see Williamson County voters return Mr. Bradley to power, donate to his campaign (though honestly I couldn't tell you how even after closely examining his website). This is the homestretch and this final month of campaigning - more than all that's gone on before - will determine the outcome of this extraordinary race.

I've never before wished to live in Williamson County, but it'd almost be worth it just to get to vote in this primary. (I'll leave readers to guess Grits' preference.)

Meanwhile, in Travis County the incumbent, Rosemary Lehmberg has a more typical fundraising edge over challenger Judge Charlie Baird, but the former District and Court of Criminal Appeals judge has been campaigning harder than the incumbent DA, judging both from outward appearances and campaign expenditures. In a weird, belated, low-turnout primary two weeks after city elections, theirs will be the most prominent race on Travis County Democratic ballots. If Baird can raise sufficient funds in the homestretch to be competitive on television, my take is that he's got a real shot at an upset.

Though Grits likes and respects both candidates, I've said before I prefer Charlie over Rose in this race for one simple reason: Inertia. Lehmberg joined the Travis DA's office in the '70s, was the first assistant for long-time DA Ronnie Earle's final 12 years, and was elected over a group of much less experienced candidates than Baird as Earle's heir apparent. Throughout most of her time there, Travis County was considered the most progressive DA's office in the state, though today that mantle has been usurped further up I-35 in Dallas. That much departmental history makes her understandably but regrettably resistant to change. Sometimes it seems as if her institutional investment in how they've always done things gets in the way of improving the system she works in or learning from obvious mistakes.

I'm thinking, for example, of the questionable confessions contradicted by DNA evidence in the Yogurt Shop murders. (The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals' Criminal Justice Integrity Unit heard a presentation on the case at an event they sponsored to educate themselves and the public on the subject of false confessions.) How a DA reacts to exonerating DNA evidence tells you a lot about their mindset. They can admit a mistake, apologize, and continue the search for the real killer(s), perhaps even revisiting other confessions obtained by the same detective (in Austin's case Hector Polanco, who  notoriously, tragically extracted a false confession from Christopher Ochoa as well as the Yogurt Shop defendants) or they can spin out new theorems about some unindicted co-ejaculator, a hypothetical fifth mystery suspect supposedly present with the accused but accounted for neither in the questionable confessions nor the prosecution's theory at trial. Grits was disappointed the incumbent at first chose the latter path before finally, grudgingly recommending charges be dismissed. Also, I've been  dissatisfied that local jail diversion strategies haven't been more successful or always available to defendants with appointed counsel. I don't know that I'll agree with Judge Baird in every instance, but he has the experience and mettle for the job, and I'm confident he'd be more open to change than the incumbent.

Speaking of the Yogurt Shop murders, the prosecutor in that case, Efrain De La Fuente, is running to replace retiring Travis County District Judge Mike Lynch presiding over felony cases. De La Fuente is opposed by a long-time Austin defense attorney David Wahlberg, who told the Austin Statesman:
that most of the felony District Court judges had worked as prosecutors before taking the bench. He said it is dangerous to have prosecutors and judges who are too alike.

"I don't mean to say they are bad people," Wahlberg said, "but ... if you have spent your career as a hammer, everything looks like a nail. I feel like we need a different perspective."
That's certainly my view, and  the main reason Grits supports Wahlberrg in the race. Indeed, whether primary voters agree with that sentiment - that an aggressive prosecutorial mindset exerts too much influence over a bloated and inefficient justice system - may determine the outcome of both this and the other two races described in this post, and arguably the Harris County DAs race as well.

Senin, 16 April 2012

Challenger surging in hotly contested Williamson County DA's race

Grits has no firsthand knowledge of Williamson County District Attorney race, but judging from endorsements and fundraising, incumbent John Bradley appears to be on the ropes in his primary battle against insurgent challenger and current County Attorney Jana Duty. The headline in today's Statesman story on the race calls it "unparalleled in intensity," declaring the race more heated than any election in living memory according to Williamson courthouse watchers.

Police unions remarkably began to line up against Bradley after he had to retract ill-informed, ham-handed comments about civil service at the Cedar Park PD. He said a difference between him and Duty was he opposed them getting it, but Cedar Park voters had already authorized it. (Ironically, this is an issue where my views jibe more closely with Bradley's than the unions'; his ignorance of basic facts, IMO, is a greater indictment of a candidate than the politically incorrect view he expressed criticizing civil service.) In any event, the array of law enforcement interests stepping up to endorse Ms. Duty over the incumbent has grown quite impressive.

Source: janaduty.com.
The challenger has proven to be a diligent fundraiser and has a substantial lead in that regard, though neither candidate appears to be raising TV money so far, which must be spent in the relatively expensive Austin market:
Duty said in February that she had raised about $113,000, but she has declined to say how much she has raised since.

Duty has a history of successful fundraising. When she ran against an opponent in the 2004 primary, she raised about $47,000, winning with 63 percent of the vote.

By comparison, Bradley raised more than $27,000 for his 2002 primary battle, according to campaign finance reports.

Bradley said last week that he has about $68,000 and expects to raise an additional $10,000 to $20,000 by election day. Bradley has attacked Duty's fundraising, noting that it has come in part from her own staff and from loans to herself, but Duty said she has a broad base of supporters, including residents and attorneys who have left the Bradley camp.
The race is far from over and I'd still give the incumbent a 50/50 chance to remain in office, mainly because of incumbency advantages and because even Duty's greater fundraising totals appear too low to ensure voters all enter the polls understanding what's at stake. Even so, Bradley's reputation has been battered - in some cases thanks to vicissitudes of fate beyond his control, but in most cases as a result of his own missteps and misapplied ambitions - and he'll need more resources than he's projecting he'll have to pay for sufficient communication to overcome it.

The practical reason money matters in elections, and the reason it's often viewed in political and legal circles as almost a proxy for "speech," is that the MSM offers quite poor coverage of most elections, which are treated as in this story more as a horse race than a choice between public policy visions. Not only is campaign coverage poorly structured, it's also infrequent. We might see one more story featuring the race in the Statesman before election day, for example, but likely no more. Most information voters receive about candidates comes from paid advertising. When candidates in third-or-fourth tier races like this one can't afford campaign communication in sufficient volume to actually get voters' attention - be it direct mail, door hangers, radio and TV ads, etc. - voters go to the polls utterly ignorant, as opposed to mostly ignorant, which is a terrific contributor to high reelection rates among incumbents. (Voter attention confoundingly skews toward presidential, senate, congressional and legislative races much more than local contests.) So Duty's fundraising edge matters a great deal, and so does keeping and extending it as the end of the campaign nears. If she actually raised enough money to go on TV with an attack message or deliver several rounds of targeted direct mail, it could drive a stake into the heart of the incumbent. Unless Mr. Bradley somehow pulled a financial rabbit out of his hat, he simply wouldn't have resources to respond.

For those interested, here's Bradley's campaign website (he also has an active Facebook page) and challenger Jana Duty's campaign site.

Senin, 26 Maret 2012

60 Minutes interviews Michael Morton

"It's not every day that a convicted murderer clears his name and then returns to court to argue that his prosecutor should be prosecuted," correspondent Lara Logan said at the opening of 60 Minutes' segment last night featuring Michael Morton's first media interview since his exoneration. See the clip (there's a ad at the beginning of each):


And here's an additional online discussion from the 60 Minutes reporter and producers:


The account of Morton's relationship with his son is one of the most heartbreaking you'll ever encounter, like some epic, tragic Russia novel with a surprise, wholly Americanized happy ending - like a "present from heaven," as Morton himself put it. Morton's is an amazing tale. Once again, congrats to him and everyone involved over the years in fighting the Williamson County DA's office to free him.

RELATED: Reacting to the story, Wilco Watchdog says that "Ken Anderson put Morton in prison and John Bradley kept him there." Bradley wasn't mentioned in the 60 Minutes piece, but there's little doubt the issue looms large over his re-election campaign, for the reasons articulated by the Watchdog, and this national press coverage won't help matters. In a sense, it may benefit Bradley that the redistricting battle forced the state to push back its primaries, or Williamson County voters would be going to the polls next week with the 60 Minutes story fresh in their minds. OTOH, it's also possible the longer timeline will give Bradley's opponent a chance to make the associations among voters between Bradley and the Morton case that 60 Minutes left out. We won't know until May how this may impact the Williamson DA's race, but the incumbent must be worried.

ALSO: In the second clip embedded above, the producer said they interviewed Michael Morton for nearly three hours in preparation for this story, with just a few minutes broadcast during this segment. This was Morton's first media interview since his release last fall, so I hope CBS goes ahead and puts more of the extended interview online. That's historic material.

AND MORE: Texas Monthly's Paul Burka has a bloggerly assessment of the Williamson County DA's race in the wake of 60 Minutes' coverage.

Rabu, 29 Februari 2012

Plea deals without open files turn off ignition on adversarial system's truth-seeking engine

An exchange between judge and defendant during a guilty plea out of Williamson County in a remarkable, 33-year old murder case caught Grits' attention.

Benny Tijerina was sentenced to concurrent 40 year sentences in Williamson and McLennan counties for the crimes, though he claims and a victim's mother agrees that another man was the shooter (the prosecutor claimed to have jailhouse informants who say otherwise). Anyway, as cold cases solved by DNA go, this was at once both a remarkable and increasingly a routine event.

What caught Grits' eye was an exchange recorded at the end of the Austin Statesman story: "After he was sentenced, Tijerina asked [Judge] Carnes why he hadn't been allowed to see any of the evidence against him in the case. Carnes said that was standard and that Tijerina would only have seen the evidence if the case had gone to trial."

That's true as far as it goes under the US Supreme Court's Brady v. Maryland ruling, but it's also a "standard" that shifts in Texas county by county at the whim of the local elected prosecutor. In Tarrant County, for example, defense attorneys have access to prosecutor files - electronically, no less - even in cases that result in plea agreements. In El Paso, too, DA Jaime Esparza told a conference at the Task Force on Indigent Defense that his office allows defense counsel to get access to case files within 24 hours, noting that it facilitated more routine cases getting disposed of within three days or less, reduced jail costs, overcrowding and liability, relieved court dockets, and even freed up space in the jail that's now leased out to house federal inmates and make extra money.

We live under a justice system where 98% of cases result in plea bargains instead of trials. Under the Williamson County rule, in the overwhelming majority of cases nobody outside the prosecutor's office ever actually vets the evidence before a sentence is dispensed. If the adversarial system is a truth seeking engine, in 98% of felony cases the engine's ignition switch remains locked in the "off" position under that "standard."

According to the Texas Office of Court Administration's annual report (pdf), "Less than two percent of all criminal cases (excluding transfers and motions to revoke probation) went to trial in 2010" in district (felony) courts. Just 3,633 felony cases in FY 2010 went to either jury or bench trials, says OCA. So in the overwhelming majority of cases, under the Williamson County system, the defense never sees the evidence.

I have no knowledge of the case beyond this report from the Statesman and don't argue with the sentence(s), but that exchange between defendant and judge about what is "standard" in Williamson County - and too many other Texas courtrooms - should raise alarm. The same sort of prosecutorial gamesmanship takes place in more routine cases all the way down to the misdemeanor level. Make Grits philosopher-king and I'd prefer that, as in El Paso and Tarrant, both sides had full access to the police investigation as early in the process as possible. Clearly some DAs - like Williamson's John Bradley - just won't do that unless they're required, so in the interests of justice the Legislature should make them.

Jumat, 24 Februari 2012

Louis Sturns to oversee Michael Morton 'court of inquiry' over alleged prosecutor misconduct

Gerry Goldstein, Michael Morton, John Raley and Barry Scheck, via AP
Last week, Texas Supreme Court Justice Wallace Jefferson named the judge in the Micheal Morton "court of inquiry" - fellow black Republican state District Judge Louis Sturns of Tarrant County. (Bob Ray Sanders at the Startlegram provides background, for those who need it.) A defense attorney who's practiced a great deal under Sturns told me he's the "nicest guy you'd ever want to meet," though that doesn't mean he won't also hand down extremely long sentences. Most folks seem to think he will be fair, which is all one can ask. See AP's acccount, and Brandi Grissom's coverage. If you're really interested and have the stomach for it, here's the 140+ page report (pdf) that convinced Chief Justice Jefferson to appoint a judge to oversee these unusual proceedings. Fittingly, his decision comes days after the silver (25th) anniversary of Morton's false conviction, a coincidence whose force is heightened by the protagonist's silver hair and beatific camera visage. In most pictures I see of Michael Morton he has a big grin on his face, like the cat who just ate the canary. In the one above he shows no teeth, but his eyes are smiling.

Courts of inquiry are strange birds - a seldom used, Texas specific vehicle for making an end-run around the DA's office to seek an indictment for alleged criminal wrongdoing without ever having the case heard by a grand jury. Lately, attorneys like my boss Jeff Blackburn from the Innocence Project of Texas (Timothy Cole) and Barry Scheck of the national Innocence Project (Todd Willingham) have sought (with 50-50 success) to use the procedure as a truth-seeking vehicle in posthumous innocence cases. Now Raley, Scheck and Co, hope to  use it to punish prosecutorial misonduct. These are mostly uncharted legal waters  for all involved, both for the attorneys and Judge Sturns.

What a dramatic hearing that will be! Grits may have to drive up to Cowtown for that one.

Read more here: http://www.star-telegram.com/2012/02/21/3752088/important-move-forward-on-holding.html#storylink=cpy

Sabtu, 11 Februari 2012

Judge: Court of inquiry to proceed investigating prosecutor misconduct in Williamson County

Remarkable! Judge Sid Harle has recommended a Court of Inquiry (see more background on this unique, Texas proceeding) regarding whether then-Williamson County DA Ken Anderson (today a District Judge) broke any laws by concealing evidence in the Michael Morton murder case 26 years ago. See:
For much more detailed background on the allegations which led to the decision, see the report (144-page pdf) from Morton's defense team alleging prosecutorial misconduct based on their unusual, court-approved post-exoneration investigation.

Rabu, 08 Februari 2012

Challenger doubles John Bradley's fundraising as rivals slug it out for Williamson DA

A pair of local news stories update us on the status of the Williamson County DA's race, where challenger Jana Duty has more than doubled incumbent John Bradley's fundraising total. The story this morning by  the Austin Statesman's Claire Osborn opens:
In the Republican primary campaign for district attorney, Williamson County Attorney Jana Duty had raised more than twice as much money as her opponent, incumbent John Bradley, according to the most recent campaign finance reports.

Duty raised $83,211.09, and Bradley raised $38,604.06, according to campaign finance records filed at the end of December with the Texas Ethics Commission. Duty said last week that she has since raised $30,000. Bradley said he has raised $20,000 since the beginning of January and expects to raise another $20,000.
Osborn points to Duty's successfully luring even self-described friends of Mr. Bradley like Austin attorney Roy Minton into her camp:
Austin criminal defense lawyer Roy Minton said Bradley is a longtime friend but that he is supporting Duty in this campaign.

"I believe that John has not shown the concern that I would like to see prosecutors have for young people that get into difficulties and need to be rehabilitated and continue in society without carrying with them a conviction or penitentiary time," Minton said.

Minton contributed to Bradley's 2002 campaign, campaign records show. Filings from July show that Minton's law firm also contributed $500 to Bradley's current campaign. Minton gave $500 to Duty's campaign, reports show.

Duty supporter Mark Brunner previously worked as an assistant district attorney under Bradley and is now a criminal defense lawyer in Georgetown. Brunner said he trusts Duty and said she "fosters a sense of a search for the truth."

Some criminal defense attorneys have said prosecutors under Bradley had offered defendants one-day deadlines for deals in their cases rather than allowing defense attorneys access to evidence, such as videos, that would help them make a decision for their clients.

Access to case files has become easier for defense attorneys since the Michael Morton case, Brunner said. Bradley did not prosecute the case but refused for six years to allow DNA testing on a piece of evidence for Morton, who was wrongfully convicted of the death of his wife, Christine Morton. Morton spent 25 years in jail before he was released in the fall; another man recently was charged in connection with Christine Morton's death.
Conversely, Your News Now Austin has an interview with John Bradley by Alana Rocha in which the incumbent takes his best shots at the challenger (and pretends his Forensic Science Commission nomination was shot down by "liberal Democrats" when Republicans drove the nails in the coffin). My own, admittedly biased estimation is that Jana Duty's much-ballyhooed troubles with the state bar - which largely stem from competing criminal and civil roles of the County Attorney's office - don't rise to the level of concern as John Bradley's politicized stewardship as DA, including but not limited to his aggressive opposition to possible innocence claims. Williamson County voters in the GOP primary, of course, must make their own judgment.

Fundraising is a tell-tale metric in politics, however, and usually the most reliable indicator after polling as a predictor of who will win an election. So for a challenger to "lap" the incumbent, as the Statesman headline writer put it, even an impartial observer (and Grits won't pretend impartiality) would have to conclude that John Bradley appears to be on the ropes, with most of the momentum so far on Jana Duty's side.

Still, even if both campaigns meet their fundraising projections, we're not talking about a lot of money given Austin-market TV prices, so much depends on a) how effectively the campaigns spend what they have, b) the few, limited remaining opportunities for earned media (Bradley may need some to alter his downward spiral), and c) whether Bradley's local establishment allies decide to hang him out to dry. I don't  know who benefits more from the likely postponement of the primary date: Normally I'd say the challenger, but it may be Mr.Bradley. Judging by the campaign's fundraising totals and projections, he may need some luck and all the time he can get to turn things around.

Selasa, 17 Januari 2012

John Bradley named '2011 Worst Prosecutor of the Year'

Your Winner: 2011 Worst Prosecutor of the Year, John "Marty" Bradley
Over at The Agitator, Williamson County DA John Bradley edged out an extremely competitive national field to win Radley Balko's 2011 Worst Prosectuor of the Year Award based on a reader poll. As one of Radley's Agitatortots commented, "although the award is given for a year, it is effectively a lifetime achievement award." Indeed. Well earned.

Meanwhile, Grits feels compelled to point readers to this hilarious video clip of a scene from a WWII film in German which somebody subtitled with biting dialogue drawing on themes from the Michael Morton exoneration. Normally Grits disdains Hitler references on the web, deferring to my college pal Mike Godwin's dicta regarding the uselessness and disrespectful nature of such comparisons. However, this piece doesn't compare Bradley's actions to those of Hitler's, which is the usual Godwinian trope. Instead, it uses the scene to explore the emotional state of a megalomaniac in free fall. Anyway, it made me laugh.

On a more serious, related note, last week the Texas Tribune interviewed Michael Morton's attorney John Raley about the case, and published excerpts in video and transcript form. And Wilco Watchdog is going through old John Bradley posts from the District and County Attorneys user form and finding lots of controversial opinions expressed that don't always jibe with his comments to the MSM.

Bradley's GOP primary opponent, Williamson County Attorney Jana Duty, has been racking up law-enforcement endorsements and this week received the endorsement of the former Williamson County DA Ed Walsh, who preceded Ken Anderson and John Bradley in the office. A reader from Williamson County emails to say, "There are bandanas appearing on his signs all over the county. People are really sick of him and no longer scared to speak out."

What a difference a year makes! This time in 2011 Bradley was on top of the world, with many anticipating that by the end of the year his long-time patron Governor Perry may even appoint him to the Court of Criminal Appeals. But first the Texas Senate rejected JB's nomination as chair of the Forensic Science Commission, then the Michael Morton exoneration splashed his and Ken Anderson's names across the national press as poster children for indifference toward valid innocence claims and alleged prosecutorial misconduct. Now, not only is appointment to Texas' high criminal court a pipe dream, he might not even win reelection in Williamson County. Grits remains flabbergasted by Bradley's eye-poppingly rapid downfall, which will reach truly epic proportions if he actually loses the April primary. I'm sure the DA himself must be stunned at the development.

Selasa, 10 Januari 2012

Williamson County prosecutors playing defense

Williamson County District Judge Ken Anderson, reports Chuck Lindell at the Austin Statesman, filed a brief with the court which "accused [exoneree Michael] Morton's lawyers of employing falsehoods, incomplete facts and an incorrect reading of trial records to accuse Anderson of hiding evidence that could have spared Morton from a receiving a life sentence for a crime he did not commit." See Anderson’s brief here (pdf) and accompanying exhibits here (pdf).

Meanwhile Williamson County DA John Bradley is reportedly out blockwalking for his campaign, just as Wilco Watchdog has discovered the internet treasure trove that is the incumbent's collection of 7,500+ posts at the Texas District and County Attorneys Association's user forum, posting a comparison of Bradley's public media statements about disclosing exculpatory evidence with his running commentary among friends on the TDCAA site. My favorite bit: In a brilliant moment of understatement, one forum user responded to Bradley's authoritative disdain for handing over exculpatory evidence with the observation, “The contention that there is no constitutional obligation to turn over exculpatory evidence when the defendant pleads guilty seems highly dubious.” Dubious, indeed! Regrettably, the blogger doesn't provide permalinks for the quotes, though I'd read most or all of it before. See the full Watchdog post for more.

For those who haven't seen it, if you're a regular Grits reader and are interested in the topics this blog covers, I encourage reading the TDCAA forum purely for its entertainment value, as evidenced by the quotes pulled out by the Watchdog. (Their site appears to be inexplicably down, hopefully not in order to expunge years of dialogue as a result of the Watchdog's post!) A lot of interesting discussions happen at the TDCAA user forum on subjects I don't see addressed anywhere else, for good and sometimes for ill. One caveat: Before ever quoting the forum, as the Watchdog did, always get a screen shot or cut and paste the string into a separate document. Mr. Bradley in particular, but other forum participants, too, have been known to change or delete comments when they were cited in the media.

The primary battle for Williamson County DA this year is shaping up to be a real hoot!

See related Grits posts:

Selasa, 03 Januari 2012

As predicted: State bar dismisses grievance against John Bradley from Morton case

Grits is shocked, shocked I tell you that the state bar announced it has dismissed the ethics complaint filed against Williamson County DA John Bradley stemming from alleged prosecutorial misconduct in Michael Morton's false conviction, a development the Austin Statesman reported today. Except ... oh yeah ... Grits predicted earlier the state bar "almost certainly" wouldn't do anything. As pointed out then, "The State Bar didn't even discipline a [former] DA or judge from Collin County after the prosecutor admitted in a deposition they'd been sleeping together during a capital murder trial." If that won't get a prosecutor sanctioned, how could one expect action stemming from the Michael Morton exoneration?

I'm not a lawyer, but to me Bradley calling in all the prosecutors involved for a meeting to review evidence before their depositions (unbeknownst at the time to Morton's attorneys) struck me as straight up evidence tampering, giving the alleged perpetrators an opportunity to get on the same page and get their story straight while muddying independent recollections. The state bar, though, apparently said that was okay by them.

Granted, the complaint against Judge Ken Anderson may be stronger on the merits, if potentially hindered by a statute of limitations, but Bradley's politically convenient, belated, and half-hearted mea culpa doesn't mitigate the fact that he fought for years to keep Judge Anderson's misconduct from being exposed, mocking Mr. Morton's innocence claims while obstructing every possible avenue for proving them. If that wasn't technically unethical according to state bar rules, it certainly was heartless and fundamentally antithetical to the prosecutor's oath to seek justice, not convictions.

Examples like this have convinced your correspondent that the Legislature must find some way to beef up sanctions for prosecutorial misconduct and/or implement preventive procedures, e.g., mandating open prosecution files. The courts won't do it, and it's wholly evident the legal profession is incapable of policing itself on questions of prosecutorial misconduct.

See related Grits posts:
 And more generally on the subject of prosecutorial misconduct:
See also the report (pdf) by Morton's attorneys on proseuctorial misconduct in the case and a deposition (pdf) of Bradley former appellate chief who worked on the Morton case, current Williamson County Court at Law Judge Doug Arnold.

MORE: From Simple Justice where, reacting to this case, Scott Greenfield accused the Texas state bar and Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas of "horseradish vision."

Selasa, 27 Desember 2011

Battle of the yard signs heating up in Williamson County

In Williamson County, vandals are leaving reminders on John Bradley's yard signs of the District Attorney's role delaying Michael Morton's exoneration by opposing DNA testing of a bloody bandana for years on end:

Via the Wilco Watchdog
Ouch! Grits doesn't condone vandalism, but you gotta admit that's a poignant image, borne of a dark humor. For anyone familiar with the story, little more need be said, but Wilco Watchdog says most of it anyway.

Meanwhile, speaking of yard signs, the Watchdog reports that attorney Adam Reposa has made up hundreds of these yard signs targeting Williamson County District Judge Ken Anderson, who prosecuted the Michael Morton case and failed to turn over exculpatory evidence to the defense counsel or the court.


Who'da thought? The battle of the yard signs in Wilco is heating up.

UPDATE (Dec. 28): More from KXAN-TV.

Senin, 26 Desember 2011

Triumph or Tragedy? Drawing meaning from the Michael Morton exoneration

"If you want a happy ending, that depends, of course, on where you stop your story."
- Orson Welles

Regular readers will recall that Grits recently named the Michael Morton exoneration out of Williamson County the biggest Texas criminal justice story of 2011. Morton spent a quarter-century in prison for allegedly murdering his wife before he was exonerated by DNA and a team of won't-quit attorneys who fought Williamson County DA John Bradley over testing the evidence for six long years (prevailing only after the Legislature changed the law to remove Bradley's grounds for objection). It turned out prosecutors 25 years ago had failed to release exculpatory evidence to the defense, and the man who apparently did so, then-elected DA Ken Anderson, is today a sitting Williamson County District Judge. You really can't make this stuff up!

As the year's biggest criminal justice story, several publications recently issued end-of-the-year retrospectives on the event:
Now that Morton's defense team has released their prosecutorial misconduct report (pdf), as a pure news story the Morton exoneration is over. As these articles demonstrate, though, what remains is to understand what his story means and how or whether lessons may be drawn from it that could prevent more, similar false convictions in the future. Those questions are all wide open, as are what consequences any of the state actors might face and what if any reforms might be implemented in the wake of exposing such gaping, systemic flaws.

Interestingly each of the writers in the stories bulleted above seeks to draw different conclusions regarding how we should understand this horrifying episode.

For Grissom at the Tribune, the lesson is that "Despite scientific advancements like DNA testing, the use of unreliable scientific techniques in the criminal justice system persists." She quotes a lawyer from the Texas Defender service who observes, "“What passes for science in courtrooms is not always, in fact, science.” That might sound like a radical statement if the National Academy of Sciences hadn't recently found the same thing. Moreover, the Court of Criminal Appeals ruled this summer that legal and scientific truth were different things and expert testimony could be legally true but scientifically false.

Jordan Smith at the Austin Chronicle is more focused on whether "whether current D.A. John Bradley has also acted, if not improperly, at least imprudently, in his handling of the Morton case since he succeeded Anderson in 2001. Bradley fought mightily against testing of the bandana, telling at least one local reporter that to allow the DNA testing in what he apparently considered an open-and-shut case against Morton would be 'silly'; Morton was merely 'grasping at straws,' he has also said."

At the Houston Chronicle, Patti Hart focuses on the seemingly insurmountable barriers overcome by Morton's obsessively persistent defense team, without whom Morton would have spent the rest of his life in prison, as well as the larger question of how to make prosecutors fulfill their duty to turn over potentially exculpatory evidence in criminal trials, making Judge Anderson her poster child: "Under well-established law, prosecutors must share exculpatory evidence. By withholding crucial facts, Anderson could face contempt charges or even disbarment," wrote Hart. She decries prosecutors use of tactical maneuverings to avoid so-called "Brady" disclosures (after the US Supreme Court's decision in Brady v. Maryland mandating the state disclose such evidence).

Which is the right conclusion to draw? All of the above, and more. Morton's attorneys have requested a "court of inquiry" to investigate prosecutorial misconduct charges (after Grits reads their 144-page report  (pdf), along with Judge Doug Arnold's deposition (pdf), I'm sure there will be more to say about that subject). In the meantime, what are the lessons for prosecutors, judges, and even defense counsel, all of whom failed miserably at their jobs 25 years ago?

Texans will be hotly debating those questions for many years, well past the legislative session in 2013, just as the Tulia exonerations still raise hackles in certain quarters. Indeed, like the Tulia case, I suspect Mr. Morton's story may become the subject of books, documentaries or even a Hollywood fillm (the Halle Berry Tulia flick was delayed because of her pregnancy but reportedly is now tentatively scheduled for a 2014 release; the story of a similar Texas drug sting inspired a Disney-backed Hollywood film, "American Violet."). If we don't see similar cultural artifacts spin off of Mr. Morton's story, I'd be surprised; his has been a truly epic saga - an almost unparalleled story of tragedy and triumph.

We shouldn't let Morton's triumph, though, deflect attention from the tragedy, however (rightly) exultant Morton and his legal team are at his release. This was a tragedy so grim it would baffle Kafka and make Shakespeare wince: Morton's wife, Christine, was brutally murdered. He professed his innocence but was falsely accused and wrongfully convicted, the victim of apparently overt prosecutorial misconduct and misrepresentations of forensic science. Then prosecutors fought for years to keep from revealing exculpatory evidence and to prevent DNA testing that ultimately led to discovery of the alleged real killer - a man whose DNA had also been discovered at a similar murder scene near the Mortons home four years after Christine's death. The alleged real killer had been living in neighboring Bastrop County for most of the intervening quarter century.

It all sounds like a Hollywood movie plot, complete with a "happy ending." But for Morton and his family, the victory, however satisfying, must be bittersweet. Nobody can give them that quarter century back. No amount of money can repay stolen time. And who knows what other crimes were committed by the real killer while Morton was locked up? We already know of one other alleged murder by the same suspect; were there more?

Indeed, isn't it a matter of interpretation whether this episode constitutes a triumph or tragedy? As Orson Welles said in the epigraph to this post, it all depends on where you end the story, or in this case, when opinion leaders and the media decide it has ended. If his conviction in 1986 had never been overturned, Morton's would remain a secret tragedy, like hundreds or probably thousands of others in TDCJ. But with Morton's triumphant release does that mean "the system worked"? Is that the end of the story? If Anderson were punished professionally, even disbarred, as Patti Hart suggests, would that retributivist homage constitute a happy ending? Would it make things "right"? How about John Bradley losing re-election, would that democratic rebuke be enough? Or perhaps if the Legislature passed a law named after Morton mandating an open-file policy for prosecutors or punishing willful Brady violations with jail time, would such preventives provide a satisfactory conclusion?

For the story writers, perhaps. But it won't bring back Morton's late wife, nor will state compensation nor half-hearted press conference apologies ever make up for what was stolen from him. For Michael Morton, who yesterday spent his first Christmas with his family since the last visit of Halley's comet, the story will continue as he struggles to rebuild a shattered life and to keep this horrible nightmare from defining and defeating him. Indeed, for Mr. Morton, not only is this not the end, the most important part of the story is just beginning. Grits wishes him all the luck in the world in the new year as he seeks to begin writing his own happy ending. I hope he finds it.

Rabu, 21 Desember 2011

'Bradleyland': Anatomy of a Meltdown?

Having in a past life worked as a professional opposition researcher in more than five dozen campaigns, I've had the opportunity over the years to watch more than my share of politicians melt down under pressure, both my own clients and opponents, during heated campaigns. And there are signs that's what's happening with Williamson County DA John Bradley, judging from this TV news report from KVUE, which I saw via the Wilco Watchdog. There we find a bizarre claim by Bradley that his electoral opponent, County Attorney Jana Duty, initiated the pending grievance against him at the State Bar, which he went on to deny even existed ("not a grievance but a complaint on a piece of paper which he says came from Jana Duty"). In fact, Jana  Duty did not file the grievance. As Grits reported here, it was a woman named Julie Oliver from a group called the Texas Coalition for Lawyer Accountability. See their press release.

The Watchdog sees this odd divergence from the facts as evidence that John Bradley's "Road to Damascus" moment, as Grits called it in this post, may be short-lived:
Grits reported a few weeks back a story on John Bradley’s election year transformation. It was titled “On the Road to Damascus: The Conversion of John Bradley?” One line from the post stated “Any such optimism regarding Bradley's newly announced conversion, though, should for now remain measured. He’s got a long record, and it will take more than a few words of humility to get everyone to believe that he’s had some road to Damascus moment.'"
Bradley was also quoted as saying “It would be very easy I think for me to get upset, bitter, and just react to all of that stuff but I’ve never really approached things that way.”

It appears Bradley’s road to Damascus moment just hit a dead end and he has exited back to “Bradleyland.”
The Watchdog adds that "Sources close to Bradley have stated that he is in complete 'panic mode' and is 'desperate' to salvage any remaining hope in being re-elected." This faux pas certainly sounds like desperation to me. I'd have thought JB was smarter than to just begin flailing and making stuff up. Issuing unfounded attacks you'll inevitably have to retract isn't the way to make up ground if the incumbent DA hopes to salvage his reelection chances between now and the April 3 primary.

Rabu, 14 Desember 2011

Challenger's polling says John Bradley vulnerable in Williamson County primary

Williamson County DA John Bradley has drawn a primary opponent - incumbent County Attorney Jana Duty - in a campaign that appears likely to center around the Michael Morton exoneration and Bradley's role in fighting DNA testing for twenty years and opposing release of exculpatory evidence to the defense. The Texas Tribune has an interview with Duty regarding her challenge here. Duty decided to run after conducting a poll of GOP primary voters, she said, leading her to believe Bradley could be beat. The told the Trib:
It's going to be a competitive race, because he has name recognition. He's well known and in some circles well respected.

I recently did a poll, a survey, to see how the people out in the general public feel about the job that he's doing. Do they echo the concerns that are being echoed in the courthouse? And what I found is that they do. They are concerned. I think a lot of people want to see change, and I don't believe they see John Bradley the way he sees himself.

So that was encouraging to me that with the proper message, getting the truth out about the way that office really runs, that he can be beat.
Duty has some of her own baggage, but of quite a different sort than Bradley's. She's been in a big feud with the good-ol' boy crowd at the county commissioners court, which hired an outside attorney over her objections - ironically the attorney who was the second chair prosecutor at Michael Morton's original trial. The State Bar upheld a complaint against Duty for revealing information she learned in executive session of the commissioners court. But the reason she did so stems in part from conflicting roles: She was attending an executive session as attorney for the commissioners court, but she is also a prosecutor. The information revealed related to what she believed was a criminal offense.

Bradley will inevitably attack Duty over the state bar reprimand - indeed, in the Trib story he's already begun - but her revealing secret information because she believed a crime has been committed is quite a polar opposite issue to Bradley's woes. By comparison, Bradley opposed DNA testing in the Morton case for two decades, mocked Morton for seeking to prove his innocence, and fought to keep information secret that would ultimately exonerate an innocent man and lead to the capture of an alleged killer. Grits prefers a prosecutor who broke a rule to expose corruption over one who manipulated the rules to cover up mistakes and misconduct. Anyway, there's an extent to which Duty's reprimand stems from a fundamental tension that exists between the role of a County Attorney as adviser to the commissioners court and her role as prosecutor of crimes. Those duties, Duty discovered, sometimes conflict.

While there's no other coverage of Duty's nascent campaign yet, at least that I could find, here's the text of an email Grits received this morning announcing her candidacy:
Williamson County Attorney Jana Duty announced her intentions today to challenge District Attorney John Bradley in the March 6th Republican Primary election. Duty said she is challenging Bradley because she believes the citizens deserve a D.A. who understands that his/her job is to seek justice. 

“Unfortunately there is a cloud hanging over the District Attorney’s office,” Duty said. “John Bradley represents all that is wrong with our criminal justice system today. Instead of seeking justice, Bradley aggressively fought against DNA testing for a man who was wrongfully imprisoned for over two decades for murder. The whole time the real killer remained on the loose committing additional crimes. Bradley has also repeatedly refused to prosecute his buddies at the courthouse for their blatant violations of the law. Worse still, he reduces roughly 25% of his felony cases to misdemeanors annually, and passes them off to my office. Some of those cases involve child predator offenders which I find reprehensible.  These are not the actions of a tough prosecutor, but instead are the actions of a self-serving politician who cares more about his statistics than seeking justice.  That’s why I am running for District Attorney.”

Duty has served as the Williamson County Attorney since 2005 where she prosecutes misdemeanor and felony crimes. During her tenure in office, she has more than doubled the amount of protective orders obtained for victims of family violence, saved millions of tax dollars through innovations and efficiencies, and has implemented checks and balances to insure government transparency. Duty has also earned a reputation for taking on the “good old boy” system at the courthouse, a reputation she embraces. 

Duty continued, “I make no apologies for being an advocate for the people of this county.  If that makes me unpopular with the courthouse insiders, so be it.  My pledge to the people of Williamson County is to bring honesty and integrity back to the D.A.’s office, to see that everyone is treated evenly and fairly under the law and to continue fighting to protect our families as I have done as County Attorney. We need a D.A. who will put the public interest above his own political career and that of his friends.”

Duty’s public service continues a family tradition that goes back nearly two centuries.  Jana Duty is a direct descendant of Joseph Duty, one of Stephen F. Austin’s “Old Three Hundred” settlers, who received a title to a league of land in Texas from the Mexican government in 1824. Eventually he settled with his family at Webberville in Travis County. Duty also had four ancestors who fought in the Texas Revolution, including two who participated in the final victorious battle at San Jacinto. In fact, the Duty family has had at least one family member fight in every conflict that Texas has ever been a part of. 

Duty is a graduate of the University of Texas at San Antonio and the St. Mary’s University School of Law.  Prior to becoming a prosecutor, she was a high school English teacher. She and her husband, Daniel, are the proud parents of three children and three grandchildren. They make their home in Georgetown.
“The implications of this campaign go well beyond me and my family,” Duty concluded. “I hope the entire community will rally around our cause and send a strong signal on March 6th that business-as-usual will no longer be tolerated.  It’s time to start a new era in the District Attorney’s office, and that fight starts today.”
 
To find out more or to join the campaign, please visit www.JanaDuty.com .
The Trib's Brandi Grissom called Bradley "a giant figure in Texas politics," but that may overstate things: He's an influential figure in legal circles, no doubt, but politically he lost his only ever competitive race - for the Court of Criminal Appeals back in the '90s - was appointed to his current spot by Rick Perry, and has never faced a serious challenger until now. Duty, by contrast, appears quite serious: She's coming to get him.

Now we find out if Bradley the media bully can back up his tough-guy image on the campaign trail standing on his own two feet as opposed to on the shoulders of this or that political patron. Can he raise money? Does he know how to run a campaign or employ consultants who do? Will voters really prefer him when they have a choice? Has the Michael Morton case damaged him beyond repair, or will voters believe his road to Damascus schtick? Stay tuned. We'll find out next spring.

MORE: Check in later at the blogs Wilco Watchdog and Eye on Williamson County, both of which I'm sure will be covering Duty's announcement soon.

Sabtu, 03 Desember 2011

Roundup: Coverage of prosecutor misconduct investigation in Michael Morton case

The articles linked below collectively cast a great deal more light on the prosecutorial misconduct investigation in Williamson County surrounding Judge Ken Anderson and his role prosecuting an innocent man, Michael Morton, for murdering his wife in the '80s. Most Grits readers are familiar with the story: With an innocent man locked up, the real killer went on to commit more crimes, including another murder in the Austin area. Now that DNA has exonerated Morton, his lawyers are investigating alleged prosecutorial misconduct that led to their client's false conviction. A lot's been happening on that front this week, with Judge Ken Anderson's much-anticipated deposition finally released; here are a few recent links for those looking to stay abreast of the controversy:
This amnesiac response from Anderson is especially odd since we know from Don Wood's deposition that Anderson personally attended a meeting before his deposition where all the principles on the prosecution team were given an opportunity to go over old records and discuss the case together, supposedly to refresh their memories (as opposed to getting their stories straight or agreeing to an omerta pact). How can Anderson recall so little, one wonders, having so recently read through the file, discussed it with the principal investigator, etc.?

Grits predicted after Sgt. Don Wood said he remembered nothing about the case that Judge Anderson's memory would probably "turn out to be similarly impaired," and indeed that's how it played out. At best these claims of memory loss come off as dubious, at worst as pure CYA. Judge Anderson remembers nothing about the case except he remembers for certain he did nothing wrong? If he really has no memory, how can he be so sure? Right now, the paper trail argues strongly that Anderson cheated to win and an innocent man spent a quarter-century in prison as a result. Given the evidence now available that Williamson County prosecutors fought for years to conceal, it will take more than blanket denials and claims of memory loss to dispel that singular impression.

Senin, 28 November 2011

Grievances filed against Bradley, Anderson and Davis

A group I'd not heard of, the Texas Coalition on Lawyer Accountabilty announced that it has filed grievances aganst current Williamson County District Attorney John Bradley, former Williamson County District Attorney (and current District Judge) Ken Anderson, and former Williamson County Assistant District Attorney Mike Davis. Go here to download copies.

The grievance against Bradley includes allegations related to the Forensic Science Commission's investigation into flawed forensics underlying Todd Willingham's conviction, in addition to alleged misconduct related to the Morton case. Via Wilco Watchdog.

MORE: See additional analysis from Wilco Watchdog. And from the Texas Tribune.

UPDATE/RELATED: Via KXAN-TV, "John Bradley files for re-election."

Sabtu, 26 November 2011

Holding Texas judges accountable for past misconduct: William Adams and Ken Anderson

Quite a few readers contacted Grits a couple of weeks ago asking if I planned to comment on the Aransas County family law judge who was videotaped beating the living crap out of his then-16 year old daughter for illegally downloading music. She made the video in 2004 before releasing it in retaliation earlier this month when he threatened to cut her off financially (revenge, unlike grits, is best served cold). Grits refrained, mainly because the topic was being widely discussed by others more effectively than anything I could have said, and I had nothing in particular to add to what was mostly a family-law discussion. (Besides, 3+ million people had seen the YouTube clip before I did; it hardly needed my promotion.) The video was horrendous, nearly unwatchable, far exceeding any acceptable fatherly punishment to surpass the threshhold to "abuse." But the statute of limitations had run out, the daughter is now 23 and no longer lives with her father, and most attorneys who've looked at the question, including the local DA, agreed there's no way to turn it into a criminal matter.

Even so, I was fascinated to learn via CNN that the State Commission on Judicial Conduct is not only investigating the old abuse allegations but has convinced the judge to accept a paid suspension while it does so:
Judge William Adams, who made national headlines after the release of a 2004 video of him beating his then-teenage daughter, has been suspended by the Texas Supreme Court.
Adams, while not admitting guilt or wrongdoing, agreed to the suspension. He will be paid during the suspension.

The judge's lawyer, William Dudley, said his client proposed the suspension motion with input from the state Commission on Judicial Conduct, which is investigating the incident. Adams already was on voluntary leave, Dudley said in a statement to CNN.
See the order (pdf) and the commission's public statement (pdf) in Judge Adams' case, and the commission's rules (pdf) for disciplining or removing judges. What interests Grits in particular are possible parallels to Williamson County District Judge Ken Anderson, the prosecutor in the Michael Morton case who 25 years ago apparently hid exculpatory evidence from both the defense and the court to convict an innocent man, allowing the guilty one to remain living free in Bastrop County for the intervening decades. Just as the statute of limitations has run out on any possible offenses in the video from Adams' years-ago incident, the statute or limitations on any prosecutorial misconduct in the 25-year old Morton case have also likely expired. But if the Commission on Judicial Conduct can investigate Judge Adams over old abuse allegations, and even facilitate his suspension while they do so, why can't or won't they do the same for Judge Anderson in Williamson County?

I've been told privately that, even though the statute of limitations on Adams' conduct may have expired, there's an argument to be made that the commission could pursue him under its constitutional authority to discipline judges who engage in "willful or persistent conduct that is clearly inconsistent with the proper performance of his duties or casts public discredit upon the judiciary or administration of justice." A family law judge who engaged in that kind of behavior in his own family life, the argument goes, willfully engaged in behavior that cast discredit on the judiciary.

Similarly, assuming withholding exculpatory evidence from the judge was a willful act (instead of an act of extreme, near-unfathomable incompetence), it's hard to argue that Judge Anderson's recently-revealed shortcomings aren't "inconsistent with the proper performance of his duties or casts public discredit upon the judiciary." If the Commission on Judicial Conduct found a hook to justify intervention on older charges in Adams' case, Judge Anderson's should be similarly fair game.

Ken Anderson hid evidence and misled the judge in perhaps the biggest trial of his prosecutorial career. His alleged misconduct was primarily responsible for a false conviction which ranks among the worst injustices in the state's history, threatening to elevate him to Mike-Nifong status in the pantheon of convict-at-any-cost prosecutors willing to cheat to win. He's an embarrassment to his county and his profession - yet he still sits on the bench in a Williamson County District Court, dispensing what passes for "justice" in that jurisdiction. Why? Anderson's past misdeeds weren't violent but they discredit any claim he might make to integrity or impartiality on the bench in much the way that Judge Adams' tumultuous family life discredits his family-law credentials.

Grits suspects Anderson himself has insufficient capacity for self-reflection or shame to himself contemplate stepping down; his failure to accept responsibility - apologizing for "the system" but insisting he himself was blameless - surely demonstrates that. But if the Commission can find a hook to go after Judge Adams regarding years-old charges, they should find a way to do the same thing in Williamson County. Much as with Judge Adams, every day Anderson remains on the bench taints and demeans not just the integrity of Texas' judiciary but the entire legal profession.

Opportunity for activism
Speaking of the Commission on Judicial Conduct, they're up for Sunset review along with TDCJ and the Board of Pardons and Paroles, and you can see their self-evaluation report here (pdf). (More soon analyzing that document.) Anyone frustrated with the impotence of judicial oversight in Texas should view the Sunset process as an excellent chance to suggest improvements to the process.