Showing posts with label Judicial corruption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Judicial corruption. Show all posts

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Elena Sassower: On The Corruption of The Moreland Commission

The Commission to Investigate Public Corruption
October 28 Manhattan Hearing:

(1)    In conjunction with my registration to attend Monday’s hearing of the Commission to Investigate Public Corruption, which I also combined (in the address section, with a request to testify), I have sent a protest to the Commission, on behalf of the public, reading:

“On behalf of the public, I protest that the Commission's October 28th 'public hearing' is not only 'topic limited' to prevent the public from testifying as to the breadth of public corruption within its knowledge and experience, but that it explicitly excludes the public from even testifying as to that limited topic, relegating We, The People, to nothing more than spectators who may 'attend only'.” 

(2)    For those who already registered to attend Monday’s hearing of the Commission to Investigate Public Corruption (Oct 28), the start time of the hearing has been changed!  It now begins at 5 pm (with doors opening at 4 pm).

(3)    The end time also has been changed.  It is no longer 9:30 pm, but to “Conclusion of Invited Speaker Testimony”.  This change is obviously to prevent the embarrassment to the Commission that occurred at the Sept 24 Albany hearing – where the last scheduled witness finished 1/2 hour before the  announced 9 pm ending time, yet the Commission did not use the opportunity of the free ½ hour to invite members of the public who had come to the hearing hoping to testify and who had registered to testify to do so.  And, by the way, the reason the Commission had announced a 9 pm ending time for the Sept 24 Albany hearing was because it thought it could be “smart” and prevent a repeat of what happened at the Sept 17 hearing in Manhattan – which had not ended until 9:40 pm.

(4)    For those who have not yet registered for Monday’s hearing, you can still do so – notwithstanding the registration page says on top “”Submissions for this form are closed”.  Just proceed to the bottom & click to registration form.

(5)    Please let me know if you are planning to come, so that we can coordinate strategy, vis-à-vis, media, which will be there.  Again, if you have not furnished me with your written statements about your requests to the Commission to testify at public hearings – and its responses, if any – please do so, as soon as possible.

September 17 (Manhattan) Hearing

It is extremely important that witnesses who testified at the Commission’s September 17th hearing in Manhattan compare the stenographic transcription of their oral testimony with the video – both posted on our webpage “The People Have Something to Say -- & Evidence to Back It Up”, accessible via our homepage, www.judgewatch.org.  Here’s the direct link:   http://www.judgewatch.org/web-pages/searching-nys/commission-to-investigate-public-corruption/people-evidence/menu-people-evidence.htm .  So that you can see why, read my October 25th letter to the transcription company about the stenographic transcription of my oral testimony.  It is attached & here: http://www.judgewatch.org/correspondence-nys/2013-corruption-commission/10-25-13-ltr-to-precise-reporting-with-enclosure.pdf

By the way, my October 25th letter will be invaluable for our demand that court proceedings be audio/video recorded because of the inaccuracy &/or doctoring of transcripts.  Your experience &, more importantly, your filed complaints about inaccurate, doctored transcripts – and about court proceedings for which neither transcript nor recordings are available – are essential to our presentation on the subject to the Commission.  Let me hear from you!

September 17 (Manhattan) Hearing & September 24 (Albany) Hearing

Only by making public what the public is saying to the Commission about judicial and other governmental corruption will we be able to prevent the Commission from getting away with its intended cover-up. Read my October 24th letter to the Commission entitled “Public Access to the Record of the Commission’s September 17 and September 24th Public Hearings: Written Testimony & Other Supporting Materials”, posted on our website, here:http://www.judgewatch.org/correspondence-nys/2013-corruption-commission/10-24-13-ltr-to-calcaterra-with-enclosures.pdf .

Other Important Info

I probably don’t need to tell you that I will be voting NO on Proposition #6 – a constitutional amendment to extend the retirement age of NY Court of Appeals judges & Supreme Court justices to 80, from its present 70.  Earlier this week, I sent you an e-mail identifying that that ballot proposition had NOT been the subject of any legitimate legislative process in the Legislature.  

Catherine Wilson, who testified at the Commission’s Sept 17 Manhattan hearing, responded to that e-mail.  She stated she had done a financial analysis of the constitutional amendment proposal, available through Amazon:  

She described it, as follows: “Uncover the history and reasons behind the 2013 proposed NYS constitutional amendment to increase the judicial mandatory retirement age to age 80, an multi-million dollar exercise that will benefit only 1% of all NYS judges. Includes information regarding the mandatory retirement ages for other NYS employees, statistics regarding judicial retirements and demographic breakdown, and financial disclosure regarding current judicial compensation for judges over 70 collecting both court salaries and NYS pensions.” 

Thank you, Catherine, for your important contribution.

Lastly,

I have not yet written our Petition about the Commission and its hearings – but will do so, hopefully, within the next week.    Our target date for presenting it – to the Governor, etc. – with hopefully thousands of signatures -- will be December 1st – the date on which the Commission’s preliminary report is due.

Thank you.  As always, SPREAD THE WORD….FORWARD THIS E-MAIL!

Elena Sassower, Director
Center for Judicial Accountability, Inc. (CJA)

Saturday, October 19, 2013

A False Light on Corruption: The Moreland Commission

Governor Andrew Cuomo's lack of concern for, and/or knowledge of, New York State's informed citizens  on the issue of public corruption shows when he appointed members of his inner circle to The Moreland Commission.

The Moreland Commission became a joke. What Cuomo wanted to do is glorify himself by setting up a panel to hear about how wonderful he was, and instead, he heard the opposite. I doubt that any more hearings will be scheduled, and I think that Cuomo should admit he was misinformed about the anger and frustration in New York State against the public corruption which is rampant under his watch. People know that Cuomo is not above the other public officials, but is just as corrupt as any of them. Cuomo is, afterall, part of The Family, documented so well by Tom Fitton in his Corruption Chronicles..

Betsy Combier

Off the leash 

Gov. Cuomo's anti-corruption commission shows some teeth

Comments (1)

LINK

Time to play hardball.

Just when Gov. Cuomo’s anti-corruption commission seemed a dying quail, its leaders barraged the state’s major political parties with subpoenas — on top of issuing demands for information from the Legislature.
What explains the sudden show of aggression? You connect the dots.
Dot 1: Cuomo and Attorney General Eric Schneiderman create the Commission to Investigate Public Corruption, with the governor declaring that the panel would be an “independent” force, free to pursue all leads — including any that lead to his desk.
Dot 2: Daily News Albany Bureau Chief Kenneth Lovett reveals that the commission is not so independent after all. Sources tell Lovett that it dropped certain subpoenas under pressure from Cuomo’s top aides.
Dot 3: The shelved subpoenas include one aimed at the state Democratic Party’s “housekeeping” account, which had financed ads promoting the governor’s agenda. In one case, the commission actually delivers a subpoena to the Democrats’ ad-buying firm, then pulls it back.
Dot 4: Reform-minded voices, including this page, warn Cuomo that back-room meddling risks trashing the commission’s credibility — and ruining this generation’s last, best shot at cleaning up Albany.
Dot 5: In a meeting with the Daily News Editorial Board, Cuomo acknowledges that the panel is not truly independent since it answers to him and uses staff borrowed from his office. He also says that he was concerned only that all subpoenas approved by the commission’s co-chairs — Nassau District Attorney Kathleen Rice, Syracuse DA William Fitzpatrick and former federal prosecutor Milton Williams — would be legally defensible.
“If a subpoena is challenged — or the authority of the commission is challenged — and the commission loses, you go to a very bad place right away,” he said, adding that subpoenas were going out.
Dot 6 : A few hours later, the commission announces a unanimous vote to subpoena the “housekeeping” records after all — and not just from the Democrats, but also from the Republican, Conservative and Working Families parties, plus the housekeeping accounts controlled by legislative leaders.
“The meeting was like turning over a new leaf, a fresh start,” one insider told Lovett.
Sunlight brought a not-so-pretty picture into useful focus. Cuomo should stand back and let it stay that way.

Andrew Cuomo's Announcement He Was setting Up The Moreland Commission
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yrD1fgg7u20

NYS Governor introducing The Moreland Commission
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F19-452lLGQ&feature=player_detailpage

NYC Moreland Commission on Public Corruption September 17, 2013
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ltI-1Z5wcXQ

Testimony of Attorney Mark A. Sacha at The Moreland Commission
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A4OuwwwNIF4

Governor Cuomo on NY Utility Companies
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K-pgCqGo0Qw

Will Galison's Interview With Moreland Commission Member John Amodeo AKA "John Owens"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AlK-KOzq538

Testimony of Elena Sassower at the Moreland Commission public meeting
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OZ4CpWkOLlc&feature=youtu.be

Testimony of Will Galison at The Moreland Commission
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwvnSNwEUdo&feature=player_detailpage

Will Galison's attempted interview with Moreland Commission member Regina Calcaterra
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cCUjkviJ5Do

From Elena Sassower:
Has the Commission to Investigate Public Corruption shut down public hearings because of conflicts of interest?

According to the terse October 15th “Statement From Moreland Commission Co-Chairs”, the Commission “will continue its mandate of investigating corruption…holding public hearings…”   http://www.publiccorruption.moreland.ny.gov/press-release/moreland-commission-statement-from-co-chairs

When might those next “public hearings” be?   

Is the reason the Commission is NOT holding “public hearings” because they expose conflicts of interest of Commission members, advisors, and staff?  To date, the Commission has afforded the public only an hour and a half at a single public hearing – the Manhattan hearing – to testify as to the breadth of public corruption within its knowledge and experience.

The Commission’s conflicts of interest were highlighted by my testimony at the Commission’s September 17th Manhattan hearing and by the testimony of Mark Sacha at the Commission’s September 24th Albany hearing, to which I gave audible comment from the audience.    The video clips, as well as the full hearings, are here:   www.judgewatch.org/web-pages/searching-nys/commission-to-investigate-public-corruption/people-evidence/menu-people-evidence.htm

Attached is my October 17th letter to Commission members and special advisors on the subject.  It is posted, with my prior correspondence to the Commission, most importantly, my August 5th  and October 4th letters, here: http://www.judgewatch.org/web-pages/searching-nys/commission-to-investigate-public-corruption/aug-5-2013-ltr-etc.htm .

I am available to answer your questions and to be interviewed.

Thank you.

Elena Sassower, Director
Center for Judicial Accountability, Inc. (CJA)
Cell: 646-220-7987

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

New York State CJC Decides Not To Remove Bronx Surrogate Judge Lee Holtzman

NYS Judicial Conduct Commission Rules Censure, Not Removal, For Bronx Judge Lee Holzman

The New York State Commission on Judicial Conduct has determined that Bronx County Judge Lee Holzman should be censured -- not kicked off the bench, as Commission Administrator Robert Tembeckjian recommended in a rare move this summer.
holzman walking.jpgDaily News investigations revealed that Holzman appointed a friend and political supporter, Michael Lippman, to oversee the estates of Bronx residents who died without wills -- including signing off on $1.5 million in advance fees before Lippman even did any of the alleged work.
Lippman, who had first gotten the estate jobs from Holzman in 2006, according to the Commission, got arrested in 2010 on charges of pocketing $300,000 in excessive fees and faking documents to cover his tracks.
The Dec. 13 Commission determination, made public today, found that Holzman’s doings reflected “poor judgment, rather than knowing concealment of criminal behavior or intent to deceive.” 
The panel also took note of the fact that by law, Holzman, 70, must step down at the end of this year anyway, and cited his “lengthy and unblemished tenure as a judge.”
Three Commission members concurred with Tembeckjian's recommendation to bounce Holzman.
“The Commission and I play different roles in the formal disciplinary process.  I prosecute and make a recommendation, the Commission members render decision, and sometimes we disagree," Tembeckjian, who serves as the group's counsel, said in a statement.
“I believed removal from office was the appropriate result based on the judge’s egregious misconduct.  A majority of Commission members voted instead to censure.  Naturally, I agree with the three who dissented for removal, but now, as always, we move on in good faith to the next case.”
The full determination appears below.
Holzman.Lee.L.2012.12.13.DET