The grass
roots coalition of judicial
reform activists known as
J.A.I.L.
(Judicial Accountability
Initiative Law), have
managed against all odds
to bring forth their Initiative
directly to the voters in
South Dakota.
The group
seeks to pierce the veil
of Judicial Immunity that
judges in this country enjoy
and often abuse. Such legal
immunity shields judges
from all civil and most
criminal liability stemming
from any decision(s) they
may have issued pursuant
to or in conclusion of legal
proceedings before them.
For more background, see
How the Courts Stole the
Right to Petition for Grievance.
This self-serving
court-made rule, first proclaimed
by the courts in 1793 and
which is unsupported by
any text in the Constitution,
prevents recovery of damages
suffered by litigants proceeding
before a judge where the
judge violated the law;
see Supreme Court’s affirmation
of the rule,
Stump v. Sparkman, 435 U.S.
349 (1978). (a case
where a judge unilaterally
ordered the sterilization
of a 15 year old girl, involuntarily
and w/o her knowledge, solely
on the verbal request of
her mother who complained
that her daughter was dating
men too old for her.)
In practice,
what this means is that
the courts and the judges
who run them have formed
a united cabal that protects
itself and its members from
ever being liable for decisions
and orders they issue, no
matter how illegal.
The courts
maintain that rule, irrespective
of egregious or plain violations
of law a judge’s actions
may have been. It makes
no difference whether a
judge’s actions caused wrongful
death, permanent injury,
wrongful imprisonment, property
destruction or other offense.
It makes no difference whether
the judge even had jurisdiction
or authorization of any
kind under law, to do what
he did, the rule says they
are completely immune from
redress of the aggrieved
parties, and preempted from
being sued for their otherwise
unquestionably tortuous
acts.
In South
Dakota, a private businessman
subsidized the J.A.I.L.
Initiative, obtaining 46,800
ballot signatures, and attaining
the right to put forth directly
to the SD voters whether
to make the Initiative effective
as State Constitutional
Law....
Such provisions,
if they achieve inaction
into law, would act as a
people’s safety net against
judicial malpractice, and
provide a civil remedy for
those aggrieved by a judge’s
legal negligence. Although
considered revolutionary
in legal circles, the law
would be only effective
after standard due process
has been given a chance
to correct any perceived
breaches of judicial discretion.
Under the
new law, judges still retain
the benefit of the doubt
when someone questions their
judicial actions; a potential
complainant against some
judge must first exhaust
all judicial remedies available
under traditional due process,
i.e., working within the
court system, motions to
reconsider, appeals, certioraris,
mandamus’, etc. . . . and
giving the system a chance
to police itself.
But if
after all this, an unsuccessful
complainant still feels
justice is being subverted,
he would have the right
to petition a special grand
jury, required by the law
to be made up of citizens
who are not attorneys, judges,
police officers or judicially
related employees.
The special
grand jury would have the
power to hear the complaint,
review the evidence and
the record, have subpoena
powers as needed, and upon
good faith consideration,
would also have the power
to formally strip the defendant
judge of his presumptive
entitlement to judicial
immunity.
A complainant/plaintiff
would then have the right
to prosecute a civil suit
against the judge for any
legally wrongful and civilly
liable acts the judge may
have committed while presiding
over the subject claimant’s
case. Such a suit would
proceed like any other civil
suit, with all other protections
and due process’ in place.
Legitimate causes of action
provided by the new law,
would be constrained to
otherwise uncontroversial
breaches of a judge’s authority
and scope of discretion,
specifically:
•Deliberate
violations of statutory
law, violation of non-discretionary
court rules of procedure,
or that of the state or
federal constitutions.
•Fraud
or conspiracy.
•Intentional
violations of due process.
•Deliberate
disregard of material facts.
•Judicial
acts without jurisdiction.
•Acts that impede the lawful
conclusion of a case, including
unreasonable delay and willful
rendering of an unlawful
judgment or order.
It is the
acknowledged hope and motivation
of the Initiative’s proponents
that the mere threat of
appeal to such a special
grand jury will act as a
wake-up call to the judiciary,
and without even being invoked,
would induce the courts
to clean up the judicial
sloppiness and abuse that
legal immunity allows to
go unchecked.
It is expected
that the quality of court
administration and judicial
determinations will increase
significantly from the enactment
of this law.
Proponents
of the Initiative hope that
if it meets with success
in South Dakota, a precedent
and example will be set
for the rest of the nation,
and enthusiasm for the new
law will spread to other
states.
The Initiative,
having only qualified as
an elective choice for SD
voters, has already caused
major official backlashes
from those who stand to
gain by maintaining the
status quo, as almost all
politicians, attorneys,
judges and pro-government
newsmedia in South Dakota
have lambasted the Imitative,
and implausibly argue that
somehow judges should never
be legally responsible when
they break the law.
Furthermore
instead of clear explanation
in defense of judicial immunity,
critics of the initiative
resort to questioning the
reputations and motivations
of the its proponents, imputing
some spurious or nefarious
agenda.
The South
Dakota legislature as a
body even went so far as
to pass an official resolution
urging the voters to vote
against the initiative.
State officials
have spent public funds
convening hearings, lobbying
the public with advertisements
and official notices, threatening
that anarchy and social
chaos will occur if it succeeds
at the ballot box. The media
and statist pundits regularly
misrepresent the terms of
the Initiative in editorials
and articles to the public,
claiming that convicted
felons will be able to sue
judges for the sheer fact
they were found guilty,
(In fact,
under the Initiative a judge
would still be immune from
such suit if s/he administered
the proceedings pursuant
to law)
Despite
the fact that elected officials
have neither the jurisdiction
or authority to take an
official stance on such
ballot initiatives, they
have used their official
status and tax payer dollars
to oppose this grass roots
popular effort for reform;
this is both a conflict
of interest and usurps the
public’s discretion to make
an independent choice.
In November 2006, hysterical
South Dakota legislators
and the legal community
will find out if the voters
choose to demand effective
accountability from all
employees of the government,
or if they will let judges
continue to proclaim that
they can legally "Do
No Wrong", a legal
principle that they claim
as their divine right and
legacy, conferred directly
from the social class of
pre-Magna Carta Kings and
Royalty.
"It is better to
have a bad plan, than no
plan at all"