From: Jack Venrick [jacksranch@skynetbb.com]
Sent: Wednesday, September 16, 2009 10:51 PM
To: AJack R. Venrick
Subject: Fw: * * * California Courts
Closing Its Doors * * *
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, September 14, 2009 2:28 PM
Subject: * * * California Courts Closing Its Doors * * *
J.A.I.L. News Journal
Judicial Accountability Initiative Law
______________________________________________________
Los Angeles,
CA
September 14, 2009
A Public Service Announcement to America
(To be removed from this PSA see instructions below)
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The Battle Lines are Drawn: J.A.I.L. versus The Foreign Power
A Power Foreign to Our Constitution
Today is September 14. In just two days all of the courts in the State of California will be closing. Our California judicial system is in total shambles, while the judges are prospering. They can now sit along their pool side with lemonade while they collect not only their full salary, but an additional $46,000.
During the last two decades of the California courts an appellate court has found that the Los Angeles County judges have been taking $46,000 in annual County bribes. This payoff of the judges by the County of Los Angeles has influenced their decisions whenever the County of Los Angeles has been a party to an action. In fact, Attorney Fredrick Bennett, who was assigned to all cases involving judges, has boasted that in all his years he has never lost a case wherein a judge was called into account. I, Ron Branson, testify that when I appeared in federal court as a plaintiff against a Los Angeles judge, Mr. Bennett would sport with the judge in my presence prior to the case proceeding. His conversation, my not remembering the names, went as follows; “How is your wife Helen? How is your son, Johnnie and your daughter Mary?” This was his manner of letting me know that he has an intimate relationship with the federal judge as though having picnicked with the family last Saturday. In effect, he was laughing at me over the very idea that I would seek to hold a Los Angeles judge accountable.
Economically, the chickens are coming home to roost, and now the courts are facing financial turmoil and having to close. For those of you not familiar with the judicial system here in California, the author of the below article is California Chief Justice Ronald George. I was called by the Los Angeles Times, and on the other end was Reporter Jessica Garrison. She asked me, “Do you know who Ronald George is?” I said yes, he is the Chief Justice of California. She said, “That’s correct. I just got off the phone with Ronald George and he says he knows you.” I said to her, I’m very impressed, but he has nothing good to say about me. She said, “That is correct.” I then told her that Ronald George has said in the media that I am out to destroy this “wonderful judicial system” we have here in California.
She asked me if I would meet with her for an interview. I told her yes, and I met her at Sitton’s Restaurant. She was quite a serious person, and during that interview I decided to enter a little humor. I said to her, “I’m going to call Ronald George and arrange for lunch with him.” She asked, “Why would you do that?” I to her “You said that Ronald George knows me, so I thought we should get together and discuss getting JAIL4Judges passed here in California.” She did not crack a smile.
Anyway, below you will see Ronald George mourning the closures of his courts throughout California. He has entitled it, “Justice Takes a Day Off.” If it is any consolation to him, I am here announcing J.A.I.L.’s goal to post the Judicial Accountability Initiative Law on our California Secretary of State’s website, and the endeavor to place Judicial Accountability on the California ballot in California for November, 2010. Ronald George’s help in this endeavor will be appreciated. We know this news will spread across this nation very fast.
Enjoy as you read the words of my dear ole’ friend, Chief Justice Ronald George. He was kind enough to write about me in his State of the Judiciary message for 2007, so if you care to write him, tell him Ron Branson sent ya.
Ron Branson
* * *
Los Angeles Times
In California, justice takes a day off
https://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-george14-2009sep14,0,6922678.story
The state's chief justice says shutting down the courts one day a month will be a burden -- and a test of our ability to deal with fiscal crisis.
By Ronald M. George
September 14, 2009
Starting Sept. 16, the largest court system in the
nation will be closing the doors of courthouses across the state one day each
month. On Wednesday, an estimated 3 million cases will be delayed, 150 jury
trials interrupted and 250 child custody cases unheard. Jails will be more
crowded as arraignment and release dates are postponed; attorneys and their
clients will be inconvenienced, as will jurors; and the public will experience
longer lines, more delays and more crowded courtrooms.
Wednesday is the first of 10 monthly statewide closure days (uniformly the
third Wednesday of each month) authorized by the Judicial Council, the
constitutionally created body that administers California's court system. As in
many other states, the council was created in the 1920s, an outgrowth of the
Progressive movement, which sought to make government more efficient, more
effective and more accountable. The mission of the council today remains
largely unchanged: to ensure the consistent, impartial and accessible
administration of justice in the state.
Why then is the council, a body created to protect and increase access to
justice in California, allowing our courts to close for even one day a month?
California's economic crisis has affected government at all levels and in
nearly every area of service, as well as every aspect of private life and
business. For seven months, Californians have endured the effects of mandatory
furloughs for many state workers, first two days a month and now three. But
courts are not state agencies. And courthouses -- known earlier in our history
as "temples of justice" -- are not just office buildings; they are
the repository of our fundamental commitment to justice for all. The unintended
yet inevitable symbolism of "Closed" signs on institutions that
embody our democratic ideals is yet another tragic indicator of the severity of
California's economic crisis.
The Judicial Council, with express authorization from the Legislature and the
governor, made the difficult decision to close courts one day a month to avoid
even more damaging consequences of reductions in the judicial branch's budget.
This course of action was taken with great reluctance at an emergency public
meeting in July, after substantial input from local courts and after months of
examining alternatives. In the end, court closures proved to be the only
rational option available to address budget realities while protecting skilled
employees from massive layoffs, maintaining a consistent level of court
services for litigants and their lawyers, and preserving equal access to
justice. Indeed, the Superior Court of Los Angeles County had already concluded
that closures were inevitable and in July became the first court in the state
to implement monthly closures.
At the emergency meeting, I pledged to reduce my own salary to share in the
sacrifice we are asking of the majority of the 21,000 men and women who work in
the California judicial branch. I also encouraged my judicial colleagues across
the state -- more than 1,600 trial judges and an additional 111 appellate
justices -- to join me in voluntarily waiving their salaries for one day a
month or donating a portion of their salaries to support court operations. I am
gratified to report that a very high percentage of the judges in the state have
pledged to either participate in the waiver or to make private donations to
their respective courts. As The Times recently reported, that figure is
exceptionally high in Los Angeles, where 423 of the 430 judges are
participating in voluntary pay reductions.
At this critical juncture in our state's history, even as the judicial branch
is forced to close courts one day a month, the state court system itself
remains stronger and better able to deliver on the promise of equal justice
under law because of the many changes we have made in the last several years.
In the years I have served as California's chief justice and chairman of the
Judicial Council, the judicial branch has undergone the most significant
structural reforms in our state's history.
The court reforms of recent years rival those of the Progressive era and will
exceed them in the benefits they provide to the public. Legislation in 1997
that allowed for statewide funding of the trial courts addressed historic
inequities in the quality of justice dispensed among California's 58 counties.
In 1998, California voters approved an amendment to the state Constitution to
permit the unification of the 220 Superior and Municipal courts into 58 trial
courts -- one in each county. Unification has allowed greater flexibility in
the use of judicial and staff resources, eliminated duplicative services and
led to the creation of additional services for the public, such as collaborative
justice courts, domestic violence courts, drug courts and complex litigation
courts. Finally, the Trial Court Facilities Act of 2002 called for the transfer
of responsibility for court facilities from the counties to the state. This
allowed the judicial branch for the first time to assume responsibility for the
buildings in which judges and court staff work and the public is served, and to
do so economically and effectively. To date, 503 (more than 90%) of our court
structures have been transferred to the state's ownership under judicial branch
management.
These historic changes and the growing responsibilities of the council have
been a means to an end. They have strengthened the judiciary as a coequal and
independent branch of government and secured the system of checks and balances
essential to a robust democracy. They have addressed budget inequities among
trial courts around the state. They have improved our branch's accountability
to our sister branches of government for the financial appropriations provided
to the courts. And ultimately they have enhanced equal access to justice and
provided a greater degree of accountability.
One irony of the current crisis is that it restricts court services at a time
when the need for them is increasing. The economic downturn has produced a
sharp spike in civil filings, especially in the areas of contract and unlawful
detainer, which includes evictions. This increase has more than offset a small
decline in criminal filings. What this means to judges and court staff is that
we are asking them to do more with less. What this means for all Californians
is that we must provide adequate resources for courts to resolve disputes in an
orderly manner, or suffer the consequences of being unable to meet the public's
needs.
When I served as a trial judge in Los Angeles during the 1970s and '80s,
California was still in its age of abundance. Today we are in a far more
challenging time. The fiscal crisis in our state will have profound effects on
many aspects of public service, including the courts, in the next fiscal year
and for several years to come. I am committed to protecting the public from the
full impact of further reductions in court services, and from any decline in
the high quality of justice that so many have worked so long to achieve.
My hope is that as we are tested by this crisis, all of us -- state government
officers, justices and judges, court employees and Californians everywhere --
will join together in meeting these challenges. How we proceed will tell us a
great deal about the prospects for our state in the years ahead.
Ronald M. George is chief justice of California and chairman of the state
Judicial Council.
Copyright © 2009, The Los Angeles Times
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