Archive for the ‘Other’ category

Tennessee House committee rejects plan to make it easier for judges to carry guns in courtrooms

April 2nd, 2012

2011 saw a slew of bills introduced and enacted to make it easier for people in general, and judges in particular, to carry firearms into courthouses and courtrooms. Tennessee, for example, enacted HB 2039 / SB 1775 which authorized judges to carry firearms into a courtroom. However, under the law, the judge must :

  1. have a handgun carry permit
  2. successfully completes 16 hours of POST court security training
  3. successfully completes eight hours of POST firearm training on an annual basis
  4. be vested with judicial powers and in the actual discharge of those official duties as a judge

The fourth provision was aimed at limiting a judge’s ability to carry to his/her own courtroom.

Dissatisfied with the restrictions, HB 3222 / SB 2942 was introduced. It would effectively eliminate the training requirements (i.e. elements 2 and 3 listed above) from the existing law, allowing any judge with only a carry permit to being a firearm into his or her courtroom.

The matter was heard before the Tennessee House Judiciary Committee’s General Sub-committee on March 21. The plan was ultimately rejected on a 2-4 vote with one member voting present. The video below was from that hearing.

Montana: Legislative referendum to require supreme court be elected by district thrown off ballot

March 26th, 2012

I mentioned previously that Montana’s 2011 legislature passed SB 268 a referendum to require election of supreme court justices from districts that was to on the ballot in 2012. The proposal was to enacted a law to require election by district and not a constitutional amendment.

Because it was a mere statute, however, a state trial judge in Montana has struck SB 268 (now known as LR-119) off the ballot. In sum, the court held that election-by-district was a qualification for office that could only be altered by constitutional amendment. An appeal to the state’s supreme court is expected.

Reports on the decision are available from Gavel Grab.

Minnesota judicial discipline legislation would allow appeals to legislative committee from Board of Judicial Standards

March 23rd, 2012

Details are starting emerge about possible legislative changes to the judicial disciplinary process in Minnesota. As I noted yesterday a strike all amendment was being offered today to an existing bill (SB 2205) that as originally drafted would have let a newly reconstituted Board of Judicial Standards, made up of only legislators, open any prior complaint against any judge “for any reason.”

The amendment removes all language regarding changes to the Board, creation of a legislatively enacted Code of Judicial Conduct, etc.

Section 1 does broach the issue of reopening existing complaints. It amends existing statutes (490A.02 Subd. 4) to add a new paragraph that reads

(b) Upon receipt of a referral from the Joint Legislative Committee on Judicial Ethics, the board shall reopen a matter previously disposed of by the board.

Section 2 creates a Joint Legislative Committee on Judicial Ethics, made up of the House Ethics Committee and Senate Rules and Administration Committee’s Subcommittee on Ethical Conduct. A person who field a complaint with the Board and remained dissatisfied with the Board’s decision could send it on to the Joint Committee, which would then have several options:

  1. they could determine the judge is “disabled, incompetent, has committed conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice, or has otherwise violated the Code of Judicial Conduct or other law applicable to judicial administration or conduct” and refer the matter back to the Board
  2. they could determine grounds for impeachment exist and recommend the House in fact impeach the judge
  3. they could dismiss the complaint (though not explicit in the bill, the author stated this was an option at today’s hearing)

Joint committee meetings would be subject to the state’s open meetings law, but could be closed a majority vote of the Joint Committee at the preliminary stage only. If further proceedings were deemed warranted by the committee, the allegations or charges “must be open” unless:

  • a judge’s health records, a judge’s medical conditions, or other information not deemed publicly accessible under existing state law (Chapter 13) are discussed
  • non-publicly accessible information under the rules of the judicial branch is discussed
  • non-publicly accessible information under some other law regarding public access to records is discussed

Nevertheless, a judge could insist on an open meeting at any point in time.

The bill, as amended, was immediately tabled.

Minnesota Senate Committee on Judiciary and Public Safety to look at judicial discipline tomorrow; as-yet unreleased strike all amendment to be offered

March 22nd, 2012

I’ve mentioned that over the course of the last year, indeed the last several years, the Minnesota legislature has had a keen interest in the state’s judicial disciplinary board (the Board of Judicial Standards) and has indicated an interest in creating a statutory Code of Judicial Conduct (rather than letting the state supreme court do so).

In the Minnesota Senate this effort has taken the form of SB 2205, itself the companion bill to HB 1568 which was introduced last year. As I noted when HB 1568 was introduced, the bills:

  1. Strips the Supreme Court of the power to suspend temporarily a judge during an investigation and transfers it to the Board exclusively.
  2. Strips the Supreme Court of the power to “retire” permanently a judge and transfers it to the Board exclusively.
  3. Allows the newly constituted Board to open any prior complaint against any judge “for any reason.”
  4. Gives the Board the power to enforce a new Code of Judicial Conduct enacted by the legislature

A meeting of the Senate Committee on Judiciary and Public Safety, to which SB 2205 was referred, is set for tomorrow March 23. Interestingly, a revision has been made to the agenda, indicating an as yet unreleased “delete everything amendment will be considered for discussion… No public testimony will be taken at this time. The bill as amended will be discussed and then laid on the table. No final vote will be considered.”

The meeting is to start 9:00 local time and may have video streaming here.

 

Creating court security fees in Minnesota

March 20th, 2012

The recent spate of courthouse shootings and attacks has brought the focus back to court security and specifically how to pay for it.

Several states provide for court security fees to be added to civil and/or criminal cases. Minnesota is considering such a plan, one that would allow counties that feel the need for such a fee to impose it up to $15.

This video is from the March 15, 2012 hearing on the bill (HF 2000) before the Minnesota House Judiciary Policy and Finance Committee.

Bans on court use of sharia/international law: Bills withdrawn in Minnesota and New Jersey, Kansas House attaches ban to unrelated bill

March 20th, 2012

This post has been updated. Click here.

The last several weeks in the examination bans on court use of sharia/international law have seen something new: while such bans have been voted down in committee before for t he first time authors are starting to withdraw the bills outright.

Minnesota’s SB 2281 was withdrawn the day it was introduced. According to WCCO TV:

Before the bill was even introduced, the author, Republican Dave Thompson pulled it. “It was never my intent to introduce legislation that was being targeted to any one group,” said Thompson.

The second bill was New Jersey’s AB 919 (introduced in the 2010/2011 session as AB 3496). Introduced January 10 of this year, the bill was withdrawn last week. The NJ Assembly Republicans blog on March 13 quotes the bill’s author (GOP Assemblywoman Holly Schepisi):

In the climate of what has been transpiring in the Muslim community in New Jersey, they were concerned it would further, in their view, portray Muslims in a negative light. After sitting and listening to their concerns, I agreed to withdraw it.

The legislature’s website, however, does not yet show the bill has having been formally withdrawn. (No direct link to bill status page, follow this link and search for bill AB 919).

The other activity was in Kansas. SB 79, as originally introduced, had nothing to do with international law or sharia. Instead, it made a modification to an existing state program that helped courts recover fees/fines owed. That bill passed the Senate unanimously.

Yesterday (March 19) the House changed the bill entirely. The House substitute for SB 79 simply replicates the language of HB 2087, which the House had passed in 2011 and the Senate had declined to advance.

Readers may recognize this tactic on the part of the Kansas House. When the House approved bills to end merit selection for the state’s Court of Appeals, bills the Senate did not take up, the House started to add provisions to unrelated bills (see here, here, and here). The difference here is that rather than tacking on the new provision to the existing bill, this effort simply replaces the text of the bill entirely.

Full roster of 41 bills introduced and their statuses after the jump.
» Read more: Bans on court use of sharia/international law: Bills withdrawn in Minnesota and New Jersey, Kansas House attaches ban to unrelated bill

Bans on court use of sharia/international law: South Dakota governor signs, dead in Florida, failing to advance in any other states

March 13th, 2012

This post has been updated. Click here.
If February was the active month for legislative bans on court use of sharia/international law, March may turn out to be the quiet month.

Yesterday (March 12) South Dakota’s governor signed into law HB 1253 which reads “No court, administrative agency, or other governmental agency may enforce any provisions of any religious code.”

The other activity, or lack thereof, was in Florida where that state’s multiple efforts failed to advance before that legislature adjourned. (Missouri’s Rules Committee passage was more procedural than substantive).

The possibility of any other state advancing such bans is diminishing; already many proposals have failed to meet internal legislative deadlines to advance out of their committees or chambers of origin (so-called “crossover” days).

Full roster of 39 40 bills introduced and their statuses after the jump.

Update 3/13/12 10:40 a.m.: Minnesota SB 2281 added
» Read more: Bans on court use of sharia/international law: South Dakota governor signs, dead in Florida, failing to advance in any other states

Louisiana becomes 6th state to consider legislation in 2012 to combat filing false liens on judges

March 12th, 2012

I mentioned only a few weeks ago that 5 states (Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, Nebraska, and Pennsylvania) were considering legislation to address the practice of filing false liens or similar documents on the property of judges and/or court staff. Louisiana’s legislature, which is scheduled to come into session this week, now becomes the 6th state to confront the issue this year.

HB 616 creates the specific crime of  filing a false lien against a court or law enforcement officer. “Court officer” is defined to include

  • any active or retired justice of the peace, any active or retired judge of a city, parish, state, or federal court located in Louisiana
  • any district attorney, assistant district attorney, or investigator within the office of a district attorney
  • any city prosecutor, assistant city prosecutor, or investigator within the office of a city prosecutor
  • the attorney general and any assistant attorney general or investigator within the office of the attorney general

Those who did file a false lien would be subject to a fine ranging from $500 to the amount of the value of the false lien, plus up to two years imprisonment.

HB 616 is currently assigned to the House Administration of Criminal Justice Committee.

Maryland: Punishing judges for their opinions via the Commission on Judicial Disabilities; judges are just “employees”

March 7th, 2012

The last several years have seen efforts to make use of the judicial disciplinary process to examine judicial opinions and punish judges for those opinions.

The latest such effort is Maryland’s HB 1061, a constitutional amendment that:

  • Authorizes Commission on Judicial Disabilities to remove a judge from office for refusal to enforce applicable law, rendering a decision contrary to applicable law, or knowingly disregarding applicable law.
  • Provides judge found by commission to have engaged in above conduct forfeits pension.
  • Provides any person may file complaint alleging above with commission.

Prior coverage here.

The video below is from the hearing held this afternoon on the bill.

Iowa’s House debates carrying firearms into courthouses

March 7th, 2012

I mentioned two weeks age the failed efforts in Wyoming’s House to tighten restrictions on the carrying of firearms into courthouses. This week, it appears to be Iowa’s turn.

HB 2361 is primarily focused on prohibiting localities from enacting gun laws tougher than the state’s. Specifically, it declares the regulation of firearms, firearm accessories, and ammunition to be the exclusive domain of the state.

HB 2361 does however carve several exceptions to this general rule. One in particular provides “this section [declaring regulation of firearms exclusively the state's] shall not be construed to prevent…A governing board for a city hall, courthouse, or public hospital from adopting and enforcing rules regulating or prohibiting persons from carrying or possessing firearms, firearm accessories, or ammunition in the buildings or on the grounds of the city hall, courthouse, or public hospital.” (emphasis added)

The same day (February 23) HB 2361 was filed an amendment (H8030) was filed as well that would delete this exception.

On March 2, another amendment (H8078) was introduced. This would strike the entire bill and replace it with two provisions. The first amends the existing statutory prohibition on carrying of firearms in schools and extend it to “courthouse buildings”. The second changes the phrasing of the power of a political subdivison to “regulate” gun ownership/carrying/possession.