Utah Judge Out of Control

The Deseret News link did not work in my first post so I ahve included the article below:


Hunters Target Judge
Her views on sport trigger ouster effort via Internet
By Geoffrey Fattah
Deseret Morning News

Utah deer hunters have a new target in their sights: 3rd District Judge Leslie Lewis.
Leslie Lewis Members of the hunting community have started a grass-roots campaign to oust Lewis after she ordered that a defendant's brother be arrested for expressing displeasure with her views on hunting during a hearing last February.
Opponents have launched a Web site, www.firejudgelewis.com, that contains a link to the in-court video of the February episode, which has been posted on the Web site YouTube. The posting is one of the first instances of Internet campaigning being used in a judicial election in Utah.
"She thinks she's God in her courtroom," said hunting advocate Tony Abbott, who hosts The Big Outdoors, a local radio show on KFAN AM1320. Abbott said he has no ties to the court case but is just expressing his personal views. He said Lewis' lecture has angered some people who believe she should be voted off the bench during next month's judicial-retention election.
Lewis is among 24 district-court judges up for retention election this time around. She has caused controversy in the past for her occasional verbal outbursts. She is also the only district-court judge up for retention who received a sub-standard score in two areas of a recent survey by attorneys who appear in her court.
According to the survey of 123 attorneys, 60 percent found Lewis' behavior "free from bias and favoritism." Only 54 percent of the attorneys approved of how she "perceives legal and factual issues." Under standards set by the Utah Judicial Council, judges should pass with 70 percent approval or greater. Lewis has countered that under state law, she passed the review by receiving at least 70 percent approval on 75 percent of the 15 questions in the questionnaire.
The hunting-community controversy stems from a February hearing on a third-degree felony count of wanton destruction of protected wildlife filed against Michael Jacobson. In the hearing, Lewis was recusing herself from the case because of her personal bias against deer hunting.
While expressing her views, Lewis confronted Jacobson with questions of how he feels while shooting a deer. Jacobson's brother, Kent Jacobson, stood up to leave the courtroom. Lewis ordered a bailiff to bring him back into the courtroom.
"Now, why did you feel the need to make such an explosive and clear indication of your displeasure or boredom at being here?" Lewis asked.
Kent Jacobson responded: "OK, it's not just the displeasure of being bored here. The problem is, is we have just as much rights of going out and shooting deer as you have the right ..." He was then cut off by Lewis.
"What are you talking about?" she injected, and then ordered that he be arrested and sent to a holding cell.
Court records show Lewis recused herself and sent the case to Judge Dino Himonas, who ordered Michael Jacobson to pay $2,500 in restitution and to give up his hunting rights for two years.
In a statement released Wednesday, Lewis said she was constrained by the Code of Judicial Ethics from debating or commenting on the matter.
"It's my obligation as a judge handling a criminal calendar to maintain control over my courtroom," Lewis stated. She also points out that she has been certified by the Judicial Council as fit to stand for re-election.
Abbott said he planned to dedicate his call-in show Wednesday evening to discussing Lewis' actions. He declined to identify the people behind the creation of the anti-Lewis Web site.
If voted out, Lewis would become only the second district-court judge to be removed from the bench by voters. In 2002, Judge David Young was ousted by a 53 percent vote after a public campaign was waged to unseat him over accusations of leniency and bias involving sex offenders and DUI offenders.
 
Sounds to me she was about to throw the book at a poacher then the poachers brother started getting lippy about how he has the right to poach deer.

Why are we trying to oust a judge that doesn't like poachers. Who cares if she doesn't like deer hunting, would you rather have her just give this poaching idiot a slap on the wrist.

Maybe there's more to the story, but thats what I got from it.
 
I vote in every election possible, and I ALWAYS vote to replace judges. After a judge has served a term or two, they get to know the ins and outs of what they can and can't do. Then they get caught up in the self imposed power they have. Give a judge enough time, and they will become tyrants. VOTE 'EM OUT!!!! Fresh judges are always a good thing, and short terms keep them honest.
 
I didn't find the brother lippy at all, I thought he was actually quite respectful under the circumstances. She never mentioned poahing at all, she obviously has a grudge against all hunters, legal or not. That lady thinks her crap don't stink, and her pompus attitude is outrageous for a person in her power/position. She is the definition of the word b##tch. If I lived in Utah I'd surely vote her out. Now that doesn't excuse the guy for poaching.
 
Send her to the Reality TV series where she can do her mouthing like Judge Judy and the rest of those idiots.

Brian
 
Will someone please post the results after the election? I can't wait to see how this turns out.
 
I wish I wouldn't have voted yesterday. That's good information. She definitely stepped beyond her bounds.
 
>I wish I wouldn't have voted
>yesterday. That's good information.
> She definitely stepped beyond
>her bounds.
 
I didnt watch any of the video, he was charged with destruction of protected wildlife? what did he do or what was he accussed of?
 
the issue isn't about his charge... she "recused" herself from his case... after doing so she then began a rant against him...

Keep in mind that at this point his cas has NOT been adjudicated he's not guilty of anything. So, she goes on to tell him that she's biassed against anyone that would shoot a deer. She asks him how he could do it when he can see it's living etc. This is a lecture AFTER she's no longer going to hear the case. She used her thrown to lecture the man about how imoral he was regarldess of the guilt or inocence of his charge. When the guy in the audience let out a guffah... she asked him to explain himself as though he was a SERF rather than her EMPLOYER.

When he explained that anyone has as much legal right to poke a hole in a deer (assuming durring season etc) as she has to be offended she had him cuffed and held in contempt. She is a queen in her court and she'll not be confronted on her personal biases off point as she lectures the public..

You following now? It's not about the case whatsoever or the guilt of the accused, he wasn't even really involved int he interchange. This is about a woman drunk on power that feels she can arrest those who disagree and casn use her pulpit not to find justice but to bludgeon the public.
 
When it rains it pours . . . I found this article in the Salt Lake Tribune today:

Judge in hot water over sentence cut
Sex offender's term allegedly reduced with prosecutors unaware
By Stephen Hunt
The Salt Lake Tribune
Salt Lake Tribune
Article Last Updated:10/31/2006 03:05:32 AM MST

Authorities are investigating whether a controversial Utah judge secretly knocked 10 years off a sex offender's prison sentence.
Third District Judge Leslie Lewis allegedly had an ex parte (one side only) conversation with a defense attorney and subsequently reduced his client's sentence by 10 years without consulting prosecutors.
"We did an investigation regarding allegations of misconduct," Salt Lake County District Attorney David Yocom said Monday. "We have filed a complaint against the judge before the [state Judicial Conduct Commission.]"
The complaint claims Lewis asked the defense attorney not to tell prosecutors about her plan to reduce the sentence. It also accuses Lewis of altering the date of the sentencing change.
If the allegations are ruled valid, the Utah Supreme Court could reprimand Lewis or remove her from office.
Lewis - a 15-year veteran of the bench who faces a retention vote in the general election on Nov. 7 - could not be reached for comment Monday.
JCC investigations and disciplinary actions are generally kept secret unless the high court takes severe action against a judge.
Defense attorney Roger Kraft said it all began with a bad day he had in Lewis' courtroom on Feb. 10. Kraft was before Lewis for the sentencing of his client, 46-year-old James Robert Scott, who had pleaded guilty to three counts of sodomy on a child.
The attorney said he left the courtroom feeling furious over the way Lewis had treated him and his client.
"There's nothing harder than trying to make a sex offender not look so bad in front of Judge Lewis," Kraft told The Salt Lake Tribune. "But every argument I made, she argued with me, she interrupted me."
And when Kraft noted that his client had been molested as a boy, Lewis argued that experience made Scott all the more culpable because he knew how it felt to be abused, Kraft said.
Kraft's experience with Lewis was apparently not an anomaly. In a survey of judges, Lewis scored low on questions about her courtroom demeanor and whether she is free of bias.
Lewis ordered Scott - who had sexually abused a 7-year-old girl - to serve 30 years to life in prison by running three 10-to-life terms consecutively.
Prosecutors had asked for 30 years to life, but a pre-sentence report recommended 15 to life.
Back at his office after the sentencing, Kraft penned a letter to Lewis to vent his frustration. "It is my job to argue BEFORE the court and not WITH the court," Kraft wrote.
A month later, on March 15, Kraft got a phone call from Lewis, who offered an apology.
"She said she went back and watched the video [of the hearing] and said I was 90 percent correct in my letter," Kraft said.
Kraft said his letter did not ask Lewis to reduce Scott's sentence. But during their phone conversation, Kraft said he told the judge, "I'm hoping our [courtroom] banter didn't cost my client an additional five or 10 years."
After Kraft reminded her of the stiff sentence, Lewis said, "If I still have jurisdiction, I'm going to change that," according to Kraft.
Offering to reduce Scott's sentence by 10 years, Lewis promised to send Kraft documentation of the change, he said.
Then Lewis said something that turned Kraft's pleasure to discomfort.
''She said, 'I would appreciate it if you don't discuss this with the prosecutor,' " Kraft recalled. ''She said it at least two, and maybe three, times.''
Kraft said the situation put him in an ethical dilemma.
''I'm bound and sworn to look after the best interests of my client,'' he said. ''I'm feeling elated that she's going to try to reduce the sentence by 10 years. On the other hand, did she just tell me not to talk to the prosecutor?''
Lewis never sent anything about the sentencing change to Kraft, who said he didn't learn Lewis had actually reduced Scott's sentence until July 26, when he got a call from a public defender who wanted to discuss Scott's petition to the Utah Court of Appeals.
''When I became officially aware she had changed [Scott's sentence] I was saying, 'Holy crap! What am I supposed to do?' " Kraft said.
Kraft said he decided to report the matter to prosecutor Patricia Parkinson, who also was unaware of the sentencing change.
The proper way to try to change a sentence is with an appeal or with a motion asking the court to reconsider, Kraft said.
Once a sentence has been handed down, said Yocom, ''there is not a way for the judge to go back and change it'' without notifying the prosecution.
A comparison of court records with the timeline of events raises questions about when Lewis reduced Scott's sentence.
According to Kraft, the change could not have occurred any earlier than March 15, the day she called him. But the court docket shows only one sentencing date - Feb. 10 - and only the revised 20-to-life prison term.
There is, however, this note on that date's docket: ''The court having given additional thought to the sentencing of the defendant, now orders sua sponte [of its own motion] that counts 1 and 2 are to run concurrent to each other and count 3 is consecutive to count 2.''
Yocom said the amended sentence "obviously didn't take place on that date."
The Utah Attorney General's Office plans to file a motion seeking to set aside the amended sentence, Yocom said.
Kraft said he was reluctant to talk about the case "right before the elections" but said he wanted to ensure the facts were correct.
"I don't think it's right what she did," Kraft said, adding he feels sorry for Lewis. "Here's a life's worth of work that looks like it's going down the drain."
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