
Corruption Scandal Shakes Brooklyn Court
August 4, 2003
By TOM HAYS
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -- After 14 years on the bench,
Judge Victor Barron spoke with authority at a sentencing last year when
he declared, "No one is above the law."
The sentencing, after all, was his own.
The silver-haired Brooklyn judge was led out of the courtroom in
handcuffs to begin a three- to nine-year prison term for taking
thousands of dollars in bribes - perhaps the most troubling scene so
far in a judicial corruption scandal that one watchdog group calls the
worst in the nation.
Since Barron's conviction,
authorities have
arrested a second Brooklyn judge for allegedly accepting gifts from a
corrupt lawyer, kicked a third off the bench for breaking rules on
rental property and scrutinized a fourth for his handling of his
elderly aunt's life savings.
District Attorney Charles Hynes has
launched a grand jury investigation into the cozy relationships between
Brooklyn's elected judges, lawyers and politicians in response to
allegations that civil judgeships - with annual salaries $125,000 or
more - are for sale.
At issue is an arcane system in which
voters pick delegates to a judicial nominating convention, but do not
pick the judges themselves.
Critics say the system allows
political party leaders to steer nominations to judicial candidates who
have strong party ties and deep pockets - not sound legal credentials.
And because the city's most populous borough is heavily Democratic,
that party has had a near lock on selecting judges.
"You have to
be connected to get on the bench in Brooklyn," said Alan Fleishman, a
reform-minded Democratic district leader. "Are there payoffs? There's
always been that buzz in the court community."
Party leaders
have denied that the selection process is corrupt, and point out that
malfeasance also occurs in states where voters choose judges more
directly.
Still, honest judges find the Brooklyn allegations
"deeply upsetting," said Judith Kaye, the state's chief judge. "No one
is more eager than they to see corruption and misconduct rooted out."
Watchdog
groups have called for independent judge-selection panels, nonpartisan
elections and other reforms to counter Brooklyn's growing reputation
for judicial corruption.
"We haven't seen anything as severe as
what's coming out of Brooklyn," said Bert Brandenberg, spokesman for
Washington D.C.-based Justice at Stake.
The scandal's latest chapter centers on a mother's despair, a box of 25
Dominican cigars and videotape.
In
October, the mother - fearing she had lost a bitter child custody
battle before Judge Gerald Garson - was approached by a courthouse con
man who told her the judge could be swayed with a bribe, authorities
said. She reported the encounter to prosecutors, who soon learned the
man was working with a lawyer to solicit bribes of up to $10,000.
After
another judge authorized the use of video eavesdropping, investigators
secretly recorded the lawyer meeting Garson in his chambers and plying
him with the cigars and cash, a criminal complaint said. The lawyer
also was overheard in separate conversations bragging that he had
bought the judge meals and loaned him money in exchange for favors.
Confronted
with the tapes, Garson told investigators that judge nominations could
be bought for $50,000 - and the wider inquiry was launched.
Garson,
70, has pleaded innocent to a charge of receiving reward for official
misconduct. His lawyers have accused Hynes of inflating a possible
ethical violation into a felony case.
True to the clannish
nature of Brooklyn's judicial and political circles, both Garson's
cousin, Michael, and his wife, Robin, also are on the bench - and in
the sights of investigators.
Michael Garson, 59, has faced
allegations that he looted his 92-year-old aunt's bank accounts to
cover stock losses. About $500,000 is unaccounted for since 1997, when
the aunt granted him power of attorney. No charges have been brought.
Investigators
also have reviewed financial records for 49-year-old Robin Garson's
successful campaign for a civil court seat, but have made no
accusations of wrongdoing.
In May, an appeals court removed
another Brooklyn judge, Reynold Mason, after finding that he illegally
sublet his rent-stabilized apartment to his brother-in-law and used the
money to pay child support.
Then there was Barron, 61, who
admitted accepting $18,000 in cash in his chambers to approve a
multimillion-dollar civil settlement. A Westchester County judge
assigned to the case told him at sentencing that he had "made a joke
out of (Brooklyn) and that's terrible."
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