Prosecutors ‘cherry-picking’ judges for sex offense cases.
The prosecutor’s office in Cook County, Illinois has been consistently asking that Judge James Linn be removed from hearing cases involving sexual crimes after he gave what prosecutors considered to be too lenient a sentence (18 years) back in 2013. According to this article, Linn hasn’t presided over a sex case since November 2013, after having overseen more bench trials involving sex crimes than any other Cook County judge the previous 13 years.
The facts came out during a broader investigation into the prosecutor’s office using a tactic called a motion for substitution of judge (SOJ) where, for no articulated reason, the prosecutor’s office can simply request a different judge if they (for any reason) don’t want the one assigned to the case. In Judge Linn’s case, “In less than two years following his controversial handling of Fultz’s case, Linn was bounced from at least 25 sex cases using SOJs, about four times more than the next closest judge”. even more curious, court officials that “randomly” assign judges to cases, aware of the state’s attorney’s campaign, largely stopped assigning sex cases to Linn.“We’ve been SOJing (Linn) on sex cases so long that the last two presiding judges do not even send them to him,” wrote Joseph Magats, then-chief of the state’s attorney’s criminal prosecutions bureau.
The investigation was not limited to Linn and sex offense cases, The investigation also found that prosecutors would SOJ Judge Ann Finley Collins on drunken-driving cases, And one judge, Leo Holt complained that the state’s attorney’s office was removing serious felony cases from his call (he was Black and a former civil rights attorney who had defended, among others, Martin Luther King, Jr.). Another black judge, James L. Rhodes, who handled juvenile cases felt the same. He was quoted in the article as saying, “Their idea with what to do with juveniles is just to lock everybody up, Since I didn’t agree with that…they didn’t want to send cases to me.
It sure sounds to us like a method prosecutors in Cook County, Illinois use to cherry pick judges they think will give them the best chance of winning.
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It sounds to me like the judge simply reduced ad hominem jury verdicts to charges that were actually legally proven in the proceedings. Pretty sure that’s exactly what judges are supposed to do, and it’s a bit depressing that so few judges are willing to do that, particularly in state superior/criminal courts.
Sex cases are particularly problematic in that regard. Juries often convict based on the horror story told by the DA (often overstated) rather than whether or not the evidence presented proves the allegations actually happened.
Aside, “judge shopping” is illegal in many states, and at least unethical (bar violation) where it isn’t. At the very least someone should submit a formal grievance to the bar association against the county DAs office.
Interesting find:
https://www.kjnewswire.com/4536/book-release-people-v-money-corruption-scandal-rocks-florida-court-system
Book Release: People v Money- Corruption Scandal Rocks the Florida Court System
Entrapped
I was shocked to see Justice Alan Lawson on the list. After the courts denied my early release of probation 3 different times, on appeal HE treated me with respect and dignity. He spoke to me as a human being, not a sex offender. He immediately ruled to end my probation 6 years early.
Color me surprised.
So they got “caught” in this county and someone actually cared enough to write a story. THAT is the surprising part.
So, in each case, they are denying defendants equal access to the law and courts. Isn’t that a basis for appeal? Sounds like a constitutional violation – maybe of due process?
This is action from a prosecutor who touts herself as a champion for criminal justice reform. See her link:
https://www.cookcountystatesattorney.org/about/kimberly-foxx
Why is this a surprise? Cook County Illinois (ie Chicago) is one of the most infamously corrupt government entities in our nation. Let’s not forget, Illinois had THREE former Governors go to federal prison one after the other.