Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Meg is back in New York. We all heaved a sigh of relief that New York escaped the hurricane relatively unscathed. Today Meg returned to the city she has taken to calling “home.” Soon I will be joining her.
The entire situation has a certain surreal quality. I am sitting in an apartment topsy-turvy with books and other junk spread out all over, just trying to figure out what to do with everything I own. The thought of actually packing my car, driving across the country, then finding a place to live seems like more of a tv show pilot than my life. A month seems like a long time, until I tally up everything I have to do, then it seems like a blink of an eye.
New York itself is intimidating. I have been there many times, but the only time I stayed there for an extended period I found life difficult. Adjusting to all those people, everywhere, all the time is a major switch. While I grew up in Chicago, a big city but not New York, I have lived in Denver for 33 years. This change may be uncomfortable for a while.
Still, I am excited. New York is so much fun. It is vibrant, and exciting, and full of everything. During the summer they play baseball every day in New York. Broadway has 33 shows. The library is awesome. Most of all, Meg is there. I will be able to see her perform. No more six months between visits.
I don’t know how this will work out. But I can go anywhere. If not New York, maybe Chicago where I still have family, or Boston where I went to college. There is only one way to find out.
Underlying everything is the knowledge I can always come back to Denver. I plan to maintain ties to all my friends here through the miracle of modern technology. (I actually have some Facebook friends.) Should life elsewhere not be what I expect or want, Denver will be here. Who knows, maybe the DA’s office will let me work there for a fourth time. (But please no more plaques.)
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
I mean seriously. You have to read this one to believe it. Two grown children sued their mother for causing them emotional distress by being a bad parent. Maybe you could understand it if she beat them, locked them under the stairs, or kidnapped them in violation of a court order. However, this was nothing like that. The children alleged their mother failed to give them money for their birthdays, told her son to wear his seat belt or else she would call the police, and called her daughter to come home early from homecoming. Early was midnight. The trial court threw this garbage out and the appellate court upheld that ruling.
However, according to one report, the mother cannot get attorneys fees. The kids’ attorney’s fees? No problem, they were represented by their father, who had won a child custody case against the mother when the two were children.
This is why people lose respect for attorneys as a profession. As far as I am concerned not only should the prevailing mother be allowed to collect attorney’s fees for defending a frivolous action, she should be allowed punitive damages, and the father should face disciplinary action. He won’t. Lawyers who pull crap like this never face disciplinary action. (I will resist the temptation here to go into a diatribe about attorney discipline.)
Can you imagine if this kind of ridiculous bullshit found a sympathetic judicial ear? I am pretty sure I failed to get Meg a birthday present this year. That would be worth a few thousand dollars in emotional distress. I remember when she was about 12 she was in acting camp and gave a monologue at the camp’s performance. I had to miss it because I was judging in night court (and thus, solidifying my credentials for Supreme Court justice). Certainly, Meg’s psyche was severely damaged. I mean come on.
When did people get the idea the answer to everything is a lawsuit? It seems every issue in American life ends up in front of judges. Believe Colorado schools aren’t properly funded? File a lawsuit relying upon a vague statement of principle in the state constitution to force more funding. Think Obamacare is a bad idea? Get your Attorney General to sue the federal government and that way the tax dollars you whine are being wasted can be spent to pay for attorneys on both sides. Concerned that some insignificant rodent will lose its habitat if we build a dam to make life better for millions? Have a federal judge enjoin the whole thing for decades to figure out how to save the thing that you would set a trap for if it came in your house. On and on and on.
I know lots of judges. Many of my best friends are judges. Judges are by and large, smart, impartial, and dedicated to applying the law the way they believe is correct. However, I am not convinced that judges should resolve every single problem people have with each other. Sometimes, you just have to take your lumps. I mean really, should judges be deciding whether some school’s dress code is too restrictive? I don’t want the government to violate anyone’s constitutional rights, but how minute should that protection be?
I understand protecting constitutional rights. When drafting legislation it was one of my primary concerns. (For those of you turned off by my arrogance now would be a good time to stop reading. I am going to blow my own horn here and it will get pretty deep in a second.) The best drafting I think I ever did was the funeral protest bill of 2006. Everyone knows about the Phelps church people who picket the funerals of soldiers all across America in some kind of protest about homosexuality. Following one of these disgusting (but constitutional) displays in Colorado, the legislature wanted to pass legislation to stop it. The first bill I saw I felt was clearly an unconstitutional violation of free speech. After a great deal of research I drafted some legislation I think would allow restraints on their behavior, but not a strict prohibition. Fortunately, we were able to get the law passed pretty much as I drafted it. (Don't get confused by the headline on the article, it doesn't reflect the copy.)
The Executive Director of the ACLU said this law as written could not be challenged on its face. Phelps and his followers, despite claiming the law would not deter them, have not been back. I mean, how good is a criminal statute that once passed never has to be enforced because the offensive behavior has been deterred? I have not closely read the U.S. Supreme Court opinion about Phelps which was issued following the drafting of these statutes, but I don’t believe most of what I drafted would be subject to attack. But I am sure, someday, its constitutionality will be determined by a panel of judges.
Monday, August 29, 2011
There is an opening on the Colorado Supreme Court. I need to get my application together. What? You think I am not qualified? How dare you.
First, I have judicial experience. True, it was only as a part-time judge in municipal court, and I got fired from that, but that is more judicial experience than a lot of Supreme Court justices had before taking the bench. I think presiding over several speeding and a couple of dog at large jury trials well-prepares me for the kind of decisions the Supreme Court has to make. Admittedly, I was never required to make a lot of legal rulings, but serving as a municipal judge put me in touch with the people. I realize my demeanor being in touch with those people is what got me fired, but hey, Joe Torre was fired three times before he became manager of the Yankees. We all learn from our mistakes.
Plus, I have appellate experience. I wrote about 60 briefs for the Attorney General’s Office. Yes, only one was in the Supreme Court. And in that case, while they first accepted certiorari and agreed to hear the case, following oral argument they changed their mind and dismissed it as “improvidently granted.” Which was my second experience in front of the Supreme Court. The first time I persuaded them to hear my Rule 21 appeal of a district court ruling from Georgetown, but after all the briefs were filed they dismissed that one, too, as “improvidently granted.” Not such a good track record at the highest level, but, still, I do have some appellate experience. Some Supreme Court justices had none prior to their appointment.
Also, I have extensive professional experience at many levels of courts; in both urban and rural areas; and in many aspects of criminal law. So, while some might call my career “checkered,” I like to think of it as varied and diverse.
You might be thinking there must be better candidates. For example, my friend Bob Russel who made the final three for the last opening a year ago. Sure, on the face of it, Bob appears to be the superior applicant. He has served on the Court of Appeals for the past eight years, following stints as the supervising prosecutor in the appellate sections of both the United States Attorney’s Office and the Attorney General’s Office. Excellent preparation for the Supreme Court, but not nearly as good as working night traffic court. Bob is perhaps the most intelligent person I know, but really, how important is intelligence for an appellate judge, I mean compared to a varied and diverse career? Bob is also widely-respected and universally-liked. But the Supreme Court is no popularity contest. Someone with an edge, like me, might be able to shake those other justices up.
Tomorrow I am going to get to work on my application. It will look a little light since in the past five years I have only tried a single case and handled no appeals. However, I did advisements about 500 times. How many other applicants can make that claim? I need to get five people to write letters of recommendation. That might be a problem. But I have written a lot of letters for other people. They owe me. Hopefully they will forget about the other stuff.
Sunday, August 28, 2011
Grammar
Friday, August 26, 2011
Trials
Thursday, August 25, 2011
New York City is preparing for a hurricane. Hard to believe. The mayor is actually talking about evacuations. Meg is checking maps to see if her apartment is in an evacuation zone. She is still in Denver and will miss the storm, but the impact will be felt long after she is scheduled to go back next week.
The idea of a hurricane hitting the City is unfathomable to me. I cannot imagine 70 mile an hour winds whistling between the buildings on Broadway or shaking the Empire State Building. Storm surge flooding Battery Park. Subways shut down. Power out. How can you survive in a high rise without electricity? In many buildings the widows don’t open. How many windows might break?
Evacuations? Eight million people live in New York City, over a million and a half in Manhattan. Most of them do not own cars. How can that many people evacuate an island? Where will they go? The storm will have impacts miles inland. Not to mention everyone on Long Island, New Jersey, etc. having to evacuate. (I suppose this means Snooki will have to leave.) The Weather Channel said 60 million people live in the path of this storm.
I will be watching the news intently through the weekend. New York is full of cameras. This should be the most well-documented weather event in history. Will the Statue of Liberty’s island flood? Will winds knock down massive amounts of trees in Central Park? How about the Brooklyn Bridge? It is over 130 years old.
Meg and I were fortunate enough to see New Orleans before Hurricane Katrina. It was a charming, vibrant city. Quaint old buildings hosting hot jazz and big drinks (the most famous ironically known as “The Hurricane”). When we returned after Katrina it was not the same. Could a hurricane have the same kind of impact on New York? Much of lower Manhattan is landfill. Could the sea reclaim that land? Can flooding cause permanent subway damage? There are dozens of bridges, and a tramway to Roosevelt Island. La Guardia Airport is right on the water.
Can you imagine all the crap that will be flying around if the winds are over 70 miles per hour? This will be one for the ages. I keep hoping something will push this away or reduce its force. If not, New York City might never be the same.
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