Thursday, February 21, 2013

Psychopath,Judge Maria Stratton, laughs because she thinks well of evil troll Judge Manuel Real

Way below is an article where it is clear a Federal Court judge, Manuel Real, is a corrupt sack of crap. I don't have to be temperate and use legalese to express exactly why Judge Manuel Real is a pox on the legal system and humanity. I can call him a sack of crap and leave it at that,  because I am not a lily livered  member of the yellow bellied L.A bar etc. I am merely an ex defendant in the Clara Foltz courthouse and then a litigant in the civil courts who was victim and witness to the extreme abuses of power that permeate the Los Angeles legal system

Well, some members of the bar have right to be scared enough to stay silent. The  lawyers I hired for 14k were scared enough and then dirty enough to take the money but not do any of the work they were paid for.

Judge Manuel Real had a storied history of intimidating lawyers into submission and getting away with it for years. He jailed many lawyers who sought to use their education and skills to protect the rights of their clients,  and he made them know not to fight for their clients or else. The "or else" is jaling and professional ruin. Pretty Serious stuff. It is no wonder that the lawyers in my case ran off, but it is a wonder that they saw fit to take the money and run.

 Despite some recent censure and the vast familiarity so many in the L.A legal world have of  Manuel Real's cruelty and lawlessness, Judge Real still sits smirking on the bench. There on a federal bench, he is perched, and ready to dole out more and more injustice till his dying day.  What a screwy system. Judges commit treason and crimes against humanity, and they can't be removed. It's bad in all courts but it's really bad in the Federal Courts. There they have judgeship for life, and the bad judges take full advantage of this lifetime pass. In my case, there is some small(very small solace) that such trespassers of law such as Judge Maria Stratton, Judge Karla Kerlin, and Judge Samantha Jessner, have been moved to other courts for the time being. Unfortunately, I recently discovered that Judge Jessner might have been moved to the Mental Health Court not as a punishment but as a reward. So, it goes. And, so absolute powers are absolutely awful to behold when so abused.

 The law just doesn't apply to judges and they steal liberty and even life, and get away with it . It's a national tragedy that too few know of. But, one where everyone seems powerless to change it.

Back to Manuel Real and why I even am privy to this dastardly bastard.

 For many years while Manny was up to NO GOOD,  Maria Elena Stratton was there in that very courthouse. Her alleged role: To protect the rights of those too indigent to pay for top flight attorneys(the type you would need if facing a federal charge,)

Judge Maria Stratton was the first female federal Public Defender. How prestigious. Her and her husband, Paul Sadowsky, are quite the power couple. Maria Stratton   was the last line of defense between a defendant having rights or having those rights "waived." The last line between justice and injustice, liberty and confinement.

And, I shudder at this thought. I shudder too at the thought of Judge Maria Stratton running for office or pursuing a federal judgeship. It is bad enough that Judge Maria Stratton is on the loose, at all. The fact that she might try to attain even more power is something that should be a national concern. Shudder.

I shouldn't be shuddering alone. This is very scary. Why? Because, Judge Maria Stratton is a true blue human monster who has the power to destroy. She followed no law and was a willing and gleeful conspirator when she lorded over the poor souls who might find themselves in Division 95 of the L.A Superior Court, a few years back. Her actions leave not one doubt that she is a vicious opportunist masquerading as a public servant.


  She denied any bail in my case in contravention to all known law, and she worked hand in hand with malicous shleppers like Martin Boags and Richard Vagnozzi to decimate me and my family . She did so because she strove to help the prosecution avoid a trial that they would lose, if any law was considered. She did  so because she is corrupted to the extreme, and is willing to do things we'd only expect from Hiteler or Stalin or other ruthless demagogues. Even many ruthless demogues would not sink so low as did Judge Maria Stratton.Well, guess what? Judge Maria Stratton got foiled. And, the her cronies in the prosecution and police got foiled too . At the last minute, a Dr. Suzanne Dupee, came and saved the day

 


 and Judge Maria Stratton looked very upset when she had to cross this out.


Very strange that the commitment papers prepared by the clerk have no date of printing or preperation. No?

Recently, I found out that Tig Notaro, in order to pursue her cancer hoaxes and other malfeasances, is telling a Zeke Iddon, and others that I was "committed" in order to have others not listen to what I have to say. Thanks Judge Maria Stratton et al for allowing her lies to live and even thrive.

Well, Tig Notaro is as low as it gets, and that's no surprise. Why this Zeke Iddon wart sees fit to defame me in this way all over the internet is another stupid mystery.

But, Zeke Iddon, and anyone else who might see this: No, I was never comitted though such an ominous ploy was in the works.The same ploy then used on Melissa Balin.

 
Evidence? This is all I have in document form.




 



But, Judge Maria Stratton was not satisfied and only after DA Mathew Byrne told her to set any bail she wanted cause he didn't know about the case would she even then suddenly come up with the random figure of 10k. This make no sense. If you consider that I never did one thing to compromise the Own recognizance release I had maintained for 15 months then it really makes no sense and shows that the lawyer I had retained is not doing his job and that Judge Maria is a sociopath who is very knowingly conspiring in this dark ages ploy.

Flash Forward to 4 months later and being left at the mercy of a political minded public defender named Alissa Malzman Sterling who didn't want to lose it all but didn't want to win it all and upset those she would work with everyday. She was happy to win 6 and throw one to the prosecution. I was not. Neverthless, these were the disposition, Judge Jessner and Kerlin and Stratton and the Mayor's dim looking sister, and Robert Vanderet, and all you shmucks who see every defendant as guilty no matter what.



SEVEN CHARGES EITHER DISMISSED OR AQUITTED.  FOUR CHARGES ADDED  A MONTH BEFORE TRIAL AS  A MEANS TO TERRORIZE ME INTO A PLEA, DISMISSED BY THE PROSECUTORS IN THE "FURTHERANCE OF JUSTICE." This was done right before trial. The nature and addition of the charges are too obscene to believe. I'll get to that later.  2 CHARGES ACQUITTED BY THE HONORABLE JUDGE MOORE ON AN ORAL MOTION FROM THE DEFENSE. VERY VERY RARE DISPOSITIONS, MARIA THE MONSTER. I wish I could think that you feel awful about what you did, but you wouldn't do it in the first place if you weren't a sociopath.

I'll start shouting. Then, one charge, which the public defender threw, in order to make nice with the prosecution ended in a hung jury. If any effort was made on this charge it would have been acquitted but as Alissa Malzman Sterling admitted, " I work for the city."So it was hung 11-1 for guilt. And, Judge Randolph Moore, saw enough,and understood enough, and immediately dismissed it in the interests of justice. Hmmmmm! Lawyely types know what that means, and how very rare and telling is such a disposition. No retrial for you, Freulein Katie Ford. Bernie Brown is going to be so angry with you. Carmen Trutanich won't invite you to any parties,  Los Angeles City Attorney Katie Ford. You tried so hard and you lied so hard and you still lost. You were a good nazi but god was on our side. Too bad so sad etc.

 This is the utterly baseless and wasteful trial that Judge Maria Stratton tried to derail by participating in a Stalin Era Competency Scheme. She is evil, plain and simple and she must not attain higher office. This would pose an even more serious danger to society. Ironically, Judge Maria Stratton is a danger to others and should be forcibly medicated with potent anti- corruption medicines. I suggest that the doctors at Patton be on high alert as she is as dangerous as it gets.

So, I know of such judges like Manny" the monster" Real. So many it's too scary to recount. The most wicked were Judge Samantha Jessner, Judge Maria Stratton, and Judge Karla Kerlin.
Judge Richard Fruin, Judge Gerald Rosenberg, Judge Mark Mooney, Dennis Landin, and Robert Vanderet are all complicit and corrupt bastards but the three ladies mentioned above are just even more chilling to behold. The jury is still out on the Mayor's dim seeming sister, Mary Lou Villar De Longoria(such a fancy name for such a shabby idiot) A virtual coven of judges, those three. Samantha Jessner, Kerlin, and Stratton are darkhearted characters who blatantly conspire with malicious prosecutions and are willing to utilize tactics from the dark ages to assist their voting base i.e prosecutors and police. They don't even pretend. It's astounding to see them grinning, as they ignore every right you were taught existed, and make a joke out of every amendment known to man.


 Well, I posted this long thing cause I just found this article on Manuel Real, and this sick shrew, Judge Maria Stratton, is laughing "cause she thinks well of him." Him being a lawless disaster named Judge Manuel Real. OMG, she's too much. The crimes and betrayals she must have involved herself in as the Federal public defender. The stuff of a million nightmares. Now she lords over the unsuspecting, and their terrorized attorneys,  in the Van Nuys Courthouse. Poor poor Van Nuys defendants or plaintiffs(depending on who can't sufficiently pay off Judge Maria Stratton.)I bet in between breaks, she has giggling fits just thinking about Manny Real's wicked ways. hee hee hee trills out of her twisted and dessicated lips.God, she is so so ugly inside and out.   The deranged witch inside is most apparent on her mug.

It's good that she looks so lousy. Jessner and Kerlin don't look as bad yet. Their evil will soon attack their faces, as it has with the hideous Maria. But for now their deceptive visages make you feel safer and then you are even more shocked when you realize that these ladies are PSYCHOS drenched in sociopathy.
Kerlin looking kind of evil, on second thought. She was a cutthroat Vegas show girl before being a dirtbag legal professional. Tragic. Go back to dancing, Karlatini. PLEASE.

Samantha "Satan" Jessner  playing at judge while quietly stewing in evil juice. Run children, run. This Poly Parent is perverted!!! She was a corrupt federal prosecutor before becoming a filthy judge . I'd bet she and Maria Stratton strategize ways to screw people over Lattes at Starbucks.


Me, looking at some motion I had to write to stave off these nutjobs. I'm better looking but this will do ;(



Ugly Maria's husband, Paul Sadowsky, must know. I'd bet Gregory Jessner is just as bad as his vile wife too. One wouldn't want Paul Sadowsky as their civil rights lawyer. He cannot be a good man if he married a monster like Maria. Maria Elana "the Sharma loving ogre" Stratton won't allow any bail for no legal reason and she ordered notoriously greedy doctors to falsify reports when she was the lord of Division 95. She broke all laws and her Hipaa violations are obscene. What a disgusting display of absolute corruption masquerading as some elite of the legal world.  So much dirt on that evil bitch, and soon it will be presented. But, in the meantime, those who may google Judge Maria Stratton, look at this article, and note this pearl from the diseased viper that is "Judge Maria Stratton."

“Everybody has a horror story about a trial they had with Judge Real,” says Maria Stratton, laughing because she thinks well of him. She was the public defender for the Central District of California from 1993 to 2006 and is now a judge in Los Angeles Superior Court

Stay strong Mr. Gary Dubin.You won't be seen as a kook some fine day soon. Maybe your enemies will get stricken as Tig Notaro was. Justice must come somehow.


Features

Real Trouble

A federal judge's behavior could move the line between judicial freedom and misconduct

Posted Sep 1, 2008 7:10 AM CST
By Terry Carter



Judge Real
Photo by Virginia Lee Hunter

Gary Dubin spent 19½ months in a California federal prison and returned to Hawaii in October 1996 to practice law. The state’s Office of Dis­ciplinary Counsel, in an extremely unusual decision concerning a matter of moral turpitude, determined that a finding of pro­fessional misconduct was “not warranted.” Later, even the U.S. Internal Revenue Service reversed itself, saying he didn’t owe the $1.5 million that was the basis of his three misdemeanor convictions for failure to file tax returns.

In fact, the agency gave him nearly $100,000, including interest, from payment in an earlier tax year. The IRS had found that he indeed had substantial business losses and deductions for the years in question, and that they could be carried back.

He can’t recoup the time behind bars; the same goes, thus far, for the $131,000 the judge fined him. In 2006, the IRS looked into the possibility of crediting the fine to his next tax liability, but found it couldn’t because the money went to the court.

Dubin still seeks redress beyond his vindication from the bar and the IRS. He has filed complaint after complaint in venue after venue against the man who sentenced him—including a 2006 mandamus petition to the U.S. Supreme Court, where cert was denied.

Dubin had been Hawaii’s example in “Project Esquire,” a nationwide dragnet by the IRS to snare lawyers for failure to file tax returns. Dubin’s case had been scheduled for a bench trial with a magistrate there.

But on short notice, it found its way to the docket of U.S. District Judge Manuel L. Real—a jurist known for a heavy hand with errant lawyers in the Central District of California—who was visiting on the bench from Los Angeles.


Gary Dubin
Photo by Chris McDonough

Dubin claims Real, now 84, railroaded him 14 years ago. It is a rare federal judge who hasn’t at­tracted such complaints. But there have been many similar complaints about Real (the judge pronounces it “reel”) over four decades by plaintiffs, defendants and lawyers alike, as well as appellate decisions occasionally attacking the judge’s handling of cases. Three times this year, cases have been summarily removed from Real’s docket.

In one decision by the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in March, U.S. v. Hall, the court remanded the case of two men convicted of securities fraud and ordered that it be given to a different judge.

The opinion noted “the catalog of inappropriate behavior by the trial court is long, so we merely summarize it here.” One example: “Sua sponte interposing adverse evidentiary rulings with such frequency that the government was effectively relieved of its responsibility to make objections.”

“That’s what he did to me, among other things,” says Dubin. In May he reworked his detailed, document-rich petition and filed it with the Judicial Conference of the United States, which recently expressed serious concerns about the judge’s actions in scores of cases going back to the mid-1980s.

Since his conviction was upheld on appeal (though the 9th Circuit accepted on its face a crucial finding of fact that seems indisputably erroneous), Dubin knows he is seen by some—especially since serving as his own lawyer—as a kook wearing a tinfoil hat.

“I have to pursue it,” the 69-year-old Dubin still says. “It was wrong.”

JUDICIAL REVIEW

The Judicial Conduct and Disability Committee of the U.S. Judicial Conference asked (PDF) the 9th Circuit Judicial Council in January to review 89 of Real’s cases in which the appeals court found problems. (The number reportedly has been cut some­what. And the review would not include Dubin’s con­viction, because it was upheld on appeal.)

Judge Real did not respond to requests for an interview. He has granted them a number of times over the years with various publications. But he lately has hunkered down and lawyered up to battle investigations into whether he has a “pattern and practice” of not giving reasons for his decisions when required and whether it is “willful.”

“The most interesting and far-reaching question is what are the limits? Where do you draw the line between judicial freedom to make mistakes—wrong decisions—which is protected, and judicial misconduct, which isn’t?” says Arthur Hellman, a professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law and a leading authority on federal judicial ethics.

“Does there come a point where a willful pattern and practice becomes misconduct?” Hellman continues. “This touches closely on the substance of judicial decision-making, which is off-limits from dis­ciplinary proceedings. It could be a major test case of where that line is.”

David Oswalt, a senior counsel in the Los Angeles office of Arnold & Porter, heads Real’s team of lawyers, which draws from other firms as well as academia, but says he cannot comment given the nature of the proceedings.

After congressional rumblings in recent years about replacing the judiciary’s self-regulation with an inspector general, the U.S. Judi­cial Conference is pushing harder for circuits to deal more forcefully with errant judges. Real became a prominent example in this effort. He was called to appear at a 2006 hearing of the U.S. House Judi­ciary Committee, which was considering his possible impeachment.

“If the Democrats had not taken back control of the Congress shortly after that, he might have been impeached,” says Henry Weinstein, who for many years covered the 9th Circuit for the Los Angeles Times before recently leaving.

On the heels of such criticism, the U.S. Judicial Conference implemented in April the first-ever nationwide rules and procedures for all circuits’ handling of judicial mis­con­duct com­plaints. It’s a step away from the decentralization that has given the circuits wide latitude in dealing with their own.

And one element in the new dis­ciplinary procedures was clearly tailored to address the kinds of issues that have come up with respect to Real.

The changes resulted from recommendations by a committee headed by Supreme Court Justice Stephen G. Breyer. In 2004, partly responding to complaints from Congress, then-Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist created the committee to study wheth­er the 1980 Judicial Conduct and Disability Act had been effective in dealing with complaints against judges.

The Breyer committee found that while for the most part the law was effective, there were significant shortcomings in high-profile matters. The report detailed several instances without naming names, but one could be clearly identified as Real. The report said that actions by the chief judge and circuit council in dealing with a com­plaint against him were “incon­sistent with the law.”

The rules declare that a “chief judge shall not undertake to make findings of fact about any matter that is reasonably in dispute.” Still, the complaint against Real was twice dismissed by Chief Judge Mary Schroeder based on her own findings—and upheld by the 9th Circuit council.

Likewise, the Judicial Conference’s conduct committee found its hands tied when con­­sidering an appeal by the complainant: It could re­view only matters in which a chief judge named a spe­­cial investigative committee, which Judge Schroeder had not done.

Under the new rules suggested by the Breyer committee, the conduct committee now can request that a circuit appoint one.

Compared to federal rules for judges, state canons for judicial ethics are more specific as to what judges can and cannot do. And it has been a long-held belief in the federal circuits that they could, and should, effectively police their own—often with a quiet, personal touch.

In the early 1990s, Charles Geyh, a professor at the Indiana University School of Law, interviewed more than 30 current and former chief judges in the circuits to study how they handled complaints against judges. He found that informal measures for dealing with abusive or troubled judges seemed to work.

“But as I’ve gotten farther down the road and also studied judicial discipline at the state level, I’ve begun to appreciate that even if federal judges take keeping a clean shop seriously, there still are two problems: The public doesn’t know that they’re doing so, so they suspect nothing is happening; and federal judges take pride in collegiality, making it very hard for them to deal with their own dirty laundry.”

REAL’S MODEL


Gregory Ellis
Photo by Thomas Broening

Over the years, Manuel Real has told a story about a case he had as a young prosecutor in the early 1950s in front of a judge who became his judicial role model.

Real was prosecuting two men charged with sending pornography through the mail—nothing more than bare breasts; it was the early 1950s. One pleaded guilty before Judge Peirson Hall, who promptly acquitted the other in a bench trial. The first man then asked to withdraw his plea and go to trial with Hall. The judge agreed.

That piqued Real, who demanded a jury trial. The judge obliged, telling his courtroom clerk to call a jury for 10 p.m. Real said he couldn’t prepare that soon.

Hall’s reply: Case dis­missed for lack of pros­ecution.

The story brings smiles to most who hear it. But if adopted generally, such an approach in the courtroom could free the guilty or send the innocent to prison.

Los Angeles criminal defense lawyer Stanley Greenberg believes one of his clients spent more than a year behind bars, fully innocent, before the case, U.S. v. Mayans, was remand­ed and later dropped.

On appeal, the 9th Cir­cuit found Real made four reversible rulings concerning testimony and evidence. But the circuit was particularly rankled about what it viewed as the unconstitutional denial of an interpreter for the defendant, who had come from Cuba and struggled with English.

The remand opinion noted that “we find ourselves in the peculiar situation of being unable to review the district court’s determination that appellant did not need an in­terpreter. The trial judge never conclusively made that determination, but rather urged appellant over and over to try testifying in English—to ‘try it.’ ”

Otherwise, Real had said from the bench, the testimony “takes twice as long.”

Although Greenberg, who was a federal prosecutor in L.A. in the early 1970s, is reluctant to criticize Real, others familiar with the case say he’s still dismayed nearly 16 years later. At trial, instead of asking wheth­er the prosecution had any more questions for a witness, an exasperated Greenberg is said to have asked if Real had anything further to add.

“He’s a complex person and there is another side to him,” Greenberg says now. “I’ve seen him do extraordinarily compassionate things from time to time, taking great interest in probationers and actually reading whatever I submitted—which you don’t always expect with other judges.

“But given a choice, it’s not a courtroom I’d ever choose. It’s very unpleasant because he makes it very unpleasant.”

Off the bench, Real is described by most who know him—including some who try to avoid his courtroom—as a caring gentleman and a charming, pleasant figure at social and professional gatherings.

Manny Real, as many call him, grew up in San Pedro, Calif., where he lives today. His parents emigrated from Spain and his father was a grocer.

For decades, he has insisted his law clerks live near enough to him that they can ride together for the 35- to 45-minute drives to and from the courthouse.

“It was our alone time with the judge,” says Gregory Ellis, who clerked with the judge from 1999 to 2000. “We would listen to NPR and discuss the news, or we could talk to him about pending cases, what he thought of them, any motions we had heard; and if he had them, he’d ask us questions.”

Real takes an interest in staff throughout the courthouse, Ellis says: “He tries to create a family atmosphere for everybody.”

After finishing at Loyola Law School of Los Angeles in 1951, Real spent four years as an assistant U.S. attorney there and then 10 years in private practice with his brother in San Pedro.

In 1964, a close friend who was an influential Democrat recommended him to be U.S. attorney in Los An­geles. Just two years into the job, Real was appointed to the federal bench by President Lyndon Johnson.

Probably Real’s most significant judicial decision came early in his career. In 1970, he ordered busing to desegregate the Pasadena public schools. It was the first such order outside the South. A Perris, Calif., elementary school was later named for him.

His most notorious decision was in 1985, after Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt appeared before him on a contempt charge from another judge in U.S. v. Flynt.

At sentencing, Flynt repeatedly taunted Real: “Motherf-----, is that the best you can do?”

Not to be outdone, Real upped the ante each time: from six months to 12 months to 15 months. The scene was in the 1996 movie The People vs. Larry Flynt.

In real life, Real was reversed; the 9th Circuit ruled Real did not take into account Flynt’s mental competency.

PERSONAL TOUCH


Victor Sherman
Photo by Thomas Broening

With more normal defendants, Real is often known for his compassion, and—sentencing guidelines be damned—if he thinks a person is salvageable, he crafts unique remedies, often with thousands of hours of community service in lieu of doing time. He monitors each of these probationers personally.

In a case in 2000, he went too far to help one of his probationers. On his own motion, Real seized her personal bankruptcy case and, based on ex parte communication with her, stopped her landlord (former in-laws) from evicting her or even collecting rent.

It is the matter that found its way into the Breyer committee’s report for having been mishandled by the 9th Circuit.

“Because he cares so much and gets personally involved in cases, I think that sometimes backfires on him,” says Laurie Levenson, a former federal prosecutor in Los An­geles and now a professor at Loyola Law School there.

Real received a public reprimand (PDF) in January for his handling of the bankruptcy matter, though it took five years after the initial complaint was filed in 2003. Interestingly, the complaint came from Stephen Yagman, a lawyer with no interest in the case—other than a grudge against Real.

It is a grudge Yagman has carried since 1984, when Real fined him $250,000 for unprofessional conduct in a civil suit. Yagman was a prominent civil rights lawyer with a specialty in police misconduct.

Yagman said at the time that Real “is a tyrant who is a disgrace to de­­moc­­racy—he is a modern-day Torque­mada. He suffers from boredom and indulges himself in infantile and harsh behavior to create situations to alleviate his boredom.”

The 9th Circuit reversed the ruling and remanded the case for another judge. Real refused to let it go and instead sat on it—he was waiting for a ruling in another case in which he asked the appellate court to vacate an order taking that matter from him.

Real then did the unthinkable.

He filed personal petitions for certiorari with the Supreme Court, in 1986 and 1987, asking that the two cases be returned to him. Cert was denied on both In re Real and Real v. Yagman.

Earlier this year, Yagman went to prison, convicted of tax fraud. And there is no word on the source of a more recent and more significant complaint about the judge. But Yagman’s case drew so much scru­tiny that other complaints were bound to gain traction.

When the Judicial Conference’s conduct committee upheld a public rep­rimand of Real in the proba­tioner’s bankruptcy matter, it also issued another opinion concerning Real that was a bombshell: It asked the 9th Circuit council to review scores of cases for a willful pattern and practice of not giving reasons for decisions.

The matter had not previously been disclosed.

Real has found himself, in effect, on the receiving end of advice he is famous for giving lawyers in his court: “This isn’t Burger King. We don’t do it your way here.”

Pitts­burgh’s Hellman says, “There has been evidence of problems with Judge Real for a long time, and the fact they are acting now in this way may be tied to the higher level of congressional interest and the raising of doubts whether the judiciary successfully policed misconduct in its ranks.”

Yagman was just one on a long list of lawyers who Real has jailed or tried to jail over the years.

“Everybody has a horror story about a trial they had with Judge Real,” says Maria Stratton, laughing because she thinks well of him. She was the public defender for the Central District of California from 1993 to 2006 and is now a judge in Los Angeles Superior Court.

Real once insisted she be in his courtroom at 9 a.m. rather than first appearing at the 9th Circuit, nearby. Protocol defers to the higher court.

“He threatened to hold me in contempt,” says Stratton, who said she rushed and was only a few minutes late to Real’s courtroom. “Then that night at a bar function, after I’d gotten an acquittal in his court and he seemed upset about it, he couldn’t have been nicer.”

JEKYLL OR HYDE?


Gary Lincenberg
Photo by Thomas Broening

Others say they never see Dr. Jekyll, only Mr. Hyde, when deal­ing with Real.

In 1971, Santa Monica criminal defense lawyer Victor Sherman was ordered to jail for four days over a routine evidentiary question.

“But it was really because he found out from a marshal that I gave him the finger as he stepped from the bench in another case shortly before that,” says Sherman, who had been exasperated by the judge’s refusal to allow him to examine a witness on a particular point.

The 9th Circuit knocked down the jail term. “And I got him reversed on the evidentiary matter,” Sherman says. “At one point, I got him reversed six times in a row.

“Lots of lawyers have these kinds of stories about Judge Real, but not many of them will talk about it publicly,” he adds.

Indeed, a dozen Los Angeles lawyers contacted for this story, some of them well-known, were eager to talk about bitter experiences in Real’s court, but not for the rec­ord. One who has spoken out in the past, and is known for his collection of negative information and court decisions about the judge, declined to go on the record now because he has a client awaiting sentencing before Real.

Real’s defenders, and he has plenty (though some of them, too, declined either to be interviewed or to speak on the record), say his motives are not malevolent.

The president of the Los Angeles chapter of the Federal Bar Associ­ation, Gary Lincenberg, does speak out and disagrees with the mount­ing criticism of Real. The jurist has long been on the association’s board and, while others occasionally miss meetings, he is always there, says Lincenberg. The judge is particularly interested in helping younger lawyers, he adds.

“Given the controversy he is in the middle of, I think that other judges might be bitter, but he stays very focused on the big picture,” says Lincenberg. “It’s fine if somebody wants to criticize his decisions—that’s what law is all about.

I don’t think criticism of his good faith is warranted.”

Says former clerk Ellis, now a Los Angeles litigator: “He’s very good at sniffing out people who are unprepared and sniffing out witnesses not telling the truth. The accuracy of his BS detector was off the charts. Typically, if lawyers were prepared and knew the papers, they did OK in his courtroom, even if he didn’t agree with them.”

The celebrity lawyer Howard Weitzman says he always came prepared and still had difficulties peculiar to Real. In the 1970s he defended a lawyer in a criminal case who was convicted in a trial before Real. The case was remanded and tried again before Real. On the second remand, the case was heard before another judge. The lawyer was acquitted.

Weitzman has tried a half-dozen or more jury trials in front of Real, observed a number of others and found the judge’s behavior problematic in all of them.

“I’ve seen him make it clear to jurors he doesn’t agree with the direction of your questioning or doesn’t believe your client,” Weitzman says. “And I saw him take over questioning of witnesses if the side he prefers wasn’t doing well. He continually demeans and puts down lawyers in front of juries in such a way that I think it averts a fair trial.”

It was this sort of courtroom in which Dubin says he found himself in 1994.

His story in brief: Just before his trial, a psychiatrist was having Dubin admitted to a psychiatric hospital for depression over both the slow death of his son two years earlier from AIDS and the whirlwind of events that led to his case being moved suddenly to a bench trial by Real.

Dubin, a respected litigator and appellate attorney, had been scrambling, with the help of others, to get a top-notch lawyer—specifically, Richard Ben-Veniste of Washington, D.C.—to represent him. Real denied a continuance.

Real sent U.S. marshals to bring him to court for trial, just as he was being admitted to the hospital. Dubin was forced to defend himself for the next day and a half while sluggish with newly prescribed anti-depression and anti-anxiety medications, and without the letters and tax rec­ords he needed to make his case—including proof of extensive de­­duc­tions and business losses, and a letter from the IRS saying he did not have to file yet for some of the years in question because he was already being audited before the dragnet.

When Dubin—who Real kept in lockup when he wasn’t in court—complained that the evidence was at his home, the judge dispatched an acquaintance of Dubin’s to obtain the files.

“The room at Dubin’s home was wall-to-wall boxes of documents,” says James Clement, the now-retired tax lawyer who ran the errand. “I came across some that looked right, but when I took them to the courthouse they turned out to be copies of the prosecution’s exhibits.

“It is my understanding that everyone knew at the time that he didn’t have the records he needed for trial, and that the judge just wouldn’t be bothered with it,” says Clement.

Despite this, in his finding of fact No. 11, Real said the defendant had his records “brought to him ... by a friend, also a lawyer, and those rec­ords were available to Dubin throughout the trial.”

Real even tacked on four months extra under the sentencing guidelines he often openly eschews, for ob­struc­tion of justice—because Dubin was at the hospital instead of court.

Clement later wrote in a signed declaration: “I know of my own personal knowledge that finding of fact No. 11 is absolutely false.”

At the appellate level, there is a presumption that findings of fact are just that—fact. And in the 9th Circuit, Real’s findings went unchallenged.

“What is disturbing about [Dubin’s complaint] is that quite a bit of evidence seems to have been available to the judiciary—long before the impeachment proceeding or misconduct proceedings that resulted in reprimands—that suggested the judge is really a danger on the bench,” says Hellman, who has not studied the Dubin case.

The judiciary is now taking what many believe is a long-overdue, in-depth look at whether Real’s decision-making runs so far afoul of law and procedure that he is engaging in misconduct.

As Hellman says, the result could draw a new line of demarcation between independence and discipline—one of the touchiest areas for the judicial branch.

Considering the 9th Circuit coun­cil’s call for a private reprimand for Judge Real, the Judicial Con­fer­ence’s conduct committee in January said, in effect, no.

“If the council finds willfulness, it should consider a more severe sanction, such as a public censure or reprimand and an order that no further cases be assigned to the judge for a particular period of time,” the conduct committee wrote.

Short of impeachment, that would be the worst fate imaginable for a jurist who twice petitioned the Su­preme Court personally in an effort to hold on to cases that had been reassigned.

Like his nemesis Dubin, Real is a man who fully believes he is right and has been wronged. And he presses every challenge as far as he can.

Related Topics


20 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi, I do think this is an excellent web site. I stumbledupon it ;) I will revisit once
again since i have book marked it. Money and freedom is the greatest way to change, may you be rich
and continue to help others.

Have a look at my blog; get followers

Anonymous said...

Appreciate this post. Will try it out.

My site :: Aktivix.org

Anonymous said...

I drop a comment when I especially enjoy a post on a site or if I have something to contribute to the conversation.
It is caused by the fire communicated in the article I browsed.
And on this post "Psychopath Jurist, Judge Maria Stratton laughs because she thinks well of evil troll Judge Manuel Real".

I was excited enough to drop a thought :-) I do have 2 questions for you if you tend not to
mind. Could it be only me or do a few of the remarks come across like they
are written by brain dead people? :-P And, if you are posting at additional sites,
I'd like to keep up with anything fresh you have to post. Could you list the complete urls of all your communal sites like your Facebook page, twitter feed, or linkedin profile?

my weblog :: tips to quit smoking

Anonymous said...

I am regular reader, how are you everybody? This paragraph posted at this
web page is really fastidious.

Also visit my site: adam lambert tears for fears
Also see my site - abc commercials 1998

Anonymous said...

This is very interesting, You are a very skilled blogger.
I have joined your rss feed and look forward to seeking more of your excellent post.
Also, I have shared your web site in my social networks!



Feel free to surf to my blog http://3klix.com/blogs/entry/Benefits-Of-Shopping-Beauty-Products-On-The

Anonymous said...

What's up, I wish for to subscribe for this blog to take latest updates, thus where can i do it please help.

Here is my web site: reseller Hosting Forum

Anonymous said...

Do you mind if I quote a few of your posts as long as
I provide credit and sources back to your website?
My website is in the very same niche as yours and my visitors would truly benefit from
some of the information you provide here. Please let me know if this alright with you.
Thanks!

My web page adobe acrobat professional
my page > ab lounger manual

Anonymous said...

It's truly very difficult in this full of activity life to listen news on TV, thus I only use world wide web for that reason, and take the hottest news.

my web page: bellevue hcg diet

Anonymous said...

Hmm is anyone else encountering problems with the images on this blog loading?
I'm trying to determine if its a problem on my end or if it's the blog.

Any feedback would be greatly appreciated.

Here is my blog post: Methadone Clinics In Ma

Anonymous said...

[url=http://www.yahooguccijapan2013.com]通販 かばん[/url]
[url=http://www.yahooguccionesale.com]メンズ財布 ブランド[/url]
[url=http://www.japanguccistoreoutlet.com]財布 ブランド 人気[/url]
[url=http://www.japanguccistoreoutlet.com]財布 ブランド 人気[/url]
[url=http://www.japanguccistoreoutlet.com]財布 ブランド 人気[/url]
[url=http://www.yahooguccionesale.com]メンズ財布 ブランド[/url]
[url=http://www.yahooguccionesale.com]メンズ財布 ブランド[/url]
[url=http://www.yahooguccionline.com]グッチ 長財布[/url]
[url=http://www.yahooguccionline.com]バック かばん[/url]
[url=http://www.yahooguccijapan2013.com]通販 かばん[/url]
[url=http://www.thebestguccistore.com]コーチ 財布 新作[/url]
[url=http://www.yahooguccijapan2013.com]通販 かばん[/url]
[url=http://www.yahooguccionesale.com]メンズ財布 ブランド[/url]

世界中で大人気のUGGムートンブーツを徹底ガイド!!!!!!!!!!

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[url=http://www.yahooguccijapan2013.com]gucci メンズ 財布[/url]

Anonymous said...

tramadol online tramadol user reviews - buy tramadol online reviews

Anonymous said...

My spouse and I absolutely love your blog and find
nearly all of your post's to be just what I'm looking for.
Do you offer guest writers to write content for yourself?
I wouldn't mind creating a post or elaborating on most of the subjects you write with regards to here. Again, awesome site!

Check out my website: トリーバーチ店舗

Anonymous said...

If you want to grow your familiarity only keep visiting this website and be updated with
the hottest information posted here.

my weblog: www.miumiuoutletshop2013.com

Anonymous said...

What's up, yes this post is in fact fastidious and I have learned lot of things from it regarding blogging. thanks.

Check out my blog post - chloe バッグ

Anonymous said...

Magnificent website. Plenty of useful info here.
I'm sending it to a few buddies ans additionally sharing in delicious. And naturally, thank you in your effort!

my blog post ... トリーバーチ店舗

Anonymous said...

Thank you for the good writeup. It in reality was once a leisure account it.
Look complicated to more introduced agreeable from you!
By the way, how could we communicate?

my web blog - トリーバーチ財布

Anonymous said...

Thanks for your marvelous posting! I really enjoyed reading it,
you might be a great author. I will make certain to bookmark your blog and may come
back later on. I want to encourage you continue your great writing, have
a nice evening!

Have a look at my blog; トリーバーチ財布

Anonymous said...

Heya i'm for the primary time here. I found this board and I find It really useful & it helped me out much. I hope to provide something again and help others like you aided me.

Also visit my blog post クロエ財布

Anonymous said...

Nice weblog right here! Additionally your web site lots up fast!
What web host are you the usage of? Can I get your affiliate hyperlink in
your host? I desire my website loaded up as quickly as yours lol

Here is my homepage: ミュウミュウ店舗

Anonymous said...

Very energetic blog, I enjoyed that bit. Will there be a part 2?


Visit my web page - http://www.lonex.com

Stef Willen's Disaster, Literally.

In the history of publishing, there is a fascinating history of memoirs that get pulled from publication, after an eagle eyed reader or rea...