Corruption in American Judiciary system
I came across an article by Adam Cohen of the Time Magazine which
inspired me to write this short article. Cohen’s article is pasted bellow.
America a country that her founding fathers
have formulated a new, modern, and innovative constitution based on the
principal of “Human Rights” with provisions of system of government in which includes;
“checks and balances”, separation of church and State, and most importantly a
judiciary system with great emphasis on “due process” and bell of rights. The
intention was the creation of a system of government “By the People for the People”.
But unfortunately the grandsons and
granddaughters of those founding fathers, by tampering with its electoral
regulations have gradually changed this beautiful constitution that meant to
form and maintain a system of government “By the People For the People” into a
government of “by the corporations for the corporations”, or put it in a
broader content, a government of “by the special interest groups for the
special interest groups” which it also includes the religious fanatics interest
group.
The present corrupt electoral regulatory system
allows the special interest groups, through their large bank accounts, purchase
the politicians and judges in all three branches of government. The present day
electoral regulations have legalized bribery in all levels of government and
have named this outright bribery “campaign contribution”.
Consequently the interest of the ordinary
people that the founding fathers had in mind is undermined by those special
interest groups. Unfortunately there is no hope in the horizon for a change
because those who are able to make the change are the beneficiaries of the so
called “campaign contribution”, either directly such as all elected officials
in all three branches of government or indirectly such as the members of the US
supreme court that, last year, had ruled that corporations are people and have the right to contribute unlimited
amount of money to whomever they want as a campaign contribution.
Judges Are for Sale -- and Special Interests Are Buying
The Occupy Wall Street movement is shining a spotlight on how much
influence big-money interests have with the White House and Congress. But
people are not talking about how big money is also increasingly getting its way
with the courts, which is too bad. It's a scandal that needs more attention. A
blistering new report details how big business and corporate lobbyists are
pouring money into state judicial elections across the country and packing the courts with judges who put special interests ahead of the public interest.
A case in point: West Virginia . In 2007, the West Virginia Supreme Court, on a 3-2 vote, threw out a $50 million damage award against the
owner of a coal company. Funny thing: the man who would have had to pay the $50
million had spent $3 million to help elect the justice who cast the deciding
vote. The West Virginia
ruling was so outrageous that in 2009 the United States Supreme Court overturned it. But that was unusual. In most cases, judges are
free to decide cases involving individuals and groups that have paid big money
to get them elected. (MORE: Justice on Display: Should Judges Deliberate in Public?)
So who is paying? The new study — by New York University Law School's Brennan Center for Justice, the National Institute on Money in
State Politics, and the Justice at Stake Campaign, a non-partisan reform group
— found that a small group of super spenders plays the biggest role, using
their money to buy the kind of judges they want hearing their cases. These
super spenders are the usual suspects: mainly big business, corporate
lobbyists, and trial lawyers. Also high on the list: a disturbing category
called "unknown." In many states, disclosure laws are so weak that
special interests can buy judicial elections without the public even finding
out.
There is also a lot of one-issue money sloshing around. In 2010,
three Iowa Supreme Court justices who ruled in favor of gay marriage were voted
out of office — after a bitterly fought campaign dominated by money from
out-of-state groups like the National Organization for Marriage and the
American Family Association. Much of the special interest money is used for attack ads, which leverage hot-button issues to
demonize judicial candidates. Has a sitting judge ever reversed a criminal
conviction because the law was not followed? Then they must be soft on crime —
and not care about victims.
Why does all this matter? Because as money floods into judicial
elections, we are getting courts that are filled with judges whose first
loyalty is not to justice — or to the general public — but to insurance
companies, big business and other special interests. It's not hard to guess
what insurance companies want their judges to do. They want them to rule
against people who have been injured — even when they deserve compensation, and
they want damage awards to be slashed. Big business wants weak enforcement of
laws against discrimination and pollution. On the other side of the political
spectrum, trial lawyers want verdicts for plaintiffs — and large damage awards.
The report's authors have some suggestions for minimizing the
impact of payola. They want to see more public financing of judicial campaigns,
although it is unclear how much the current United States Supreme Court will
allow. (The conservative majority has been recklessly striking down campaign
finance rules in recent years.) Many reformers think that the answer lies in
ending the direct election of judges, and switching to a system (which some
states already have) of appointing judges. That takes away the problem of
elections, but special interests can shift their strategy to lobbying governors
to appoint sympathetic judges. (MORE: John Paul Stevens Publishes Supreme Court Memoir)
Clearly, this is not a problem with easy solutions. But there need
to be solutions. The American ideal of justice requires neutral judges, whose
only commitment is to the law. Judicial elections that are dominated by special
interest money make a mockery of that ideal.
Cohen, the author of Nothing to Fear, teaches at Yale Law School
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