This is a fascinating way of regulating judges. Judges develop reputations. Some bad judges go out of their way to cultivate a reputation of being tough on crime. We can think of one judge within the last two decades who would brag in their chambers that they wanted to be known as "maximum _____" for the lengthy sentences they handed down.
If Florida had this system, lawyers' opinions of judges would be evident in the statistics of disqualification. Some judges would have very few disqualifications (albeit high case loads). These would be the judges that the "market" deemed fair.
Other judges would have high disqualification rates. These judges would be deemed unfair by the "market".
It's almost a self regulating procedure. It might well influence judges to give the appearance of fairness (instead of the judge who recently tossed our motion to the suppress back to the clerk with disdain and élan while sneering "denied" ).
What say you?
Follow @davidovalle305 as he covers closing arguments in a murder case. Ed O'Donnell for the defense. Michael Von Zamft for the state.
After short deliberations, jury will return Tuesday to deliberate fate of teen in Miami Gardens carjack double murde
WHAT'S HAPPENING AT THE SUPREME COURT?
"HOT SUTFF"
See you in court, where we wish we had one free bite at the apple of judicial disqualification.
2 comments:
I will take easy ed (senior) over VZ any day. If its Jr. then it might be even money.
I agree with 3:58. Von Zamft couldn't carry Eds underwear. Especially now that he has deteriorated into a blabbering lunatic.
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