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  • Judge suspended for jailing court

    Judge suspended for jailing court

    *A US judge has been removed from the bench for jailing an entire courtroom
    audience after none of them admitted being responsible for a ringing phone.
    *

    Judge Robert Restaino was presiding over a domestic violence case in the
    city of Niagara Falls in March 2005.

    A commission on judicial conduct said Judge Restaino had acted "without any
    semblance of a lawful basis" and behaved like a "petty tyrant".

    The judge has said he was under stress in his personal life at the time.

    He has 30 days to appeal against the commission's decision.

    *'Inexplicable madness' *

    In its ruling on Tuesday, the New York State Commission on Judicial Conduct
    recommended the removal of Judge Restaino for what its chairman called "two
    hours of inexplicable madness" on the morning of 11 March 2005.

    It said the 48-year-old judge had been presiding over a series of domestic
    violence cases when he heard a mobile phone ring and "snapped".

    "Every single person is going to jail in this courtroom unless I get that
    instrument now," he told the courtroom's audience, according to the
    commission.

    "If anybody believes I'm kidding, ask some of the folks that have been here
    for a while. You are all going."

    Security officers then attempted to find the phone but failed.

    After a brief recess, Judge Restaino returned to the bench and again asked
    who had been responsible for the ringing phone.

    When no-one came forward, the judge ordered that the entire courtroom
    audience of 46 people be taken into custody and set bail at $1,500.

    "This troubles me more than any of you people can understand," the judge
    explained.

    "This person, whoever he or she may be, doesn't have a whole lot of concern.
    Let's see how much concern they have when they are sitting in the back there
    with all the rest of you," he added.

    "Ultimately, when you go back there to be booked, you've got to surrender
    what you got on you. One way or another, we're going to get our hands on
    something."

    One defendant, according to the report, told the judge: "This is not fair to
    the rest of us."

    "I know it isn't," Judge Restaino replied.

    *Rights 'deliberately violated' *

    The audience and defendants were then taken to Niagara City jail, where they
    were searched and packed into crowded cells.

    Fourteen people who could not post bail were later shackled and transported
    to another prison.

    It was only later in the afternoon, when reporters began to ask questions
    about the ruling, that Judge Restaino ordered their release.

    The judge told the commission he had known that he had no legal basis for
    his actions and that they had been "improper and inexcusable".

    "He explained that he simply focused on attempting to locate the phone's
    owner and was frustrated by his inability to do so," the commission said.

    The judge told the panel he had been under stress in his personal life at
    the time of the incident, it added.

    Nevertheless, the commission's administrator, *Robert Tembekjian*, said the
    fundamental rights of 46 people had been "deliberately and methodically
    violated" and insisted there could be no excuse.

    The judge's lawyer, Terrence Connors, told the Associated Press that he
    would exercise his right to appeal the decision within 30 days. He will
    remain in office during that time.
    Story from BBC NEWS:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/americ as/7116426.stm

    Published: 2007/11/28 08:02:57 GMT
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