Showing posts with label privilege. Show all posts
Showing posts with label privilege. Show all posts

Monday, August 30, 2010

Privilege and Contempt

The following exchange occurred in February between Jefferson County District Judge Annette Karem (left) and Louisville attorney "Mikki" Adams (below), a veteran family law attorney:

At An Abortion "Bypass" hearing (this is a proceeding where a minor seeks to avoid obtaining parental consent prior to obtaining an abortion in this case "J.J." testified that her parents were drunks--the Judge sought information in order to report the child abuse and neglect testified to by "J.J."):

Attorney Adams: “ I respectfully decline to give any information that I may have. At this time I have no information. … I do not know anything other than that her initials are “J.J” and that her first name is (redacted). … And she has instructed me to decline giving any information. She is my client. The privilege is hers. It is not mine. … “

Judge Karem: “ And how do you know her first name?”

Attorney Adams: “ She gave it to me.”

Judge Karem: “ But she didn't give you her last name?”

Attorney Adams: “ She did give me her last name, and I am not going to give it to the court.”

Judge Karem: “ So you do know her last name?”

Attorney Adams: “ Yes, I do, and I'm not going to give it to the court.”

Judge Karem: “ That is contrary … to what you told me a few seconds ago, that you didn't have any other information but her first name.”

Attorney Adams: “ I misspoke. I'm sorry.”

Judge Karem: “ At this point I think you need to be quiet.”

Attorney Adams: “ Whatever.”

Judge Karem: “Ma'am, you have an attitude.”
__________________________________________
Judge Karem found Ms. Adams in contempt of court and sentenced her to jail for 6 months.  According to an excellent story at the Louisville Courier-Journal by Andrew Wolfson, the matter is pending before the Court of Appeals and Ms. Admas' incarceration is on hold.

I've actually been in this dilemma as a lawyer, fortunately for me my client "waived" his privilege and I was able to make the disclosure demanded by opposing counsel and the court.  But I didn't preface my refusal to make the disclosure with the flippant "misstatement" which is causing attorney Adams so much grief.  You see what's going on here, is a battle of wills between two veteran attorneys neither of whom wishes to appear foolish. 

In my opinion, Ms. Adams owes Judge Karem an apology for the flippancy of her "misrepresentation," and Judge Karem should yield to the principle of privilege.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

False Light Defamation

The San Francisco Chronicle reports on the 9th Circuit Court of Appeal defamation suit that should encourage Shirley Sherrod, the recently fired USDA employee who was a victim of so-called conservative journalists who pieced together "clips" of a speech she delivered to the NAACP, that made it appear that this African American federal public servant discriminated against white farmers in programming that Sherrod administered.  The concept of "false light" is that persons can defame you my manipulating and massaging video and audio to create a "false light" for the purposes of what was precisely done to Mrs. Sherrod, cost her, her job. 

"The case given attorneys for Mrs. Sherrod encouragement involves an ABC/20-20 story about a televangelist reported by right-wing correspondent, John Stossel (pic).  Here's reporter, Bob Egelko's story forthe San Francisco Chronicle story:  A federal appeals court reinstated a slander suit Tuesday against ABC-TV by a Southern California televangelist who was misleadingly shown on '20/20' as bragging about his wealth.

The ruling could come into play in another national media controversy - this one involving a U.S. Department of Agriculture official who was fired after a blogger posted a video that appeared to show her making racist remarks that in fact were taken out of context. The Rev. Frederick Price (pic, left) sued ABC and its then-correspondent, John Stossel, over the news program's use of a film clip of one of his sermons in a March 2007 program.   It showed him telling his congregation, 'I live in a 25-room mansion. I have my own $6 million yacht,' a private jet, a helicopter and seven luxury cars.

Stossel introduced the clip by saying Price boasts of his riches, and followed it with a discussion with a watchdog about ministers who hide their church's finances.   In fact, however - as ABC acknowledged in a subsequent apology and retraction - Price was speaking not about himself, but about a hypothetical person who was materially wealthy and spiritually unfulfilled.

Price is the founder and pastor of the Crenshaw Christian Center/Ever Increasing Faith Ministry, which claims 22,000 members and preaches the 'prosperity gospel' of financial reward to believers. He owns a $4.6 million house and a Rolls-Royce and travels the world in a church-owned jet, the appeals court said.

A federal judge dismissed his defamation suit, saying the film clip was 'substantially true' because Price is wealthy and has spoken about it elsewhere. But the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco said an out-of-context quotation that distorts the speaker's meaning can be libelous.  The Supreme Court has established that the accuracy of a quotation is determined by 'loyalty to the speaker's intended meaning,' the appeals court said.

'The video quotation of Price's statement materially changed the meaning of Price's words,' and he is entitled to try to prove that the film clip was a knowingly false presentation that hurt his reputation, Judge Mary Schroeder said in the 3-0 ruling.

The decision was issued the same day Shirley Sherrod turned down an offer to return to the USDA, which fired her from a job in Georgia in July after video excerpts of one of her speeches circulated on the Internet.

The video depicted Sherrod as a racist who refused to help a white farmer, but it was actually taken out of context from a talk to the NAACP in which she discussed her past and the need to move beyond race. Sherrod says she is considering a defamation suit against Andrew Breitbart, the blogger who posted the video. If Sherrod sues, 'this decision should make her very happy,' said Price's lawyer, Andrew Glassman.

Despite ABC's apology to Price, he said, the minister suffered substantial harm to his reputation from a distorted telecast that was seen by millions.  Jeffrey Schneider, ABC's senior vice president for news, said the network is confident that it will ultimately prevail in the lawsuit."
______________________________
I've been working on a matter at my W-2 job, where a large area employer followed it's disabled custodian around, filming her for 3 calendar years.  Possibly hundreds of hours of video were obtained, and yet only 4 hours of surveillance were turned over to her attorneys, and of the 4 hours of video, the employer's investigator massaged together a "17 minute edit: with jump cuts to make it appear that this genuinely crippled woman is "able-bodied."  It's actually a pretty amazing Soviet-style manipulation of images intended to screw her out of her benefits; and, for the moment, it worked.

The attorneys at my day job are pursuing a "false light" defamation claim which has only recently been recognized, here, in OurState. The defendants are expected to argue that since they screwed her in a "workers' compensation administrative proceeding" their defamation of her was "privileged."  Ah, yes, the old affirmative defense of privilege to commit intentional harm.  It's actually pretty astonishing how often this argument has sway in OurState.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Sheriff Joe Arpaio--What a Tool!



Arizona's favorite Stalinist Sheriff, Joe Arpaio is at it again.  Arpaio told Superior Court Judge Gary Donahoe to pound salt in response to the Judge's Order to the Sheriff's department to publicly apologize for stealing and copying private privileged legal documents from a Public Defender in the Judge's courtroom.

Here, we go again:  let's be clear, under that inconvenient document, the US Constitution there are something called rights possessed by the people, individually.  Numbering among these rights:  the right to a lawyer, the right of due process, the right to be secure in your property, and papers, and, believe it or not, the presumption of innocence.  When a Sheriff's correctional employee steals the paperwork belonging to a criminal defendant's attorney, these and other rights are implicated.  Imagine for a moment that the suspected criminal is a pretty horrible person, the Sheriff's department theft of a lawyer's papers could trigger the issuance of a (federal) writ of habeas corpus.   Which would result in the horrible bad guy going free to commit even more heinous acts.  Good work, Sheriff Joe!

We can legitimately question the wisdom of ordering a County official to hold a press conference to apologize for violating the civil rights of a prisoner;  but, can we even begin to question the wisdom of granting leave to this out-of-control "lawman" to create and maintain his secessionist fiefdom--where Arpaio pisses all over the rule of law?   Outrageous, you bet.

See:  http://ktar.com/?nid=6&sid=1233512