Thursday, October 4, 2012

Battle of Information in Judiciary

A new controversy has erupted within California's judiciary over a judge's question on whether the administrative bureaucracy is planning to pay expenses for judges attending a judicial conference that has become an important political venue.
     Retired Los Angeles Judge Charles Horan made the following email request for information from the Administrative Office of the Courts: "I have been told that the AOC will reimburse for up to $300 for appellate justices to attend the next CJA conference. Is that true?"
     Horan also asked if the same applied for trial judges and who had authorized the payments.
     The California Judges Association is the oldest and biggest of California's judge associations. Its annual conference has become a front in the larger conflict over the bureaucracy's effort to exert central control over the policy, operations and financing of local trial courts.
     So a move by the bureaucracy to pay certain judges for attending could be seen through a skeptical lens as an effort to influence the proceedings.
     While on its face a simple question, Horan's request was quickly forwarded by administrative office employee Chad Finke to Appellate Justice Harry Hull who has a policy of requiring that all requests for information by submitted through the U.S. Post Office.
     "The AOC is funneling all the problem children over to Justice Harry Hull," said Horan in an interview. "When they stand up and ask for peace in the valley and say we should turn the page, they should look in the mirror and ask themselves why they are playing these games."
     The administrative office argued that the requests for information are time consuming and require research.
     Horan answered, "Ninety percent of the work generated by information requests results from the gymnastic contortions the AOC and some Council members put themselves through trying to avoid answering simple questions."

Read more: http://www.courthousenews.com/2012/10/03/50936.htm

No comments: