Saturday, June 12, 2010

SHARON KELLER; HEARING SET FOR JUNE 18; ARGUMENTS FROM BOTH SIDES TO BE HEARD TO DETERMINE IF SHE SHOULD FACE ANY DISCIPLINE; AUSTIN CHRONICLE;


"The lawyers were having computer problems that afternoon and wanted permission to file the appeal late, a TDS (Texas Defender Service) employee told the court's then-general counsel, Ed Marty. When Marty called Keller to ask if the court would remain open to accept the late filing, Keller infamously replied that the court closes at 5pm. Keller has said that she meant the clerk's office closes at 5pm and that didn't bar Richard's lawyers from filing the appeal with one of the court's nine judges. Asked at her trial whether she would do anything different if confronted with the same situation again, Keller said no. Judge David Berchelmann, who was appointed special master to hear the case against Keller last summer, concluded that position was ridiculous; nonetheless, he cleared Keller of any fault in the situation and concluded that she needed no more punishment, "beyond the public humiliation" she had already suffered. The attorneys prosecuting the case disagreed with Berchelmann's findings earlier this year, and the SCJC (State Commission on Judicial Conduct) has since said that it would hear arguments from both sides during a hearing on June 18, before determining whether Keller should face any discipline."

REPORTER JORDAN SMITH: THE AUSTIN CHRONICLE; Wikipedia informs us that, "The Austin Chronicle is an alternative weekly, tabloid-style newspaper published every Thursday in Austin, Texas, United States."

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BACKGROUND: Justice Sharon Keller has attained notoriety for allegations that she allowed convicted murderer and rapist Michael Richard to be executed on September 25, 2007 - notwithstanding his attempt to file a stay of execution - because the court clerk's office closes at 5. Keller is of particular interest blog because of the opinion she wrote for the majority in the Roy Criner case. Wikipedia informs us that: "Sharon Faye Keller (born in Dallas, Texas, 1953) is the Presiding Judge of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, which is the highest court for all criminal matters in the State of Texas. Because of her position, she has been involved in many high-profile and controversial cases, and has thus received widespread news coverage......In 1998, Keller she wrote the majority opinion in a 5-3 (one judge abstaining) decision that denied a new trial to Roy Criner. Criner had been convicted of sexual assault in 1990, but newly-available DNA testing had shown that the semen found in the victim was not his......Judge Tom Price, who ran for the Chief Judge seat, in a primary election, said that Keller's Criner opinion had made the court a "national laughingstock." Judge Mansfield, who had sided with the majority in denying Criner a hearing, told the Chicago Tribune that, after watching the Frontline documentary, reviewing briefs and considering the case at some length, he voted "the wrong way" and would change his vote if he could. "Judges, like anyone else, can make mistakes ... I hope I get a chance to fix it." He stated that he hoped Criner's lawyers filed a new appeal as he felt Criner deserved a get a new trial......Following the (appeal court's) refusal to order a new trial, the cigarette butt found at the scene (and not adduced at trial) was subjected to DNA testing.The DNA on the cigarette was not a match for Criner, but it was a match for the semen found in Ogg. Ogg's DNA was also found on the cigarette, indicating that she shared a cigarette with the person who had sex with her (and who presumably killed her). These results convinced the district attorney, local sheriff and the trial judge that Criner was not guilty. The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles recommended he be pardoned and, citing "credible new evidence [that] raises substantial doubt about [Criner's] guilt," then-Governor George W. Bush pardoned him in 2000.

The thorough, unabridged Wikipedia article on Keller can be found at:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharon_Keller

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"Court of Criminal Appeals Judge Sharon Keller says the fact that she is still having to defend herself against the false allegation that she closed the court to a death row inmate on the day of his execution is an example of the "fundamental injustices" in the case against her, her lawyer wrote in a brief filed with the State Commission on Judicial Conduct,"
the Austin Chronicle story by reporter Jordan Smith published on June 10m, 2010, under the heading, ""Prosecuting Judge Sharon Keller," begins.

"Keller, presiding judge of the state's highest criminal court, was tried on ethics charges last summer in connection with the execution of Michael Richard in September 2007 – including that she failed to do her job and that she'd brought discredit to the judiciary by blocking the Texas Defender Service's ability to file a final appeal for Richard on Sept. 25, 2007," the story continues.

"The lawyers were having computer problems that afternoon and wanted permission to file the appeal late, a TDS employee told the court's then-general counsel, Ed Marty. When Marty called Keller to ask if the court would remain open to accept the late filing, Keller infamously replied that the court closes at 5pm. Keller has said that she meant the clerk's office closes at 5pm and that didn't bar Richard's lawyers from filing the appeal with one of the court's nine judges. Asked at her trial whether she would do anything different if confronted with the same situation again, Keller said no. Judge David Berchelmann, who was appointed special master to hear the case against Keller last summer, concluded that position was ridiculous; nonetheless, he cleared Keller of any fault in the situation and concluded that she needed no more punishment, "beyond the public humiliation" she had already suffered.

The attorneys prosecuting the case disagreed with Berchelmann's findings earlier this year, and the SCJC has since said that it would hear arguments from both sides during a hearing on June 18, before determining whether Keller should face any discipline.

In advance of that hearing, Keller's attorney last week filed a rebuttal to the prosecutors' objections to Berchelmann's findings, opining that the charges against Keller were mere "fiction" created by the TDS lawyers in order to deflect attention from the missteps they made on the day Richard was executed. Berchelmann has already concluded that Keller did not "break any rule, law, or canon of conduct" and, as such, continuing the proceedings "would needlessly violate Judge Keller's rights," reads the brief.

According to Keller, the accusation that she closed the courthouse doors were essentially fabricated by TDS lawyer David Dow and colleagues and carried forward by lawyers representing the SCJC at the hearing before Berchelmann last year. "This course of events would not seem out of place in the old Soviet bloc, where show trials were not really trials, but were degredation ceremonies staged to depose officials who deviated from party doctrine," reads Keller's latest brief. "Things should be different in this country."

(Keller's brief was posted online yesterday by Mary Alice Robbins of Texas Lawyer along with a really good summary article about the case. You can find that here.)

But the bombast doesn't stop there – hells no! Keller goes on to charge that the real motivation behind her persecution is a fundamental disagreement that TDS has with Keller's views on the death penalty. The objections of the SCJC's lawyers "amount to nothing more than an attempt to re-write history simply because" the lawyers don't "like 'Judge Keller's attitude'" and disagree with "Judge Keller's 'viewpoint' about the death penalty," Keller's brief reads. "Judge Keller is not – or at least should not be – on trial because of her beliefs, but because the [lawyers] charged her with denying Mr. Richard access to the CCA on the evening of his execution." Indeed, though for many CCA watchers it might be difficult to separate Keller's feelings about the death penalty from the way she presents in court – need we bring up Keller's amazing performance in the Roy Criner case, on stage for all to see in the infamous Frontline interview? And that's just one example. (There are plenty of other examples out there – just a few can be found here.)

Considering that impartial attitude is one of the canons of judicial ethics, it's not surprising that Keller's opinions about capital punishment have made many attorneys scratch their chins in wonder at some of the opinions Keller has expressed over the years, while sitting on the state's highest criminal bench. (Full list of canons is here.)

Regardless, it seems quite unlikely that the SCJC will derail the Keller hearing process that is already in motion. Indeed, Keller is slated to have her day in court before the Commission next Friday, June 18, beginning at 9a in the John H. Reagan State Office Building."

The story can be found at:

http://www.austinchronicle.com/gyrobase/Blogs/News?oid=oid%3A1039127

Harold Levy...hlevy15@gmail.com;