Judges Are for Sale -- and Special Interests Are Buying
By ADAM COHEN | Time.com – 15 hrs ago
The Occupy Wall Street movement is shining a spotlight on how much
influence big-money interests have with the White House and Congress.
But people are not talking about how big money is also increasingly
getting its way with the courts, which is too bad. It's a scandal that
needs more attention. A blistering new report details how big business
and corporate lobbyists are pouring money into state judicial elections across the country and packing the courts with judges who put special interests ahead of the public interest.
A case in point: West Virginia. In 2007, the West Virginia Supreme Court,
on a 3-2 vote, threw out a $50 million damage award against the owner
of a coal company. Funny thing: the man who would have had to pay the
$50 million had spent $3 million to help elect the justice who cast the
deciding vote. The West Virginia ruling was so outrageous that in 2009
the United States Supreme Court
overturned it. But that was unusual. In most cases, judges are free to
decide cases involving individuals and groups that have paid big money
to get them elected. (MORE: Justice on Display: Should Judges Deliberate in Public?)
Monday, October 31, 2011
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