KEISLING: At early opportunity, A. G. Kane should appeal to U. S. Supreme Court to seek protection from politicians in robes.

State court breaks its own confidentiality rules to leak story to the Philadelphia Inquirer

Suspension rather than revocation of license process a way to bypass embarrassing public hearings

AG Katherine Kane should take an aggressive stance with Pennsylvania’s overtly political courts and disciplinary board, and appeal to the U. S. Supreme Court

by Bill Keisling

From the perspective of the old boy politicians working in Pennsylvania courts, state Attorney General Kathleen Kane is a dangerous and uncontrollable loose cannon who must be stopped, at all costs.

Kane has already deeply embarrassed the courts with her discovery of thousands of pornographic emails.

Those stacks of porno emails were regularly sent or received by at least one state supreme court justice, state and local prosecutors, private lawyers, and an unknown number of state bureaucrats and, we can assume, court officials.

Former PA Justice Seamus McCaffery

Former PA Justice Seamus McCaffery

State Supreme Court Justice Seamus McCaffery, cabinet and executive branch officials, and others have already been forced to resign thanks to Kane’s highly embarrassing discoveries.

Last week, at Kane’s prodding, the state high court angrily released only a small fraction of the porno emails it had been suppressing for most of a year.

Those repugnant emails have sparked cries for another round of resignations, including calls for the sacking of a once-highly regarded state prosecutor, Frank Fina. Fina, thanks to the publication of his strange smut collection, is not so highly regarded anymore.

The reasonable question to ask is whether any other court officials or court employees received or sent any of the thousands of porno emails still suppressed by the state Supreme Court.

In other words, are the politicians who wear robes on Pennsylvania’s highly politicized state courts acting to protect themselves, their friends, and their political cronies by suppressing highly embarrassing emails?

The same as the state high court suppressed the ‘Kids for Cash’ scandal for nearly two years, when they realized the son of a chief justice co-owned a detention facility that for years bribed state judges?

PA Chief Justice Thomas Saylor: millions are now being raised for the next round of court elections

PA Chief Justice Thomas Saylor: millions are now being raised for the next round of court elections

To stop Kane, what are these robe-wearing politicians to do?

They are doing what every other politician does: they’re dragging Kane through boards and hearings they control, while they will leak their plans to newspapers under their thumbs.

Those looking to confirm this need look no further than an unwittingly humorous article published by the editorial arm of the state courts, the Philadelphia Inquirer, this August 28.

The article, headlined, “High court panel trying to suspend Kane’s law license,” was written by Inquirer staff writers and court jesters Angela Couloumbis and Craig McCoy.

This article rehashes what everyone already knows: state court officials, and their close associates at the Inquirer, are outraged, so they say, because Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane may have leaked “secret” grand jury information to the Inquirer’s sister newspaper, the Daily News, for a news article.

So what do these paragons of virtue in the courts and the Inquirer, outraged as they say they are about leaks, do?

Why, of course, someone in the Pennsylvania Disciplinary Board leaks a news story to the Inquirer, about a confidential complaint involving AG Kane.

“In a move that could force Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane from office, the Disciplinary Board of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has notified her that it is seeking to suspend her law license, according to sources familiar with the matter, write Couloumbis and McCoy (emphasis mine).

The word “leak,” in fact, appears no less than three times in the story leaked to the Inquirer from the court’s old boys, about, well, the badness and social evil of leaks to newspapers.

“Prosecutors say (Kane) illegally leaked confidential documents to a reporter,” the story reads. And, “Prosecutors say Kane leaked information to the Philadelphia Daily News.”

Leaking is something that the state court’s Disciplinary Board, whose own complaints are supposed to be confidential, obviously knows something about.

In the Kathleen Kane case, by leaking to the Inquirer, the Disciplinary Board is acting in what lawyers call an “arbitrary and capricious manner,” defying its own supposed purpose, and rules, to trample her rights, and destroy Kathleen Kane.

Which is no surprise at all to anyone familiar with the sordid history of the Disciplinary Board of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.

In Kane’s case, today, the judges and their enforcement-arm Disciplinary Board pretend they are doing Kane a favor by merely “suspending” her law license, and not outright revoking it.

In reality, the judges are doing themselves, and their porno slinging co-workers, a big favor.

To outright revoke her law license, Kane could probably demand an open hearing, with witnesses, before the state Supreme Court.

A suspension, on the other hand, can probably be attained with no hearings, and no witnesses, in the dark, as they are obviously planning to do. And as the Disciplinary Board has done in past “suspensions,” Kane’s witness list probably would be quashed too.

Where does all this leave Katherine Kane? What should she do?

Kane should certainly take very an aggressive stance with the state Supreme Court, and its politically tainted Disciplinary Board.

But if Kane were wise she’d get out of this state’s overtly political court system as soon as possible, and take the matter up with the U.S. Supreme Court.

Kane could and should appeal Pennsylvania’s politicized Disciplinary Board procedures and its sordid history directly, before this farce of justice drags on too long, to the U.S. Supreme Court. (For more about this highly politicized and dubious body, see my book on the Pennsylvania court system, “We All Fall Down.” )

The U.S. Supreme Court justices then would probably defer, as they usually do, to their member representing Pennsylvania – Republican Justice Sam Alito, formerly of the Philadelphia 3rd Circuit – and refuse to take her appeal.

But perhaps not.

US Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor

US Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor

Katherine Kane’s best hope is to remind the other U.S. Supreme Court justices of two very well-received speeches delivered to the Philadelphia Bar by former Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, in 2003, and 2013.

In her blistering 2013 attack on Pennsylvania’s elected judiciary, Justice O’Connor told the Philadelphia Bar, “It’s a serious problem that people in this country think of judges as politicians in robes.”

“Compelling judges to become politicians has almost destroyed the traditional respect for the bench.” O’Connor went on.

“O’Connor expressed her concern that the idea of having one’s day in court and the merits of one’s case being decided without passion or prejudice is being eroded by threats to judicial independence, namely the need to raise money to compete in partisan judicial elections. The cost of a judicial election is steadily rising, and while many states did not reach the $1 million mark until the year 2000, Pennsylvania reached it in 1989,” the Philadelphia Bar Association’s Bar Reporter wrote in July 2013.

Today, as I write, millions are being raised for the next round of state court elections.

And now we see more evidence of the unseemly influence of money and politics in Pennsylvania courts with this overtly political revenge case against Kane, the attorney general should tell the U.S. Supreme Court.

Though Pennsylvania’s politicians-in-robes think they are hurting Kathleen Kane, they are ultimately hurting themselves, and the judiciary, Justice O’Connor reminds us.

Average citizens may not understand constitutional law, or high court procedures.

But they sure as hell understand pornography, and smut.

“Our Constitution is not ­and could never be ­defended only by a group of judges. One of our greatest judges, Learned Hand, understood this very well. He explained: ‘Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women; when it dies there, no constitution, no law, no court can save it,'” O’Connor said at the National Convention Center in Philadelphia in 2003, when she received the Liberty Medal.

“But our understanding today must go beyond the recognition that ‘liberty lies in [our] hearts’ to the further recognition that only citizens with knowledge about the content and meaning of our constitutional guarantees of liberty are likely to cherish those concepts.

“As James Madison reminded us long ago, ‘the advancement and diffusion of knowledge’ is ‘the only Guardian of true liberty.'”

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2 Comments

  1. Well the Disciplinary Board of the Supreme Court of PA is a joke, corrupt, good old boys network protecting their own and in this case going after a lawyer for the cause of protecting more of their own.

    Just not seeing how the U.S. Supreme Court would help. The whole hotbed of corruption that the Pennsylvania judiciary is just reflects the condition Pennsylvania is in.

    The latest Supreme Court is all warm and fuzzy over making sure bankrupt health insurance companies get government subsidies (Obamacare) and that mostly well to do white gay people can get married and then vote for Republicans in the next election.

    Seriously doubt they would do anything about the PA judiciary which is just packed with GOP cronies just like themselves.

  2. I am just trying to find any substance to support the first global charge, none there. That probably explains the swift move off topic.

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