Aug 02 2010

New study looks at judicial campaign contributions, judicial decision-making

Published by at 11:24 am under Judges,News

Several months ago, the nonpartisan American Judicature Society released a report showing the frequency by which lawyers, law firms, and litigants who have donated money to a Pennsylvania Supreme Court justice’s campaign, later bring cases before those justices in court. Of 82 civil cases in the 2008-09 session, 60 percent involved at least one lawyer, law firm, or litigant who had made a contribution.

Yesterday Lancaster Online reported that Inside Story has re-analyzed the data collected by AJS in an attempt to determine whether campaign contributions have an actual effect on judicial decision-making. The results were inconclusive. Of the 82 cases, only 15 involved contributing law firms on one side and non-contributing law firms on the other. Contributing law firms won 11 of those cases.

Explains Lancaster Online,

When contributors win nearly three-quarters of such cases, the pattern suggests that contributions might affect judicial outcomes.

But there are several significant caveats.

Of the 11 cases that contributing firms won, eight were decided unanimously by the court. In those cases, judges who received money from law firms — and those who did not — voted together. They usually affirmed a lower court’s decision.

Other factors, such as the amount of the contribution and the actual merits of the case make it difficult to determine causation. Shira Goodman, Deputy Director of Pennsylvanians for Modern Courts said that while the study could not take into account all aspects of judicial decision-making, the public perception that money influences judges does significant harm to the court system.

It is really hard to attribute a judge’s decision to one individual factor, especially in unanimous cases.

The law is not set in stone. We can’t explain each individual justice’s reason or motivation for voting one way or another.

[But] perception does matter. People want to believe when they go to court that they had a fair hearing.

Samuel Stretton, an attorney from West Chester agrees. Last year he argued and lost a case before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in which the opposing side had contributed a total of $36,000 to judicial campaigns. Stretton says he should have been informed of these contributions up front so that he would have had the opportunity to motion for recusal. Failure to do so “created a cynical view” of the system.

I’m not saying that it necessarily affects the outcome of a case, but it creates the appearance of impropriety, and an appearance of impropriety is not allowed for judges.

But the solution is simple: get rid of judicial elections. Says Goodman,

Get the money out of the (judicial selection) process altogether. Then you’ve taken away the foundation for the perception that judges may be biased. 

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One Response to “New study looks at judicial campaign contributions, judicial decision-making”

  1. [...] fact, when Lancaster Online examined 82 recent cases in Pennsylvania courts (h/t Judges On Merit) and compared the outcomes in those cases to judicial campaign contributions, the article’s [...]

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