Jan 19 2011
Campaign Money Taints the Judicial Process
The Columbus Dispatch reports that a doctor believes the Ohio Supreme Court refused to hear the appeal in a malpractice case against him due to political considerations related to campaign contributions. Dr. John Cox, a neuro-radiologist, was sued for allegedly missing a stroke diagnosis. The original suit was brought against Cox and other doctors at the hospital. The Allen County Court of Common Pleas dismissed the suit, but the 3rd District Court of Appeals reinstated the case against Cox alone. Although the Supreme Court initially agreed to hear the appeal, the case was thrown out in December.
Dr. Cox’s belief of impropriety is based on support given to the campaign of then-Chief Justice Eric Brown by the lawyer on the other side of the case. Brown was involved in an unsuccessful campaign to maintain his position as chief justice. Dennis P. Mulvihill, the lawyer on the other side of this case, and his group contributed about $400,000 in an attempt to see Brown elected and two Republican justices defeated. Those two justices stepped down from the case, but Brown and the two judges he picked to temporarily replace them were part of the majority that decided to throw out the case.
Clearly, partisan elections and the campaign contributions that accompany them affect people’s perception of the courts. Whether his belief is right or wrong, Dr. Cox feels that he was denied fair and impartial justice: “‘I thought we had a system of justice here,’ Cox said this week. ‘Now we don’t have a verdict and we have to go to trial. It looks like political maneuvering.”
The court system as a whole is damaged when individuals walk away from their experiences with the law believing that justice is for sale. The best way to avoid the negative perceptions created by the role of money in the electoral process is to get judges out of the fundraising business by switching to Merit Selection.
Tags: Columbus Dispatch, Dennis P. Mulvihill, Dr. John Cox, Eric Brown, Merit Selection, Ohio Supreme Court
