Posts Tagged ‘oped’
Courts have to earn trust now every day with efficiency and fairness | Hartford Courant
There isn’t a lot of praise circulating for American institutions today. Even though we can see abundant evidence of the shortcomings of alternative systems in Russia, China and elsewhere, too many Americans are buying populist propaganda against their own government. Lately, it’s the courts’ turn. Judges are being denounced as biased, corrupt and incompetent, not…
Read MoreJudges don’t have to put up with litigants’ sniping in the media | The Hill
Perhaps President Donald Trump has crossed the line with his comments about court proceedings. Or perhaps he hasn’t. Let’s now consider the merits. Regardless of this particular case, judges never have to put up with parties who publicly attack themselves, lawyers, witnesses or prosecutors with lies. In criminal proceedings, the judges have a hammer to wield in…
Read MoreThe Needless Complexity of Our Courts | Governing
Most people with a case in court can’t understand what goes on in a lawsuit and are increasingly unwilling to accept what comes out of it. For reasons unknown to them, the case goes round and round for years without reaching its merits, and then the parties are forced to settle because their money and…
Read MoreWhat Donald Trump’s case teaches us: Litigation takes forever | The Hill
Forget for a moment whether former President Donald Trump deserves to float or sink amid the waves of lawsuits washing over him. Consider instead what this sea of trouble teaches us about the state of our legal system. Jan. 6, 2021, is more than two and a half years behind us. Yet only now are…
Read MoreAmerica Should Rethink Litigation and Adopt More Humanist Courts | Bloomberg Law
The contemporary American lawsuit focuses on its own form rather than the human problem that prompted it. Starting with a needlessly complicated complaint, it’s followed by years of maneuvering about its adequacy, generating massive amounts of discovery. For any of a half-dozen reasons, it never gets to trial. The result often baffles the parties and…
Read MoreHumanism Should Replace Formalism In The Courts | Law360
Contemporary American judges have more in common with Medieval monks than just wearing robes. Today’s courts are dominated by formalists. After reviewing decisions from the last several months—about guns, abortion, and industrial pollution—they remind me of work by the 13th and 14th Century scholastics, dominated by the monks who dictated thinking in Europe prior to…
Read MoreJudges: Guard ‘your honor’ | ABA Journal
I’m a judge, and I admit it: I like being called “your honor.” Call me entitled if you want, but I disagree with the Kentucky federal judge who made headlines last fall for saying that modesty forbids him from accepting this distinction. U.S. District Judge Benjamin Beaton claimed in a May 2022 speech, which was…
Read MoreJudges Should Avoid Herd Mentality and a Default to Precedent | Bloomberg Law
Judges know a lot about consensus. Consistency is an important attribute of a legal system. That’s why precedent from a higher court must be followed by a lower court. But sometimes judges go too far, treating like binding precedent anything other judges have said. They do this even when the other judge is their equal,…
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