Sunday, May 25, 2014

Easy To Judge This Judge







It's nearly Memorial Day- and probably already will be by the time most of you read this- so the state of Mississippi deserves credit.    As indicated by this 2010 map from The Atlantic's Richard Florida, Mississippi is among the states with the greatest number of members of the military per capita, more even than adjacent Louisiana, Arkansas,Tennessee, or Alabama.  It may attest to the lack of economic opportunities there, the courage of its (mostly young) men and women, or a myriad of other reasons.








This, however, from the Clarion-Ledger, is not as positive:

In an echo of Mississippi's past, a Justice Court judge here is accused of striking a mentally challenged young man and yelling, "Run, n-----, run."

The family has filed a complaint with police against Madison County Justice Court Judge Bill Weisenberger, who is white, alleging he struck their 20-year-old African-American son, Eric Rivers, on May 8 at the Canton Flea Market.

"This is 2014," said former Canton Mayor William Truly, president of the Canton branch of the NAACP, "not 1960, where someone could slap a young man and call out, 'Run, n-----, run."

Darlene Ballard, executive director of the state Judicial Commission, said if the allegations are true, they would "violate multiple canons" of the Judicial Code of Conduct.

Truly called on Weisenberger, a former law enforcement officer and former emergency operations director in Madison County, to step down from hearing cases until the matter is resolved — or simply to resign.

"No citizen should have to face justice before a judge who holds such a high degree of racial animus and hatred," Truly said in a news conference Friday.

Weisenberger did not return telephone calls asking for a response to the allegations.

Truly expects a Madison County grand jury to eventually hear the matter. He said the NAACP plans to file complaints with the Judicial Performance Commission, the state attorney general's Vulnerable Adult Unit and the Justice Department.

Cathy Hendrix of Tuscaloosa, a vendor at the Canton Flea Market, told The Clarion-Ledger that she and other vendors rely on local people to help load and unload their vehicles, paying for the help.

On May 8, she saw Rivers standing on the sidewalk, asking if they needed help, she said. "That young man was wanting to work to earn money to buy a bike."

Her sister, Tammy Westbrook, also of Tuscaloosa, told The Clarion-Ledger she saw Weisenberger "rear back and slap" Rivers twice.

The young man bolted away, and she said she heard Weisenberger yell out, "Run, boy, run," and "run, n-----, run."

She said she overheard Weisenberger brag afterward about what he had done.

She felt furor because her own son suffers from autism, she said. "I was angry."

Both sisters initially thought Weisenberger was a law enforcement officer because he was dressed in a security officer's uniform — only to find out he was a judge.

Hendrix praised the help she received from "many wonderful deputies during our visit to Canton" but was angered by what she witnessed, she said.

"I do not care if this young man was being a nuisance," said Hendrix, who is white. "I do not care if he were breaking a law, I do not care if he were loitering, but I do care that a man of authority, one that is sworn to protect and serve, was slapping a young man."

She said Weisenberger "seemed to be suffering from an authoritative complex and was making sure that everyone knew that."

Hendrix said after Weisenberger's encounter with Rivers, she saw the judge "jump" a female vendor, "telling her he would make her park far away and make her walk to load her goods."

When the woman replied that he could "change his tone" with her, the judge replied he would only deal with her husband because he didn't take orders from a woman, she said.

She said the judge has no business working with the public "if he is going to slap a mentally challenged child and be rude to vendors that are paying good money to be there."

On his campaign website, the judge declared that he believes "Justice Court IS the people's court."

This might be an isolated incident.  But the real moral of the story is suggested by the next line(s) in the article, in which the reporter notes

Under Mississippi law, the only requirement to be elected a Justice Court judge is a high school diploma. After taking office, the judges are required to take up to six hours of training a year.

A 2007 legislative task force concluded that Justice Court judges needed higher degrees, preferably law degrees.

Preferably, indeed. That would seem, as George Herbert Walker Bush would have put it, only "prudent." But if that standard had been in place, I would not have had the excuse of posting this song from the late, great Phil Ochs:











                         

                   Have a happy- or better yet, reverential- Memorial Day


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