Scandal-scarred Brooklyn DA Charles Hynes must go.
The race for Brooklyn district attorney pits a 24-year incumbent finishing a deeply troubled sixth term against a lawyer who has never faced a challenge remotely on the scale of leading New York’s largest prosecution office.
Charles Hynes, 78, is running for a seventh term on a record that includes findings by two federal judges of grievous misconduct by a top aide, an investigation into whether dozens of cases produced wrongful convictions and credible charges of having failed to effectively act on sexual abuse in the politically powerful ultra-Orthodox Jewish community.
Hynes’ challenger is Kenneth Thompson. Harlem-born and raised by a single mother who served as an NYPD cop, Thompson, 48, has a legal career that encompasses only five years as a Brooklyn federal prosecutor, three years as a Manhattan law firm associate and 10 years running his own small firm — plus the use of divisive rhetoric in his biggest case.
Forced to choose between two flawed candidates, the Daily News views Thompson as holding the potential to chart the better future for the Brooklyn DA’s office. This is hardly an endorsement. It is a judgment compelled by serious evidence that Hynes has presided over miscarriages of justice.
Those include the case of Jabbar Collins, who waged a 15-year fight to prove that a top Hynes lieutenant, Michael Vecchione, had railroaded him for a rabbi’s murder. Federal Judge Dora Irizarry branded the conduct of Hynes’ office as “shameful,” based on testimony that Vecchione had pressured witnesses to implicate Collins falsely and had concealed a key recantation. After Irizarry ordered Vecchione to take the stand, Hynes dismissed all charges.
Retaining Vecchione as head of his rackets bureau, Hynes dismisses the negative testimony and sloughs off the scathing conclusion of a second jurist handling Collins’ civil suit against Hynes and the city. There, Brooklyn Federal Judge Frederic Block accused Vecchione of “horrific behavior” and declared: “Hynes hasn’t treated it seriously.”
Still more, Hynes has been forced to examine almost 40 convictions won by his aides with the apparently too-good-to-be-true work of a now-retired NYPD detective. Circling the wagons where full accountability is demanded, he ordered an internal review overseen by a panel that includes several friends and political supporters.
Further undermining confidence in the quality of justice, Hynes acknowledged an almost two-decade failure to prosecute sexual abuse in the insular ultra-Orthodox Jewish community. He has since become more effective but he shields the names of defendants, asserting that the unique abandonment of public disclosure prevents reprisals against accusers.
The double standard leaped to the fore when, at a press conference, Hynes identified four black men as having subjected an ultra-Orthodox Jewish woman to nine years of sexual servitude. Later, Hynes dismissed the indictments because a top aide had concealed that the accuser had recanted her claims.
With the record demonstrating that the Brooklyn DA’s office needs new leadership, Thompson is Hynes’ lone challenger. No headhunter would propose hiring him to lead a 500-attorney office responsible for administering justice in the city’s biggest borough.
Thompson’s five years as a federal prosecutor provided criminal justice experience but entailed no supervisory positions and only six trials. His work at a large firm was run-of-the-mill for an early-career attorney. His present firm concentrates on employment claims and consists of one other partner and 15 employees.
Adding to the reasons for wariness, Thompson displayed a lack of judgment in his highest-profile case. Representing Nafissatou Diallo, the hotel maid who accused International Monetary Fund head Dominique Strauss-Kahn of sexual assault, he tried to pressure Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance into moving against Strauss-Kahn with accusations of class bias,
He asserted that Vance was afraid to bring the rich and powerful Strauss-Kahn to trial for victimizing a poor black woman. After Vance determined that Diallo had made too many false statements to prove that the encounter had been forcible, not consensual, as Strauss-Kahn claimed, Thompson suggested Vance had given a pass to a wealthy man that he would not have given to a South Bronx bus driver, Bay Ridge plumber or Harlem construction worker.
Questioned by the Daily News Editorial Board, Thompson said he regrets those attacks. “I’ve learned immensely from that case,” he said.
At best, Thompson’s former colleagues in the Brooklyn U.S. attorney’s office say that he has the potential to grow into a capable district attorney. They cite his role as junior member of a three-person team that prosecuted the Abner Louima police assault trial. Thompson powerfully delivered the opening statement. Those who have shown faith in him include former U.S. Attorney Zachary Carter, who contributed to Thompson’s campaign.
That’s some comfort in this distressing choice for a post responsible for protecting public safety while guaranteeing the rights of the accused in New York’s busiest prosecutor’s office.
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2013-09-08 17:09:472013-09-08 17:09:47Every politician that has betrayed child sex abuse victims deserves the same fate! (NY Post)
A New Jersey judge ruled yesterday that a lawsuit filed against the elite Horace Mann School by an alleged victim of sexual abuse can go forward.
“The plaintiff has set forth reasonable arguments and good cause” to force the scandal-plagued Bronx institution to hand over documents and answer questions, Justice Lisa Perez Friscia ruled yesterday.
Her ruling is limited to discovery determining the school’s ties to New Jersey, where now-deceased pedophile music teacher Johannes Somary allegedly molested his young student.
“This is a huge win for the plaintiff against Horace Mann,” his attorney, Rosemarie Arnold, told The Post.
Arnold’s client elected to sue the school instead of accepting a settlement because Somary allegedly abused the student at a boat basin and at glee-club concerts in the Garden State, where the statute of limitations is more flexible.
Horace Mann’s attorneys tried to toss the suit by arguing that New Jersey courts do not have jurisdiction over the Riverdale school.
Arnold now has 60 days to prove that the case can be brought in New Jersey.
The victim, identified as John Doe in the suit filed in Bergen County, claims Somary abused him 450 times between 1973 and 1977.
His is the only current pending case against the school over the sexual-abuse that allegedly occurred at Horace Mann for two decades, from the 1970s through the 1990s, involving at least 50 students and more than 20 teachers.
“After having concealed the fact that Somary, under their supervision, raped my client in New Jersey, they should be ashamed to argue that he’s not entitled to compensation because of jurisdictional issues,” Arnold said.
A Horace Mann spokesman did not immediately return messages for comment.
Screenwriter and former Horace Mann student Amos Kamil broke the sex-abuse story last year in a newspaper article. He is working on a book based on his reporting.
The suit accuses the private school of covering up Somary’s crimes.
The parties are due back in court on Sept. 11.
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2013-09-07 18:22:472013-09-07 18:22:47You can sue where abuse occurred. (NY Post)
CA window clears Senate! Contact Gov Jerry Brown to sign it!
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2013-09-06 23:05:122013-09-06 23:05:12CA window clears Senate! Contact Gov Jerry Brown to sign it!
Final Vote: SB 131 goes to Senate for concurrence of amendments as early as today, September 6th:
SB 131, the Child Victims Act in CA, is the bill that, if passed, will allow me to seek compensation and treatment for my kidnapping and assault, facilitated by the School of the Madeleine and the Catholic Diocese of San Diego, which remains unapologetic and unwilling to compensate me and other victims of abuse.
SB 131 may move to the Senate as early as today! Please call now! 21 Senate votes are needed to complete the bill process with a concurrence of amendments. Then, the bill may go to the Governor. Please contact all Senate members today, and ask them to vote YES on SB 131 to save my life, to help me and other survivors of abuse, and to stop child rapists and those who protect them.
Helpful information:
Most Democrats are voting Yes and simply need your reminder to vote (and to vote Yes!); calls of support to their offices will help. These Republican senators (including my own representative, Joel Anderson), however, are opposing the bill; please contact them repeatedly, and ask them to vote Yes:
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2013-09-06 14:47:592013-09-06 14:47:59Action Alert in CA! Contact Senators to vote YES to SB131!
Church opposes bill allowing sex abuse victims time to sue
Is the state of California waging a war against the Catholic church? Some say yes, and others say for good reason.
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2013-09-05 18:29:282013-09-07 18:30:26Church opposes bill allowing sex abuse victims time to sue (ABC News)
SACRAMENTO, CA – Is the state of California waging a war against the Catholic church?
Some say yes, and others say for good reason.
“There’s no war on anybody,” Sen. Jim Beall, D-San Jose, said. “It’s a law that allows people to have justice against people who molested them. How simple can you get?”
Right now, a victim only has until the age of 26 to seek punitive damages.
Senate Bill 131changes the statute of limitations only for 2014, giving victims of sexual abuse a 1-year window to sue, regardless of when the molestation happened. In 2002, a similar law was written, opening a 1-year window in 2003 allowing abuse victims of any age to sue, regardless of the statute of limitations.
During the 2003 window, the Catholic church paid $1.2 billion in settlements.
However, there were problems with that law and the California Supreme Court ruled some victims couldn’t sue.
Beall said SB 131 fixes those problems.
Opponents argue the 2013 bill only allows victims to sue private organizations, like the Catholic church, the YMCA and others. That’s because under state law, public entities, like schools and district-run day cares, cannot be sued.
“This law that was passed in 2002 that the Supreme Court ruled against, simply deals with private companies that aid and embed molesters, so that’s the issue,” Beall said.
Opponents are working hard to defeat this bill, airing commercials in the Sacramento media market, even putting messages in church bulletins urging parishioners to write to their lawmaker.
But there is the argument of the past; that $1.2 billion spent in settlements in 2003.
“This has nothing to do with [the $1.2 billion in 2003 settlements],” California Council of Non-Profit Organizations spokesperson Kevin Eckery said. “This has everything to do with the victims.”
“A step in the right direction would be having all victims with the ability to get some kind of justice,” Eckery added.
Beall disagreed, saying he would like to see the laws even harsher.
“I think there’s a lot of things that I would do,” he said. “Like the states of Illinois and Florida, which eliminated all statute of limitations for child molestation. We should eventually get to that point.”
Every politician that has betrayed child sex abuse victims deserves the same fate! (NY Post)
/in New York /by SOL ReformDump Hynes
Kenneth Thompson is the better choice for Brooklyn district attorney
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Sunday, September 8, 2013, 4:05 AM
Scandal-scarred Brooklyn DA Charles Hynes must go.
The race for Brooklyn district attorney pits a 24-year incumbent finishing a deeply troubled sixth term against a lawyer who has never faced a challenge remotely on the scale of leading New York’s largest prosecution office.
Charles Hynes, 78, is running for a seventh term on a record that includes findings by two federal judges of grievous misconduct by a top aide, an investigation into whether dozens of cases produced wrongful convictions and credible charges of having failed to effectively act on sexual abuse in the politically powerful ultra-Orthodox Jewish community.
Hynes’ challenger is Kenneth Thompson. Harlem-born and raised by a single mother who served as an NYPD cop, Thompson, 48, has a legal career that encompasses only five years as a Brooklyn federal prosecutor, three years as a Manhattan law firm associate and 10 years running his own small firm — plus the use of divisive rhetoric in his biggest case.
Forced to choose between two flawed candidates, the Daily News views Thompson as holding the potential to chart the better future for the Brooklyn DA’s office. This is hardly an endorsement. It is a judgment compelled by serious evidence that Hynes has presided over miscarriages of justice.
Those include the case of Jabbar Collins, who waged a 15-year fight to prove that a top Hynes lieutenant, Michael Vecchione, had railroaded him for a rabbi’s murder. Federal Judge Dora Irizarry branded the conduct of Hynes’ office as “shameful,” based on testimony that Vecchione had pressured witnesses to implicate Collins falsely and had concealed a key recantation. After Irizarry ordered Vecchione to take the stand, Hynes dismissed all charges.
Retaining Vecchione as head of his rackets bureau, Hynes dismisses the negative testimony and sloughs off the scathing conclusion of a second jurist handling Collins’ civil suit against Hynes and the city. There, Brooklyn Federal Judge Frederic Block accused Vecchione of “horrific behavior” and declared: “Hynes hasn’t treated it seriously.”
Still more, Hynes has been forced to examine almost 40 convictions won by his aides with the apparently too-good-to-be-true work of a now-retired NYPD detective. Circling the wagons where full accountability is demanded, he ordered an internal review overseen by a panel that includes several friends and political supporters.
Further undermining confidence in the quality of justice, Hynes acknowledged an almost two-decade failure to prosecute sexual abuse in the insular ultra-Orthodox Jewish community. He has since become more effective but he shields the names of defendants, asserting that the unique abandonment of public disclosure prevents reprisals against accusers.
The double standard leaped to the fore when, at a press conference, Hynes identified four black men as having subjected an ultra-Orthodox Jewish woman to nine years of sexual servitude. Later, Hynes dismissed the indictments because a top aide had concealed that the accuser had recanted her claims.
With the record demonstrating that the Brooklyn DA’s office needs new leadership, Thompson is Hynes’ lone challenger. No headhunter would propose hiring him to lead a 500-attorney office responsible for administering justice in the city’s biggest borough.
Thompson’s five years as a federal prosecutor provided criminal justice experience but entailed no supervisory positions and only six trials. His work at a large firm was run-of-the-mill for an early-career attorney. His present firm concentrates on employment claims and consists of one other partner and 15 employees.
Adding to the reasons for wariness, Thompson displayed a lack of judgment in his highest-profile case. Representing Nafissatou Diallo, the hotel maid who accused International Monetary Fund head Dominique Strauss-Kahn of sexual assault, he tried to pressure Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance into moving against Strauss-Kahn with accusations of class bias,
He asserted that Vance was afraid to bring the rich and powerful Strauss-Kahn to trial for victimizing a poor black woman. After Vance determined that Diallo had made too many false statements to prove that the encounter had been forcible, not consensual, as Strauss-Kahn claimed, Thompson suggested Vance had given a pass to a wealthy man that he would not have given to a South Bronx bus driver, Bay Ridge plumber or Harlem construction worker.
Questioned by the Daily News Editorial Board, Thompson said he regrets those attacks. “I’ve learned immensely from that case,” he said.
At best, Thompson’s former colleagues in the Brooklyn U.S. attorney’s office say that he has the potential to grow into a capable district attorney. They cite his role as junior member of a three-person team that prosecuted the Abner Louima police assault trial. Thompson powerfully delivered the opening statement. Those who have shown faith in him include former U.S. Attorney Zachary Carter, who contributed to Thompson’s campaign.
That’s some comfort in this distressing choice for a post responsible for protecting public safety while guaranteeing the rights of the accused in New York’s busiest prosecutor’s office.
Source: http://www.nydailynews.com/ dump-hynes-article-1.1448245
You can sue where abuse occurred. (NY Post)
/in New Jersey, New York /by SOL ReformSex-abuse lawsuit vs. Horace Mann School can proceed
By Julia Marsh
September 5, 2013 | 2:32am
A New Jersey judge ruled yesterday that a lawsuit filed against the elite Horace Mann School by an alleged victim of sexual abuse can go forward.
“The plaintiff has set forth reasonable arguments and good cause” to force the scandal-plagued Bronx institution to hand over documents and answer questions, Justice Lisa Perez Friscia ruled yesterday.
Her ruling is limited to discovery determining the school’s ties to New Jersey, where now-deceased pedophile music teacher Johannes Somary allegedly molested his young student.
“This is a huge win for the plaintiff against Horace Mann,” his attorney, Rosemarie Arnold, told The Post.
Arnold’s client elected to sue the school instead of accepting a settlement because Somary allegedly abused the student at a boat basin and at glee-club concerts in the Garden State, where the statute of limitations is more flexible.
Horace Mann’s attorneys tried to toss the suit by arguing that New Jersey courts do not have jurisdiction over the Riverdale school.
Arnold now has 60 days to prove that the case can be brought in New Jersey.
The victim, identified as John Doe in the suit filed in Bergen County, claims Somary abused him 450 times between 1973 and 1977.
His is the only current pending case against the school over the sexual-abuse that allegedly occurred at Horace Mann for two decades, from the 1970s through the 1990s, involving at least 50 students and more than 20 teachers.
“After having concealed the fact that Somary, under their supervision, raped my client in New Jersey, they should be ashamed to argue that he’s not entitled to compensation because of jurisdictional issues,” Arnold said.
A Horace Mann spokesman did not immediately return messages for comment.
Screenwriter and former Horace Mann student Amos Kamil broke the sex-abuse story last year in a newspaper article. He is working on a book based on his reporting.
The suit accuses the private school of covering up Somary’s crimes.
The parties are due back in court on Sept. 11.
CA window clears Senate! Contact Gov Jerry Brown to sign it!
/in California /by SOL ReformCA window clears Senate! Contact Gov Jerry Brown to sign it!
Action Alert in CA! Contact Senators to vote YES to SB131!
/in California /by SOL ReformChurch opposes bill allowing sex abuse victims time to sue (ABC News)
/in California /by SOL ReformChurch opposes bill allowing sex abuse victims time to sue
Is the state of California waging a war against the Catholic church? Some say yes, and others say for good reason.
Who cares?
/in California /by SOL ReformSACRAMENTO, CA – Is the state of California waging a war against the Catholic church?
Some say yes, and others say for good reason.
“There’s no war on anybody,” Sen. Jim Beall, D-San Jose, said. “It’s a law that allows people to have justice against people who molested them. How simple can you get?”
Right now, a victim only has until the age of 26 to seek punitive damages.
Senate Bill 131 changes the statute of limitations only for 2014, giving victims of sexual abuse a 1-year window to sue, regardless of when the molestation happened. In 2002, a similar law was written, opening a 1-year window in 2003 allowing abuse victims of any age to sue, regardless of the statute of limitations.
During the 2003 window, the Catholic church paid $1.2 billion in settlements.
However, there were problems with that law and the California Supreme Court ruled some victims couldn’t sue.
Beall said SB 131 fixes those problems.
Opponents argue the 2013 bill only allows victims to sue private organizations, like the Catholic church, the YMCA and others. That’s because under state law, public entities, like schools and district-run day cares, cannot be sued.
“This law that was passed in 2002 that the Supreme Court ruled against, simply deals with private companies that aid and embed molesters, so that’s the issue,” Beall said.
Opponents are working hard to defeat this bill, airing commercials in the Sacramento media market, even putting messages in church bulletins urging parishioners to write to their lawmaker.
But there is the argument of the past; that $1.2 billion spent in settlements in 2003.
“This has nothing to do with [the $1.2 billion in 2003 settlements],” California Council of Non-Profit Organizations spokesperson Kevin Eckery said. “This has everything to do with the victims.”
“A step in the right direction would be having all victims with the ability to get some kind of justice,” Eckery added.
Beall disagreed, saying he would like to see the laws even harsher.
“I think there’s a lot of things that I would do,” he said. “Like the states of Illinois and Florida, which eliminated all statute of limitations for child molestation. We should eventually get to that point.”
News10/KXTV View Source: http://www.news10.net/news/california/article/256264/430/Church-opposes-bill-allowing-sex-abuse-victims-more-time-to-sue