Remarks and observations concerning American law and cultural studies as it relates to courses taken by students in the University of Osnabrück's and University of Münster's foreign law programs.
Matt LeMieux
13 November 2007
Policing Judges
As students of Common Law Legal System in Münster and Institutionen von Staat und Gesellschaft in Osnabrück learn, judges in common law countries, especially in the United States and England, are quite powerful. Many are appointed for life terms (in England, a life term means until the judge turns 70 years-old) and few ever face the threat of discipline, even for the most outrageous of acts. Every so often, however, one comes across a story about a judge who has gone too far. One such story surfaced this past week in Virginia, where a state court judge was removed from the bench for extreme behavior. In this particular case the judge had done things like decide a child custody case by flipping a coin (Münze werfen) and ask a female to take off her pants in court. It's rare that judges get disciplined. So rare that when they do, it's newsworthy.