More fallout from the Polk County case where Judge Elizabeth Coker was caught texting suggested questions for witnesses to the prosecution team in criminal cases during trial. In the latest episode, then-prosecutor, now District Judge Kaycee Jones was the target of the state bar's public disapprobation, receiving one of the state bar's rare public reprimands for exchanging texts with Judge Coker and relaying them to the first chair. Via the Houston Chronicle ("
State bar reprimands former prosecutor in texting scandal," May 27):
The Texas Bar Association has issued a public reprimand to state
district Judge Kaycee Jones for her role in clandestine texting during a
criminal trial while she was a prosecutor and before her election to
the bench last year.
Jones, who oversees the 411th court
in Polk, Trinity and San Jacinto counties, signed the agreed judgement
citing her for "professional misconduct" just before she came in front
of the bar's grievance panel for a hearing this month.
Jones, 39, was an assistant Polk County prosecutor for 11 years before becoming a judge in 2013. ...
The agreed judgment documented how Jones had received text messages
from state district Judge Elizabeth Coker, while she was seated on the
bench during a trial in a child injury case.
Jones, then an assistant prosecutor
and observer during the trial, wrote down the message that suggested a
line of questioning to bolster the prosecution's case and relayed it to
the lead prosecutor.
The improper communication violated
the "ex parte rule" which forbids judges, who must remain impartial
arbiters, from communicating about a case unless both sides are present. ...
An ethics expert at South Texas College of Law, Jim Alfini, also said
the state bar's action was a mere slap on the wrist for a serious
violation.
"Jones was an admitted accomplice to a
serious judicial ethics violation," he said. "They went very easy on
her. I could imagine a much more severe sanction."
But judicial ethics expert and author
Lillian Hardwick said Jones will not come through this unscathed as she
will be required to disclose the reprimand on her bar record for the
next 10 years.
Now that the state bar has publicly spoken, one wonders if the State Commission on Judicial Conduct will follow up to evaluate Judge Jones' fitness to serve on the bench?
I'm not sure the commission has any jurisdiction over this. The act was before she was a judge.
ReplyDeleteWhy in the world would she retain her law license? Or continue as a judge?
ReplyDeleteI'm with you Robert.
ReplyDeletecan we all say big fucking deal. This isn't a punishment. first nobody but other crooked lier judges and lawyers will ever see it. second it's not much of a punishment. Punishment is supposed to HURT to TEACH. This is useless.
She retains her law license because Th eABA and TxBbar refused to revoke them . You will have to ask them why I doubt they have a answer that makes any sense . Rodsmith is right this is not punishment .She will continue to have a well paying job and be the extra prosecutor in the court room . If we were to be fair all of the cases she has over sen and prosecuted would be reopened and investigated by well compensated CDLs for misconduct if so a overturning or dismissing them with prejudice is the only fair actin but it will not happen .
ReplyDeleteRodSmith there is a way to stop this the way to stop this as voters demand politicians make laws that hold prosecutors, cops and judges civilly and criminally liable in a life sentence for any false conviction they help secure and a good 20 years for any other misconduct on the job, oss of pension and a justice system corruption registry. Just like sex offenders so evey6 one gets to know who and what they are . Would you hire a dirty cop a crooked prosecutor a or judge ? want one living near you? nope me neither . Another solution to a lot of what grits posts about . Term limits and a life time ban on lobbying and a to - 20 year ban on running for any other office . Limit these life time politician s . they too need to work in the dreaded private sector . The other question is are any of the case this woman has been involved with being appealed If so is her abuse of power being looked at ? If she was caught this late in the game you can bet she has been abusing her power and positions for a long time.
This is disgusting! Who are the criminals???
ReplyDeleteThe reason she doesn't get what she really deserves is because the commission is probably made up of her cronies, who have done just as bad or worse! Judges are just prosecutors who moved up!
The Texas State Bar (comprised of nothing but lawyers) has a long running documented and highly vettable record of pretending to investigate instances of judicial related crimes. (Notice that I refused to use the Misconduct label) *We, Us & Them collectively don't refer to the criminal act of robbery as Misconduct for a damn good reason either.
ReplyDeleteThe only reason they doled out this rare WTF? "Public Reprimand" is due to the public being made aware of it via blogs (GFB to be exact) and maybe one media outlet. With the 10 year mandatory disclosure attached to the "P.R.", being the 'punishment' we now know why - Judges, D.As, & ADAs don't give a rat's ass as they knowingly & willingly commit crimes in court rooms. Reprimands devoid of real punishment factors are laughed at as they know will be watered down as misconduct and addressed rarely, if ever.
The Cause & Effect syndrome
Yes, we the public deserve what we are witnessing due to the Cause & Effect Syndrome related to allowing alleged criminal acts committed by public servants to be investigated - IN-House.
Rinse & Repeat - (Only the names have changed)
We the public recently witnessed a former HPD Robbery Detective turned Divorce Lawyer turned Judge turn a court room into a mini church. Mr. John W. Clinton, was caught red handed by court room personnel force feeding Harris County Inmates bible lessons from the bench. He escaped the wrath of the Fake-Ass TBA reprimand as he only received a good talking to by other judges on the 9th hole.
Lesson Learned
Text until you puke and slip a bible lesson in on the down low. If you get busted, we got your back.
Voting just to be voting? You should be tarred & feathered.
Shame on you faithful gangsters, as the God fearing candidate touting - "years of experience" that you failed to fully vett, just might be on record (ex: police incident report) blatantly railroading a fellow citizen or two or was it ten? Thanks.
This 'one' is for the "Experts"
ReplyDelete*Mr. Jim Alfini & Mrs. Lillian Hardwick, if & when you decide to drop by and visit with Grits & Co. in regards to this GFB posting. - From time to time when Grits publishes a posting about rogue D.As. and or ADAs, the TDCAA president comes out swinging when and if the posting and or comments is / are devoid of plausible "Solutions" to the problem at hand. Then he turns it into an Us vs Them issue and goes away, as if on que to avoid discussing the solutions provided.
With that, please consider sharing any & all positive solutions you may have that we can implement state wide, this year, (right now).
Thanks in advance & of course thanks to those that have shared the solutions above and to those that may follow suit.
As I recall -- and I could be wrong on this -- is the whole thing became public when then ADA Jones fessed up.
ReplyDeleteIf she had kept her mouth shut, Cokler would still be on the bench texting.
When someone self reports and/or aids the government in prosecutions, it is common to give them a break on punishment. Everyone is familiar with U.S.S.G. sectionl 5K1.1 which allows federal judges to depart downward even below statutory minimums for defendants who cooperate.
If in fact Jones cooperated, she should get the same consideration a drug dealer would get at punishment -- a lower sentence.
Tom -
ReplyDeleteThe whistle blower was then Polk County DA Investigator, David Wells (now with the Angelina County Sheriff's Department). Wells was the criminal investigator in the case and reported that he saw Judge Coker, conspire from the bench with the prosecutor.
Wells filed a report five months ago and called Coker's actions unethical.
According to Wells, he was sitting in the audience at the time of the trial when Kaycee Jones (an assistant district attorney at the time) allegedly borrowed his notepad. According to Wells, Jones received a text message from Coker and she wrote word for word the contents of the message on his notepad.
Jones allegedly then asked him to deliver the note to the lead prosecutor...
The above was from...
ReplyDeletehttp://www.polkcountytoday.com/coker012413.html
Jan. 2013.
She fessed up because she got caught. Not prior to.
I agree with Mr Griffith, he has posted many times on this. Lets call the kettle black. Perjury, evidence tampering, false gov't documents are criminal, not merely "misconduct" when perpetrated by the government.
ReplyDeleteThese politicians including judges and DA's constantly run their mouth about "defending the Constitution". Texas courts are a joke, the Constitution is used by the government as a checklist to violate civil rights via criminal behavior.
Judges texting DA's is not criminal?, but certainly goes right to 5th & 6th amendments guaranteeing due process and fair trial.
I like the idea of a legal criminal registry. Not misconduct registry, criminal registry, just like for sex offenders.
heart-breaking, citizen-crushing abuse. Is it because they're rich, and laughing at We The Poor People? Is it because they are sociopaths, so have neither fear nor remorse; or psychopaths plotting to quietly destroy as many folks as they can? When there is no oversight, humans in power become sicker and sicker; it's Earth. That's part of why governments form, to try and limit natural lawlessness. Once the foxes take over the hen house, there checks and balances are burned down. Lawyers' union "Bar Association" has total conflict of interest. You expect those getting richer to self-regulate?
ReplyDeleteCaptcha: Please prove you're not a politicians or gov employee.
Why is anyone surprised? All lawyers, including judges, are privileged licensees of the State, with a State-granted monopoly on appearances in Courts, whose continued privilege depends upon the State. Unfortunately for us, this means that ALL lawyers will kowtow to the judge, who generally is their superior in the Lawyers' Guild. Shakespeare was right.
ReplyDeleteI was in court for a traffic ticket, perhaps not exactly the same as a criminal trial, but no one in the court could use their cell phone. One could have it on vibrate, but use in the court was prohibited. Judges, prosecutors and defenders should also heed this policy and be called out by the officers when not in compliance.
ReplyDeleteGreat post! Been reading a lot about different lawyer scandals. Thanks for the info here!
ReplyDeleteThis a prime example why the State Bar can no longer be the sole source of discipline for bar members. The attorney grievance process is antiquated and needs to be updated. That's exactly what tech startup the Legal Whistler aims to do. In the next few months, sweeping change will take place with the privatization of the attorney grievance process. Change is about to come.
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ReplyDeleteNot too long ago,I had a dealings with Kacey Jones in JP David Johnson's court. They are both corrupt. Her little slap on the wrist did nothing!!! As for the JP,he and Kacey Jones and the plaintiffs were in the back room for 30 minutes after court was
suppose to start. How much more can you be corrupt???? I refused to look at the evidence and called me a liar. I paid a fine versus paying more cost to take it to district court.
I'm in agreement about the DA knowing this and hiding it for months he should have been prosecuted himself along with the other two.
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