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The Michigan Messenger going forward

By Staff Report | 11.16.11

I am writing today to announce the closure of the Michigan Messenger. After four years of operation in Michigan, the board of the American Independent News Network, has decided to shift publication of its news into a single site, The American Independent at Americanindependent.com. This is part of a shift in strategy, towards new forms [...]

Colorado-based abstinence program provided false and misleading information to Michigan students

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By Todd A. Heywood | 11.16.11

An abstinence-only presentation provided to numerous school districts in Calhoun and Eaton Counties in October of this year provided false and misleading information to students about HIV, experts allege.

Class action lawsuit filed against MERS over unpaid taxes

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By Todd A. Heywood | 11.15.11

Two county registers of deeds filed a class action lawsuit Monday on behalf of Michigan’s 83 counties alleging that the Mortgage Electronic Registration Services owes millions of dollars in property title transfer taxes.

Schuette fights important mercury regulations

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By Eartha Jane Melzer | 11.14.11

Despite evidence of the impact of mercury on children and public health, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette last month joined with 24 other state attorneys general in filing a lawsuit to scuttle new EPA regulations that would reduce mercury emissions from power plants.

Young and Corrigan argued on behalf of Massey Energy

By Eartha Jane Melzer | 05.26.10 | 3:37 pm

In a landmark U.S. Supreme Court case, Michigan Supreme Court Justices Robert Young Jr. and Maura Corrigan argued against rules to disqualify judges from hearing cases involving major contributors their election campaigns.

Republican Justice Robert Young Jr. is now up for reelection and is expected to benefit from millions of dollars in advertising paid for by business groups.
He has strongly protested any limits on how much an individual or a business could contribute to his own election campaigns before he would be expected to disqualify himself from hearing a case involving that contributor.

Young and Corrigan filed a brief in a 2009 suit filed against Don Blankenship, the CEO of Massey Energy, who has recently come under national scrutiny after an explosion at the Upper Big Branch mine in West Virginia killed 29 workers. Massey Energy supplies coal to DTE Energy and shares a Board of Directors member with CMS Energy, Michigan’s two largest power companies.

Blankenship buys a judge

Facing a $50 million dollar jury verdict in a 2002 fraud case brought by a smaller mining company, Blankenship funneled $3 million into ads supporting the state supreme court campaign of a relatively unknown candidate, Brent Benjamin, during the 2004 election.

The bulk of the money went to an organization called And for the Sake of the Children, which purchased ads on Benjamin’s behalf. Altogether Blankenship’s $3 million in contributions were three times the amount spent by Benjamin’s own campaign.

When Benjamin was elected, Blankenship appealed the jury’s verdict and, despite widespread outcry about the perceived conflict of interest, the judge he had spent so much money to get elected cast the deciding vote to overrule the lower court’s decision.

The plaintiffs in the case, Caperton, insisted that Benjamin should have recused himself and they filed a federal lawsuit arguing that the situation had denied them due process. The U.S. Supreme, in a 5-4 opinion, ruled in Caperton’s favor.

Young, Corrigan argue on behalf of Blankenship

Most of the state supreme court judges who weighed in on the matter said that they believed ruling on a case involving a major campaign donor created the clear appearance of impropriety — but not Young and Corrigan. They filed a brief in the case arguing that there should be no limits at all on how much money a judge could receive in aid from a party to a case before they had to recuse themselves.

Young and Corrigan argued that the money would not affect their judgment and that creating standards for recusal would be impractical. “Elected judges have traditionally been accorded the strong presumption of integrity,” they argued, “and the fact that recently more money has been spent on judicial elections should not change that.”

Former Michigan Chief Justice Cliff Taylor also signed on to that letter.

The U.S. Supreme Court disagreed with this reasoning. The majority opinion, written by Justice Anthony Kennedy, concludes that there is “a serious risk of actual bias – based on objective and reasonable perceptions – when a person with a personal stake in a particular case had a significant and disproportionate influence in placing the judge on the case by raising funds or directing the judge’s election campaign when the case was pending or imminent.”

Third-party spending in judicial races skyrockets

Michigan is one of 38 states that elect their Supreme Court justices and in recent years the races have become far more expensive, with spending on third party issues ads outstripping direct campaign expenditures. An issues ad is one that is clearly designed to sway voters for or against a candidate but does not actually declare an endorsement.

The rise in issues ad spending in Michigan has coincided with a strategy by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, begun during the 2000 election, to funnel funds from member businesses into political advertising.

According to the Wall Street Journal (on 9/11/2001, of all days), “Wal-Mart Stores Inc., DaimlerChrysler AG, Home Depot Inc. and the American Council of Life Insurers all kicked in $1 million each for one of the chamber’s special projects: a TV and direct-mail advertising campaign aimed at helping elect business-friendly judges. The participants had all been targets of costly lawsuits, and the chamber’s campaign gave them a way to fight back — without disclosing their identities.”

The Journal reported that during the 2000 election the U.S. Chamber of Commerce — whose board of directors includes Don Blankenship — spent more than $5 million on judicial campaign ads in state supreme court races in Michigan, Mississippi, Ohio, Indiana and Alabama. Since then each election has seen more and more issues ads funded by business and other special interest groups.

According to the non-partisan advocacy group Justice at Stake, in 2004 five candidates for the Michigan Supreme Court raised slightly over $1.6 million, while independent groups spent $1.8 million on TV advertising. In 2006, Justice Maura Corrigan received more on-air advertising support from third party groups than she raised for her own campaign.

The Michigan Campaign Finance Network estimates $14.3 million was spent on candidate focused television ads during Supreme Court campaigns from 2000 through 2008 — more than the amount raised by the candidates in their campaign committees.

During that period Michigan’s Supreme Court, led by Chief Justice Cliff Taylor, on whose behalf the Michigan Chamber of Commerce spent an estimated $1.7 million on issues ads in his 2008 election, developed a reputation as the most business friendly in the nation.

Michigan Supreme Court sets new rules for judges

Michigan was in the process of considering new rules for judicial recusal even before the Supreme Court ruling in Caperton v. Massey, but that ruling helped shape the final result. Under the old rules, a justice whose impartiality was challenged by one of the parties in a case before the court determined on their own whether they would recuse themselves or not, and they did not have to explain their reasons.

Under the new rules, passed despite no votes from Young and Corrigan, the justice must issue a written ruling explaining their decision and the challenging party can then appeal the decision to the full court, which will then hold a vote on the question and must also issue a written decision explaining their conclusions.

Young and Corrigan are so adamant in their opposition to any rules that require a justice to disqualify themselves in the case of a clear conflict of interest that a few weeks ago they both refused to participate in a hearing over whether a fellow judge should recuse themselves in a case.

But as the plaintiffs in the Caperton case argued in that case, it is “a part of human nature for a judge to be biased in favor of a party whose CEO facilitated his election through massive campaign expenditures that were larger than the combined amount spent by all of the judge’s other supporters.”

Comments

  • Obama_Voter

    I don't know where to begin with all the inaccuracies in this article. Most important, I guess, is that Justices Young and Corrigan DO believe that judges and justices should be bound by conflict of interest rules: when a judge or justice is actually biased against a party or attorney, that judge or justice is ethically bound to recuse himself or herself.

    This much is made clear in the Court's November 5, 2009 administrative conference, which may be viewed on the State Bar of Michigan's official web site: http://cst.clickstreamtv.net/gateway/link/launc…

    Of course, the sensationalist tone of the piece suggests to me that its author did not do her homework and actually consider what the honorable justices' positions are. Of course, in an election year, the facts don't get in the way of Justice Young's political opponents.

  • ebrayton

    That position is indistinguishable from the one attributed to them in our article. To say that a judge should only recuse themselves if they perceive themselves to have actual bias is to say nothing meaningful at all. Everyone always perceives themselves to be objective, even — perhaps especially — when they are not. There is a mountain of data on this from psychology that shows that the more biased someone is, the more objective they perceive themselves to be. This is a very basic way humans deal with cognitive dissonance. The very last person who should be deciding whether is biased is the individual being accused of being so. That is why it is so important for others to make that judgment.

    There are any number of ways this can be done. It can be put up to a vote of the other justices, as we now do it here. There could be a separate judicial ethics panel that makes such a decision. But the one person who should never, ever make that decision is the one who is being challenged.

    I would also argue that actual bias is not the only justification for recusing a justice. The appearance of bias undermines public faith and confidence in the judicial system — and quite frankly, it ought to. We know enough about human nature to know that people are biased in ways they themselves do not recognize toward those they receive large financial benefit from. In scientific studies, for example, if such studies are funded by a corporation it is about six times more likely that the study will reach conclusions that coincide with the interests of the funder than if they are funded by a third party without an interest in the outcome. This is not because scientists are fundamentally dishonest or easily bought off; they genuinely believe that they are being objective. But biases can enter their analysis in a myriad of ways, with the human mind rationalizing the results away in order to rid itself of cognitive dissonance. This is quite well known to psychologists and very well understood experimentally.

    Studies of at least two state supreme courts (Louisiana and Ohio) have shown conclusively that there is a very clear correlation between campaign contributions and winning outcomes, even if one controls for other factors (like plaintiffs vs defendants, etc). Every one of the justices in those studies would no doubt believe themselves to have been perfectly objective. That does not mean they actually were.