Black Judges Getting Killed

thoughtone

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
source: New York Times

Sheila Abdus-Salaam, Judge on New York’s Top Court, Is Found Dead in Hudson River

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Judge Sheila Abdus-Salaam at the Court of Appeals in Albany last year


Sheila Abdus-Salaam, an associate judge on New York State’s highest court and the first African-American woman to serve on that bench, was found dead on Wednesday in the Hudson River, the authorities said.

Officers with the New York Police Department’s Harbor Unit responded about 1:45 p.m. to a report of a person floating by the shore near West 132nd Street in Upper Manhattan. Judge Abdus-Salaam, 65, was taken to a pier on the Hudson River and was pronounced dead by paramedics shortly after 2 p.m.

The police were investigating how she ended up in the river, and it was not clear how long Judge Abdus-Salaam, who lived nearby in Harlem, had been missing. There were no signs of trauma on her body, the police said. She was fully clothed.

A law enforcement official said investigators had found no signs of criminality. Her husband identified her body.

Since 2013, Judge Abdus-Salaam had been one of seven judges on the State Court of Appeals. Before that, she served for about four years as an associate justice on the First Appellate Division of the State Supreme Court, and for 15 years as a State Supreme Court justice in Manhattan. She was previously a lawyer in the city’s Law Department.

Zakiyyah Muhammad, the founding director of the Institute of Muslim American Studies, said Judge Abdus-Salaam became the first female Muslim judge in the United States when she started serving on the State Supreme Court in 1994.

Gov.Andrew M. Cuomosaid in a statement on Wednesday that Judge Abdus-Salaam was a pioneer with an “unshakable moral compass.” He added, “Justice Sheila Abdus-Salaam was a trailblazing jurist whose life in public service was in pursuit of a more fair and more just New York for all.”



In nominating her to the highest court in 2013, Mr. Cuomo praised her “working-class roots” and her “deep understanding of the everyday issues facing New Yorkers.” Her nomination was part of a push by Mr. Cuomo to diversify the court. When another judge, Rowan D. Wilson, joined the court this year, it was the first time the Court of Appeals had two African-American judges in its 169-year history.

On the court, Judge Abdus-Salaam was among the most reliable and steadfast liberal voices, regularly siding with vulnerable parties — the poor, impoverished immigrants and people with mental illnesses, for instance — against more powerful and established interests. She also tended to lean toward injured parties who brought claims of misconduct, fraud or breach of contract against wealthy corporations.

Among her colleagues, she was admired for her thoughtfulness, her candor and her finely crafted and restrained writing style. She was not one to use her decisions as a soapbox to make high-sounding political points or to wax poetic, even when her rulings were precedent-setting.

In a statement, Chief Judge Janet DiFiore said, “Her personal warmth, uncompromising sense of fairness and bright legal mind were an inspiration to all of us who had the good fortune to know her.”

Last summer, Judge Abdus-Salaam wrote an important decision, Matter of Brooke S.B. v. Elizabeth A.C.C., that expanded the definition of what it means to be a parent, overturning a previous ruling. For 25 years, the court had held that the nonbiological parent in a same-sex couple had no standing to seek custody or visitation rights after a breakup.

But Judge Abdus-Salaam wrote that the previous ruling had become “unworkable when applied to increasingly varied familial relationships.” In a tightly reasoned decision, she determined that nonbiological parents did have standing to seek custody if they showed “by clear and convincing evidence that all parties agreed to conceive a child and to raise the child together.”

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Judge Abdus-Salaam, left, after being sworn in by the state’s chief judge, Jonathan Lippman, in Albany in 2013.

The Court of Appeals last heard oral arguments at the end of March and issued opinions on April 4. It is scheduled to be back in session on April 25.

Judge Abdus-Salaam grew up in Washington, one of seven children in a poor family, and earned her law degree at Columbia University in 1977. After law school, she became a public defender in Brooklyn, representing people who could not afford lawyers, and then served as an assistant attorney general in the Civil Rights Bureau of the New York State attorney general’s office. In one of her first cases, she won an anti-discrimination suit for more than 30 female New York City bus drivers who had been denied promotions.

Seymour W. James Jr., the attorney in chief of the Legal Aid Society, the nation’s largest provider of free legal services, said he had first met Judge Abdus-Salaam in the early 1980s, when she worked at the Civil Rights Bureau. Mr. James said her upbringing and years spent representing the poor and disenfranchised had shaped her perspective on the bench. “She was a strong believer in equal rights and equal access to justice,” he said in an interview.

In an interview in 2014 about black history, Judge Abdus-Salaam said that she had become interested in her family’s history as a young girl in public school and that her research had led her to discover that her great-grandfather was a slave in Virginia.

“All the way from Arrington, Va., where my family was the property of someone else, to my sitting on the highest court of the State of New York is amazing and huge,” she said. “It tells you and me what it is to know who we are and what we can do.”

Eric H. Holder Jr., the former United States attorney general, was classmates with Judge Abdus-Salaam at Columbia Law School and sang her praises at her swearing-in ceremony in 2013, according to The Associated Press.

It was clear that she was intelligent, serious and witty, he said at the time, according to The Associated Press. But she could have fun, too: “Sheila could boogie,” he said.
 

thoughtone

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
source: Chicago Tribune

Police: Fatal shooting of Cook County judge may have been attempted robbery

Chicago police say a Cook County judge shot to death Monday morning outside his South Side home might have been the victim of an attempted robbery, though it didn’t appear any possessions were taken from the judge and a woman companion who was wounded.

Citing preliminary information, police said the woman, 52, encountered the gunman by the garage of the two-story brick home in the 9400 block of South Forest Avenue around 4:50 a.m. Words were exchanged and she was shot once in the leg.

"Upon hearing the commotion and the gunshot, Judge (Raymond) Myles exited his residence," Melissa Staples, the chief of detectives, said at a news conference at police headquarters. "(He) exchanged words with the offender before he was fatally shot multiple times."

The woman is expected to survive.

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Cook County Judge Raymond Myles was killed and a woman was wounded in a shooting outside the judge's South Side home on April 10, 2017

Staples said detectives were pursuing "multiple and promising leads" and reviewing video footage from public and private surveillance cameras in the neighborhood. She said detectives do not know if the judge’s work had anything to do with the shooting.

Myles, 66, an associate judge in Cook County Circuit Court's Criminal Division, was a longtime jurist who has been involved in several high-profile cases. A year and a half ago, he was beaten by another motorist during a road rage incident.

The chief of detectives could not provide a description of the suspect but said he fled on foot and then possibly in a car nearby. Staples said the FBI has offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to an arrest.

Calling the shooting "another senseless act of violence," First Deputy Superintendent Kevin Navarro said Superintendent Eddie Johnson has ordered the department to use "every resource to track down the offender and bring them to justice."

"Everyday civil servants like Judge Myles, and those of us in law enforcement, work tirelessly to hold criminals accountable and make our streets safer," Navarro told reporters. "You have our word, we won’t let Judge Myles’ life be lost in vain and we will hold his killer accountable."

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Cook County Associate Judge Raymond Myles. (Circuit Court of Cook County)

A neighbor and friend of the judge said he was awakened by gunfire and screams early Monday morning.

"I heard maybe six shots. The shots woke me up, and the screaming of the woman woke me up. She was screaming, 'Don't kill him, don't kill him!'" said the neighbor, who asked not to be named for his safety.

The neighbor said he called 911 and was told that other people had already called. He then looked out the window and saw the woman's body near the garage, its door open. When police arrived, he went outside and saw the judge lying on the porch.

"I think he was alive when they carried him to the ambulance," he said.

The neighbor said he believes the judge and the woman were leaving the home to work out at a health club nearby. They always got up early to work out, he said. "The woman, she had a bottle of water with her."

The neighbor also thinks that cameras installed by the judge at his home caught the shooting. There had a been push recently to get cameras installed throughout the neighborhood. He remembered joking with Myles about how the cameras might catch neighbors doing something embarrassing.

"We would joke, after the cameras were installed," he said.

"I knew him well," the neighbor said. "Great guy, great neighbor. He looked after the neighborhood. Any mischief in the neighborhood, he was investigating. He was always at the block clubs. He never talked about being a judge. He was just Ray."

The neighbor said he just saw the judge over the weekend. They talked about their yards. "He tended a garden in the back, a vegetable garden," he said. "It was always greenery. He was developing a green thumb."

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Another neighbor, Clayshia Moore, walked up and down the block barefoot before the sun began to rise. She had lathered her feet and hands with blessed oil while her aunt, Sondra Patterson, poured more of the oil down the street.

Patterson hoped the oil would protect her neighbors. “That God will cover us,” she said. “That he will help protect us.”

Moore was in bed when she heard five to six gunshots just before 5 a.m. She thought the noise could have been coming from the trash cans in the alley. She didn’t know there had been a shooting until she saw officers and paramedics just a few houses from where she lives.

Chicago police did not release details about what led to the shooting, leaving neighbors to speculate.

“That’s kind of odd coming from that house,” said one neighbor who did not want to be identified. “They quiet, they real quiet.”

The same neighbor said residents at a recent block club meeting had discussed installing cameras on the block in response to an uptick in home burglaries.

“Yeah, the area is going down, that’s for sure,” she said.

Most of the homes on the block are owned by their original owners, Patterson said. She has lived in her home since the 1970s. It’s only been in the past five years that she’s noticed crime in her neighborhood.

“We’ve never seen this before,” she said.

Myles joined the court in October 1999 when the Illinois Supreme Court appointed him to fill a vacancy. Circuit judges then appointed him as an associate judge in June 2001, and he has served in the criminal division since March 2009.

The two suspects in the infamous murder of seven people at a Brown's Chicken in Palatine appeared before Myles shortly after their 2002 arrests. Myles was the judge who ordered William Balfour to be held without bond in the 2008 killings of three relatives of singer Jennifer Hudson.

Just before 9 a.m. Monday, a handful of young men stood outside Myles's locked courtroom, Room 204, at 26th Street and California Avenue, waiting to attend his scheduled morning call.

A woman emerged.

"Judge Myles?" she asked quietly, then directed the men to a courtroom down the hall.

The death of the judge stunned colleagues – and even one defendant – at the county’s main criminal courthouse where Myles had worked for years.

The defendant was slated to appear before Myles on Monday and began to cry on hearing the news of his death, according to his courtroom staff.

LeRoy K. Martin Jr., presiding judge of the Criminal Division, headquartered at the Leighton Criminal Court building, last saw Myles on Friday when he brought his teenage daughter to spend the day with him at the courthouse.

“Everyone here is devastated,” Martin said. “People know when a judge is fair.”

Martin said it was unclear if Myles’ work as a judge played any factor in his killing.

“You don’t think of it in terms of jobs where people are putting their lives on the line (like) police, fire, first responders,” the judge said. “Nonetheless, when you’re doing criminal cases, you’re sensitive to the fact that judges are being blamed for the sentences. People get angry. I suppose time will tell if this had anything to do with his position.”

Martin said Myles was enthusiastic about his assignment to the “youthful offenders” call, where he heard narcotics cases involving defendants about age 27 and younger.

“He was very patient with people and gave out a lot of tough love,” Martin said. “ …He would try and provide services for people, to work with people, and try to keep people out of the penitentiary.”

The two judges had discussed expanding Myles’s assignment to include young defendants charged with crimes other than drug offenses.

“He was in favor of doing that,” Martin said. “It was just his concern about young people. We’d talk about the youth. If we’re going to succeed as a society, we’ll need to give youth a chance to succeed.”

Before joining the bench, Myles had worked as an assistant state’s attorney and then in private practice as a criminal defense lawyer.

“He was on both sides of criminal cases,” Martin said. “That gave him a certain perspective.”

Longtime courthouse employees said Myles was hardworking and friendly, a devoted father and Cubs fan who wore a flashy team jacket to work during their World Series run last year.

“He was a huge Cubs fan,” Martin said. “We would tease each other because I’m a huge White Sox fan.”

“This is the first time any of us have gone through this,” Martin said. “We’ll just have to pick up and carry on, and he’d want it that way.”

Windelin DeLoach, a criminal defense attorney who practiced before Myles for five years, said the judge was known for insisting that defendants get their high school diploma or GED.

He would make people who didn't fulfill the conditions of their bail to write hundreds of lines -- like students -- as punishment instead of revoking their bond. DeLoach said this happened to at least three of her clients.

"He wanted to make sure that every person that came into his courtroom accused of a crime got his education because he believed if you had an education, a GED, you won't come back to his courtroom," she said.

"He was a phenomenal human being. I don't know who is going to replace Judge Myles. He ruled his courtroom with an iron fist but with a great amount of kindness, fairness and justice," DeLoach said. "This was a man who walked with dignity. This was a man who walked proudly through the courthouse. He walked through the hallways... he had nothing to fear, so this was stunning."

In 2015, Myles was attacked after getting into a minor traffic collision.

Authorities said Myles was trying to park along East 86th Place when his car was struck by another vehicle. The two drivers got out of their cars, but when the judge pulled out a cellphone and began taking pictures of the damage, the other driver punched him in the face, causing serious injuries, according to court records.

The judge fell to the ground bleeding and the assailant fled, according to a Cook County state's attorney's spokeswoman. Myles was taken to Jackson Park Hospital, where he was treated for a fractured nose, facial bruising and a chipped tooth, injuries that later required reconstructive surgery, records show.

Ten months went by before authorities arrested Deandre Hudson, 22, and charged him with aggravated battery causing great bodily harm to someone over the age of 60, according to court records.

Cook County Chief Judge Timothy Evans released a statement saying he joined "all of the judges today in the Circuit Court of Cook County in expressing our sadness regarding the tragic passing of our colleague and friend.

“Judge Myles joined the bench with a wealth of experience in law and extensive service to the community. I have always known Judge Myles to be focused and determined in the pursuit of justice, and his conduct earned him the confidence and respect of the people who appeared before him.”
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Judge Abdus-Salaam seen walking alone in video before death

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© Provided by New York Daily News Police suspect the 65-year-old Court of Appeals judge, despondent over her
mother’s death a year ago and the suicide of her brother, killed herself, sources have said. - Andrew Savulich/New
York Daily News


Pioneering Judge Sheila Abdus-Salaam was captured on video walking alone near her home the night
before her body was discovered in the Hudson River, police said Wednesday.

The 65-year-old jurist was spotted on footage from a security camera on W. 131st St. at 8:30 p.m. on April 11, cops said.

Officials say she was headed toward the river.

That is at least a half-mile from where she was discovered near W. 132nd St at 1:45 p.m. the next day, police said.

The video helps narrow the scope of the investigation, a law enforcement official said.

Before the video was discovered, the last sighting of the judge had been at 10 a.m. the day before she was found, cops said.

That day, she called her assistant to say she was sick and would not be going to work.

Abdus-Salaam — the first African-American woman to serve on the state’s highest court — was allegedly depressed.

Police suspect the Court of Appeals judge, was despondent over her mother’s death a year ago, as well as her brother’s suicide.

The pain, sources said, may have driven her to suicide.

But the NYPD has labeled her death suspicious because no suicide note was found, and there are no witnesses.

Abdus-Salaam, one of seven children born to a working-class family in Washington, graduated from Barnard College and received her law degree from the Columbia University School of Law, where she was a classmate of Eric Holder, who later served as President Barack Obama’s first attorney general.

Before her nomination to the top court, she was a judge in Manhattan Supreme Court for 14 years, and an attorney with East Brooklyn Legal Services Corp., the city Law Department and the city Office of Labor Services.

During her confirmation hearings before the state Legislature, Abdus-Salaam drew a chuckle from lawmakers when she said she was first inspired to become a lawyer as a child watching the television shows “Perry Mason” and “East Side/West Side.”

Abdus-Salaam married the Rev. Gregory Jacobs last June at the Greater Newark Conservancy, according to a marriage announcement.

She spent the weekend before her death with her husband at his New Jersey home.

A spokeswoman for the city medical examiner’s office said Abdus-Salaam’s cause of death is pending further study.


http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/ju...e-death/ar-BBA3d2z?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartanntp



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QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Sheila Abdus-Salaam, Judge on New York’s Top Court, Is Found Dead in Hudson River


Mysterious death of New York judge
was initially called a suicide.

Now, police think it's suspicious

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Justice Sheila Abdus-Salaam, center, is applauded at the New York Capitol after her confirmation in 2013. (Mike
Groll / Associated Press)


Los Angeles Times
By Barbara Demick
April 20, 2017

The mystery of how a prominent African American judge came to be found floating dead in the Hudson River has deepened as her family and widowed husband disputed suggestions by the New York Police Department that she had committed suicide.

What is known is that Sheila Abdus-Salaam, 65, a judge on the state’s highest court, went for a walk alone on the evening of April 11, locking the door to her Harlem brownstone, leaving her phone and wallet at home. Surveillance cameras showed her walking alone near the river shortly after midnight, according to the New York Police Department. The next afternoon, her body, fully clothed in sweat pants and sneakers, was found at the edge of the river in an area popular with joggers and bicycle riders.

In the initial days, police said that the death appeared to be a suicide because there were no obvious signs of trauma to her body. Reports circulated that her family had a history of suicide — that her 92-year-old mother had taken her life during the Easter holiday in 2012 and her brother two years later. But her family now disputes those stories, saying in a statement that Abdus-Salaam’s mother died naturally of old age and her brother of terminal lung cancer.

Gregory Jacobs, an Episcopal priest who become Abdus-Salaam’s third husband when they married last year, also challenged the portrayal of his wife as suicide.

“Reports have frequently included unsubstantiated comments concerning my wife's possible mental and emotional state of mind at the time of her death. Those of us who loved Sheila and knew her well do not believe that these unfounded conclusions have any basis in reality,” read a statement Jacobs released Wednesday.

What looked like an open-and-shut case has been assigned a special team of investigators by the Police Department, which is now treating Abdus-Salaam’s death as suspicious. The police on Tuesday put out a poster asking for information, accompanied by a picture of the judge, photographed, as always, impeccably dressed, this time in a cream-colored jacket and pearls with wire-rimmed eyeglasses.

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FULL STORY: http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-new-york-judge-20170420-story.html



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