Trump’s Attacks On Judge’s Ethnicity Brings Back Sordid History (((Who Knew? Judge is a NUPE)))

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
http://time.com/4356690/donald-trump-judge-mexican-legal-arguments/

Similar attempts to disqualify minority judges have long been dismissed

Donald Trump’s repeated demands that U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel, who is of Mexican heritage, recuse himself from the fraud cases against Trump University, have no legal or constitutional merit.

Indeed, they draw from a long-standing but failed legal playbook used against minority judges.

Trump argues that his campaign’s hardline position on illegal immigration—namely, the presumptive Republican nominee’s repeated promise to seal off the the border between Mexico and the U.S.—creates an “absolute conflict” with the judge, who Trump described as a “Mexican” appointed by President Obama. Curiel was born in Indiana; his parents were Mexican immigrants.

“I’m building a wall,” Trump told the Wall Street Journal Thursday. “It’s an inherent conflict of interest.”

Legal scholars roll their eyes at Trump’s line of attack. There is nothing in the U.S. Constitution—and no U.S. law, regulation or code of judicial conduct—that suggests that a judge must recuse him or herself because of race, gender, ethnicity, sexual preference, or any other aspect of someone’s personal identity. After all, no judge is free from these categories.

“The notion that a judge has to recuse him or herself because of racial makeup, religious background, gender or ethnicity—it’s all just nonsense,” Stephen Burbank, a professor for the administration of justice at the University of Pennsylvania Law School told TIME. “It’s absolute nonsense.”

Arthur Hellman, an expert on federal judicial ethics at the University of Pittsburgh’s law school said that if that were indeed a standard, it would result “in chaos.” If a judge could be forced to step aside merely because of membership in a minority group of some kind, judges would constantly be removed from cases, he told TIME.

U.S. Supreme Court justices Clarence Thomas and Sonia Sotomayor could be feasibly barred from weighing in on cases concerning civil rights. Chief Justice John Roberts, a Catholic, could be forced to recuse himself from any case having to do with religion.

The idea that judges must put aside their personal identities and appeal instead to what’s known as “judicial temperament,” Hellman explained, has long been the bedrock of the U.S. judicial system.

That idea was solidified in 1974 when Judge Leon Higginbotham, an African-American district judge, refused to recuse himself from a case that had to do with racial discrimination. Higginbotham, who was himself regularly the object of racial bias, argued that his personal experience should not be disqualifying and later issued what is now considered a universally accepted opinion on the matter.

“I concede that I am black. I do not apologize for that obvious fact. I take rational pride in my heritage, just as most other ethnics take pride in theirs,” he wrote. “However, that one is black does not mean, ipso facto, that he is anti-white; no more than being Jewish implies being anti-Catholic, or being Catholic implies being anti-Protestant.” Demanding recusals based on judges’ personal identity, he concluded, would create a “double standard within the federal judiciary.”

But Trump’s strategy to discredit Curiel because of his ethnicity also draws on a long and storied legal playbook employed by lawyers on both sides of the aisle.

In 1998, lawyers in a case concerning a commercial breach of contract attempted to force federal Judge Denny Chin, who is of Asian descent, to recuse himself because some of the people in the case were Asian-American, and the defendants had been portrayed in the press as anti-Asian. The lawyers also argued that because Chin had been appointed by President Bill Clinton, he was biased since the case touched on conduct by the Democratic National Committee. An appeals court later upheld sanctions against one of the lawyers in the case.

In 2011, lawyers opposed to legalizing gay marriage argued that federal judge Vaughn Walker’s decision to strike down the marriage ban in California should be vacated because Walker, who is gay and in a long-term relationship with a man, stood to gain from his own ruling.

In 2014, federal Judge Paul Borman became the latest in a long series of Jewish judges who have been asked to recuse themselves in cases that have to do with Palestinians.

Prior to his appointment to the San Diego district court in 2012, Curiel was assistant U.S. attorney in California, where he faced death threats while successfully prosecuting the Mexican drug cartel run by Arellano Felix. Trump has repeatedly called the judge “biased,” a “Donald Trump hater,” and “a total disgrace.”

Curiel has not responded to Trump’s attacks. Federal judges are bound to a code of conduct restricting them from “mak[ing] public comment on the merits of a matter pending or impending in any court” or weighing in on candidates for public office.

Trump’s lawyers have not formally filed a motion to remove Judge Curiel in the fraud case involving Trump University. If they choose to do so, it’s extremely unlikely that it would be successful, Burbank said.

Kayleigh McEnany, a Harvard Law student who acts a public representative for Trump, said as much. Her candidate of choice “should have not mentioned the judge’s heritage,” she said on CNN Thursday. “There is no a viable argument there that because of his heritage that he is somehow biased.”
 
This has to have the affect of burying him further in the Latino community, and ours as well, since the underlying principle is the same.
 
In an interview, Mr. Trump said U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel had “an absolute conflict
in presiding over the litigation given that he was “of Mexican heritage” and a member of a
Latino lawyers’ association. Mr. Trump said the background of the judge, who was born in
Indiana to Mexican immigrants, was relevant because of his campaign stance against illegal
immigration and his pledge to seal the southern U.S. border. “I’m building a wall. It’s an
inherent conflict of interest,” Mr. Trump said

SOURCE: http://www.wsj.com/articles/donald-trump-keeps-up-attacks-on-judge-gonzalo-curiel-1464911442
 
No Non-white Judges Qualified to Judge Trump ???
Is Trump Sordid Hstory, Incarnate ? ? ?

 
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The campaign of the presumptive Republican nominee, Donald Trump, is sparking a surge in the
number of citizenship applications and voter registrations among Hispanics fearful of his immi-
gration policies. Since January, California alone has seen a boost of 218 percent in Democratic
registration and among Hispanics, registration is up 123 percent. (Alice Li / The Washington Post)



Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/vide...b8b142-2a01-11e6-8329-6104954928d2_video.html

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Trump has Republicans squirming with ‘Mexican’ judge attacks

The racially based attacks show Trump has no plans to become a more mild general election candidate.


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Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks to the media before a rally on May 26 in Bismarck, North Dakota. | Getty


politico
By Nick Gass
06/06/16

A day before the last GOP primaries on the calendar, Donald Trump has dashed Republicans’ hopes that he would tone down his divisive rhetoric as a general election candidate, as they now race to distance themselves from the billionaire’s latest firestorm.

Trump’s repeated rants smacking around the Mexican heritage of federal Judge Gonzalo Curiel, the Indiana-born judge who is overseeing two class-action lawsuits against Trump University, show that the real estate mogul has no immediate plans to become the unifying figure he’s promised to be.

And that has Republicans squirming.

"It's completely racist," Joe Scarborough declared at the start of MSNBC's "Morning Joe” on Monday as he then railed against Republicans who have endorsed Trump and who have tried to disavow his racially based attacks on Curiel.

"They can't be morally outraged this week when they knew what he was doing last week,” Scarborough said.

Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who has so far withheld his endorsement, on Monday added to the growing legions of Republicans saying Trump is out of line. "Attacking judges based on their race &/or religion is another tactic that divides our country. More importantly, it is flat out wrong," Trump's former primary foe said in a two-part Twitter takedown. “@realDonaldTrump should apologize to Judge Curiel & try to unite this country. #TwoPaths,” he added.

Another of Trump's fallen rivals — Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) — also weighed in, and shared some sharp words . . . told a local television affiliate on Monday that Trump was "wrong" to question Curiel's fitness based on his ethnic heritage. "That man is an American," Rubio said.

Others offered up a more nuanced take, careful to not alienate their party's nominee. Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah), who chairs the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, told Fox News on Monday that "people are disturbed that you would want to try to dismiss a judge based on his ethnicity.”

Appearing later on the same network, Chaffetz conceded that Trump is not his ideal candidate but suggested that he would still support him as the party's nominee. "I can disagree on policy and principles. I disagree with the statements he made there but do I think he would be much better candidate and much better president than Hillary Clinton," Chaffetz said. "You betcha, all day."

Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), however, called Trump’s remarks “absolutely unacceptable.”

“His statement that Judge Curiel could not rule fairly because of his Mexican heritage does not represent our American values,” Collins said in a statement on Monday (Collins has generally supported the party's nominee, but she has declined to explicitly support Trump so far this year). “Mr. Trump's comments demonstrate both a lack of respect for the judicial system and the principle of separation of powers.”

Trump, meanwhile, is showing no signs of backing down. He ratcheted up his attacks last week when he told the Wall Street Journal that the American judge’s Mexican heritage is “an inherent conflict of interest” because of the billionaire’s proposal to build a massive wall on the southern border.

He went further on Sunday, telling CBS that it’s possible he would have similar concerns with a Muslim judge because of his proposal to temporarily ban Muslims from entering the U.S.

The comments are not out of character for Trump, whose unprecedented rise through the GOP primary was marked by attacks on undocumented Mexican immigrants, Muslims, women and other demographic groups.

But they fly in the face of Republicans who have rested their reluctant endorsements on the premise that Trump will tone it down once he clinched the nomination.

Some of the most awkward moments have come from congressional leaders.

House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) could not last 24 hours after formally backing Trump in a newspaper column before, unprompted, lashing out at Trump's comments about Curiel. “Look, the comment about the judge the other day just was out of left field for my mind,” Ryan said on Friday. “It’s reasoning I don’t relate to. I completely disagree with the thinking behind that. And so, he clearly says and does things I don’t agree with, and I’ve had to speak up from time to time when that has occurred, and I’ll continue to do that if it’s necessary. I hope it’s not.”

On Sunday Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was visibly uncomfortable as he dodged – three times – a direct question on whether Trump’s attacks on Curiel are “racist.”

“I couldn’t disagree more with the statement,” McConnell said each time he was asked by Chuck Todd on “Meet the Press.”

Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) didn’t try to hide his irritation on ABC on Sunday, saying he thought he was going to be on to talk about foreign policy, not Trump. But he said he did "not condone the comments."

Newt Gingrich, who has largely been supportive of Trump’s candidacy, was more forceful, calling the remarks "inexcusable" and "one of the worst mistakes Trump has made" on Fox on Sunday, comments that stoked the ire of Trump.

"As far as Newt is concerned, I saw Newt," Trump told "Fox & Friends" on Monday after the show played clips of Hillary Clinton and Gingrich denouncing his remarks speculating that Curiel's Mexican heritage represented a conflict of interest in the cases against Trump University over which he is presiding. "I was surprised at Newt. I thought it was inappropriate what he said."

The editorial board of The Wall Street Journal, which had signaled support for Trump's list of 11 potential Supreme Court judges, also ripped into him for the remarks, pronouncing them at once "merely obnoxious" and "truly odious."

"Apart from his racist implications, Mr. Trump is also indulging in the left’s habit of attributing the motivations of everyone and everything to race, class, gender and sexual orientation," the editorial board trolled on Sunday night. "Claiming that a person’s judgment is determined by his objective circumstances is a Marxist trope. Isn’t Mr. Trump supposed to be running against such thinking?"

While Republicans have spent the past few days tripping over themselves, Democrats have been all too happy to seize of Trump’s comments as just the latest example of his dangerous candidacy.




Read more: http://www.politico.com/story/2016/06/trump-judge-republicans-respond-223942#ixzz4AqZEbwvi
 


All white juries have been sending black defendants to death or prison for years. A defense attorney can now use Trump comments.
 
All white juries have been sending black defendants to death or prison for years. A defense attorney can now use Trump comments.

Ironically, the 1986 seminal case of Batson v. Kentucky dealing with jury composition arises out of: . . . Kentucky. :smh: my damn head.

In Batson, the SCOTUS held that a prosecutor in a criminal case (since extended to either side in civil cases) cannot use his peremptory challenges to strike members (black people) from juries based solely on their race as the same violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. I'm not familiar with the case raised by the video, but it sounds like the issue may go beyond Batson (striking potential jurors based on race) to something even more invidious: systemic exclusion of minorities from the juror pool -- where you don't have to be concerned with striking them from a potential jury -- because they are not in the pool, ab initio (in the damn beginning).

Taking nothing away from your comment "[a] defense attorney can now use Trump's comments" -- but comments like Trump's, historical jury nullification and a legacy of other tampering schemes are nothing new and have been successfully raised, for days.

If you happen to know the style of this case, please post it. I'd like to research/read more.

Thanks in advance.
 
in a crazy roundabout way,

trump sure is exposing americas hypocrisy against its

native so called african american population..
 
I'm not a fan of Ana Navarro who appears frequently on CNN to deliver
conservative argument, but I have to give respect to her comments here:


 
Last Man Standing


‘Racist’ Senator Sticks With Donald Trump

Everyone—and we mean everyone—chided Trump for his
racist comments about the California judge of Mexican
descent in charge of his Trump University civil case.

Everyone, that is, except VP short-lister Jeff Sessions.


48845407.cached.jpg




Trump’s veep list got shorter this week.


Really short.

Maybe Jeff-Sessions-short.

That’s because the Alabama senator is one of just a few on Trump’s rumored VP short-list to not have shivved him over racist comments about an Indiana judge. Among the hailstorm of Republican criticism, Sessions backed Trump Tuesday by refusing to say anything at all.

Sen. Bob Corker, who stirred up VP speculation by meeting with Trump in New York City, said Tuesday that “the last five or six days have been very negative,” urging his party’s presidential nominee to “move into a very different place.”

Even former Speaker Newt Gingrich, who had been an early Trump backer and potential VP pick, called the statement “inexcusable.” “It was inappropriate” for Gingrich to weigh in, Trump shot back. “I was surprised at Newt”—an episode which may wipe Gingrich off the veep list.

But from Sessions, who himself was accused of racism 30 years ago when nominated to the federal bench, there was no protest, no condemnation—just silence.

“I don’t have any statement on it,” Sessions said, as he swiftly walked past a Daily Beast reporter. He didn’t answer a follow-up on whether he thought the criticism was racist.

Among the slings and arrows sent Trump’s way by members of his own party, Sessions’s silence was practically a slap on the back.

But Sessions, who serves Trump as a national security adviser, has previously been dogged by accusations of racism himself. As the U.S. attorney for the southern District of Alabama, he was nominated for a U.S. District Court seat in that state in 1985. His nomination was
voted down in the Senate.

In a case that led to charges of racism, he had prosecuted three civil rights workers of voter fraud who had been working to encourage African Americans to register to vote. Sessions’s focus on so-called Black Belt counties in Alabama “to the exclusion of others caused an uproar among civil rights leaders, especially after hours of interrogating black absentee voters produced only 14 allegedly tampered ballots out of more than 1.7 million cast in the state in the 1984 election,” The New Republic reported.

Even more scandalous allegations were levelled at Sessions during his nomination process. An assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Figures, who is black, said that Sessions had called him “boy,” and had once lectured him to “be careful what you say to white folks.”

Sessions was even alleged to have said that the Klan was “OK until I learned they smoked pot.” He claimed it to be a joke when the comment was presented to him during his confirmation process.
As Sessions continued to stand by his man, Republican lawmakers of all stripes were forced to wade through a gauntlet of reporters Tuesday afternoon—all of whom were asking about Donald Trump’s criticism of Judge Gonzalo Curiel.

Sessions’s silence on a matter of national importance comes as Trump consigliere Roger Stone appeared on the conspiracy-driven Alex Jones show this week, boosting Sessions as a possible veep choice.

“It’s essential that [Trump] choose someone who tracks his views... who is a nationalist, who agrees with him particularly on the issue of immigration. Therefore I think, by the process of elimination, one of the strongest contenders... would be Sen. Jeff Sessions,” Stone said.

Trump’s relationship with Sessions has been strong—and strange—from the beginning. He asked Sessions to chair his national security committee—while Sessions has served on the Senate Armed Services Committee, he was not a particularly compelling force there, and has developed far more of a reputation on immigration and budget issues.

Sessions has especially been known for his hardline positions on immigration—as the Senate considered and passed the 2013 “Gang of Eight” immigration reform package, Sessions stood as a primary antagonist to the effort.

“He’d make an excellent VP,” Shelby, his fellow Alabama senator, told The Daily Beast. “He'd bring a lot of knowledge of the issues, on the Judiciary Committee, on the Budget Committee… where he’s developed a lot of expertise.”


So if Trump puts stock in fealty, the senator’s early endorsement, and alignment on immigration views Sessions stands a strong chance at the vice presidential nod.

But of course, almost everyone else has crossed themselves off the list.

—with additional reporting by Andrew Desiderio and Eleanor Clift.


SOURCE: http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/06/08/racist-senator-sticks-with-donald-trump.html


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Trump has Republicans squirming with ‘Mexican’ judge attacks



Mitt Romney suggested Friday that Donald Trump's election could legitimize racism and misogyny, ushering in a
change in the moral fabric of American society:

"I don't want to see trickle-down racism" Romney said in an interview here in a suite overlooking the Wasatch
Mountains, where he is hosting his yearly ideas conference. "I don't want to see a president of the United States
saying things which change the character of the generations of Americans that are following. Presidents have an
impact on the nature of our nation, and trickle-down racism, trickle-down bigotry, trickle-down misogyny, all
these things are extraordinarily dangerous to the heart and character of America."


SOURCE: http://www.wyff4.com/politics/romney-says-trump-will-change-america-with-trickledown-racism/40002328


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Hispanic judge’s black fraternity brothers back him in clash with Trump

Judge Gonzalo Curiel joined a predominantly African-American Kappa Alpha Psi in 1974;
Some fraternity members have launched social media efforts to support Curiel, blast Donald Trump


Ronald Anderson‏@rande10 Jun 5
Justice Curiel is a Kappa man, and all for the USA. He is above Donald Trump's bigotry.pic.twitter.com/shpma5AKry

CkMtr84XEAAqFcT.jpg



McClatchyDC
By William Douglas
June 11, 2016

WASHINGTON - As a former federal judge, Rep. Alcee Hastings was incensed when presumptive Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump rhetorically attacked U.S. District Court Judge Gonzalo Curiel’s ability to be impartial because of his ethnicity.

Hastings, D-Fla., was equally outraged that Trump went after a fraternity brother.

In disparaging Curiel for his handling of the Trump University lawsuit, the Republican standard-bearer has raised the ire of members of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc., a predominantly African-American organization that the judge belongs to.

"Several of us have reached out to other Kappas to point out that it now gives us two reasons to be upset with Donald Trump," Hastings said Friday. "The fact that he referred to him as Mexican and the fact that he is our fraternity brother."

Curiel joined Kappa Alpha Psi in 1974 when he was an undergraduate student at Indiana University Bloomington - the campus where the fraternity was founded in 1911. Curiel went on to become a charter member of the university’s the fraternity’s alumni chapter.

"It takes a strong person of a different heritage to join a predominantly one-race fraternity," Hastings said.

Ronald Anderson, 67, a Kappa Alpha Psi member from Indianapolis, said that the organization for decades has welcomed people of all races and ethnic groups “who just decided they want to pledge a black fraternity.”

“I guess they relate to the blackness more than anything," Anderson said.

Kappa Alpha Psi has more than 150,000 members and 721 undergraduate and alumni chapters nationwide and seven chapters overseas.


Its membership includes a roster of current and former elected officials that reads like a Who’s Who in African-American Politics: Hastings, Reps. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., William Lacy Clay, D-Mo., John Conyers, D-Mich., Sanford Bishop, D-Ga; Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed; and former mayors Tom Bradley of Los Angeles, Wilson Goode of Philadelphia, Wellington Webb of Denver, and Adrian Fenty of Washington, D.C.

Trump raised the issue Curiel’s ethnicity on the campaign trail and in interviews, claiming that the judge has an “absolute conflict” in the Trump University lawsuit because he is “of Mexican heritage.”

“I’m building a wall,” Trump said in a Wall Street Journal interview, referring to his campaign promise to build a giant wall along the border with Mexico. “It’s an inherent conflict of interest.”

Thomas Battles, Jr., Kappa Alpha Psi’s Grand Polemarch, said in a statement that Curiel “is a highly regarded jurist whose distinguished academic and professional career personifies Kappa Alpha Psi’s founding motto: ‘Achievement in Every Field of Human Endeavor.’”


“Kappa Alpha Psi stands firmly against the practice of judging a man solely by his race, creed, or national origin,” Battles added. “Our fraternity will continue to oppose all forms of racism and rebuke those who promote this evil.”

Justice Curiel is a Kappa man, and all for the USA. He is above Donald Trump's bigotry.pic.twitter.com/shpma5AKry

Some of the fraternity’s members, known as "Nupes," have taken to social media, launching campaigns under #Nupes4Curiel and #NupesAgainstTrump.

Members of the fraternity’s chapter in Montclair, N.J., posted a "Men of Kappa Stand in Solidarity with Judge Gonzalo Curiel" petition Wednesday on Change.org that "vehemently" denounces "the ad hominem attacks that have recently been hurled against Brother Curiel by the presumptive Republican presidential nominee."

The petition had nearly 750 signatures Sunday. Bishop said his fraternity brothers are also alerting the other so-called "Divine 9" organizations – historically black fraternities and sororities - that Curiel is one of their own.


Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/politics-government/election/article83212312.html#storylink=cpy

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