June 8, 2009
Supreme Court says Benjamin should have recused himself
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The U.S. Supreme Court said Monday that West Virginia Supreme Court Justice Brent Benjamin should have stepped aside from a case involving the man who spent more than $3 million to put Benjamin on the court.

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State Supreme Court spokeswoman Jennifer Bundy said repeatedly in answer to questions, "The West Virginia Supreme Court will follow the United States Supreme Court mandate." When asked other questions, Bundy hung up.

The lawsuit started over Massey's takeover of a 10-year coal supply contract Harman signed with Wellmore Coal to supply metallurgical coal to LTV Steel in Pittsburgh. The August 1997 takeover came soon after Massey bought United Coal, Wellmore's parent company.

Blankenship shifted that contract to Massey's mines in Boone County, which were all nonunion. Harman operated under a United Mine Workers contract.

Shane Harvey, Massey vice president and general counsel, stated in a press release, "While we are disappointed in the outcome of the [Supreme] Court's close vote, our outlook about the ultimate resolution of this legal matter remains positive."

Caperton called Monday's decision great not just for him, but for the miners, small businesses and others who were hurt when his company went out of business.

"We are excited for all of them. We are looking forward to going back and hearing from the West Virginia Supreme Court. We are waiting to see what will happen," Caperton said.

He added, "This decision will certainly alter the way the recusal of judges is viewed across the country."

That worries some critics of Monday's decision, who predict it will encourage thousands of new appeals in courts across the country. Including West Virginia, 39 states elect their judges in political campaigns.

Kennedy's opinion noted former state Supreme Court justice Elliott "Spike" Maynard recused himself in January 2008, after photos surfaced showing him "vacationing with Blankenship in the French Riviera while the case was pending."

Kennedy stated Benjamin should also have recused himself.

"Just as no man is allowed to be a judge in his own cause, similar fears of bias can arise when -- without the consent of other parties -- a man chooses the judge in his own cause. And applying this principle to the judicial election process, there was here a serious, objective risk of actual bias that required Justice Benjamin's recusal."

Kennedy also noted, "Not every campaign contribution by a litigant or attorney creates a probability of bias that requires a judge's recusal, but this is an exceptional case."

Former U.S. solicitor general Theodore B. Olson argued Caperton's case before the U.S. Supreme Court on March 3. Caperton was also represented by Bruce Stanley, Dave Fawcett and Rob Berthold.

"In the end, the appearance of justice is paramount if people are to believe in the legal institutions which bind America," Stanley said. "It's unfortunate that West Virginia, my home state which I love dearly, had to become the example for such an important lesson."

@tag:Reach Paul J. Nyden at pjny...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-5164

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Posted By: FYI25203 (7:40am 06-12-2009)
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Thank you OL for proving my point. There was no legal precedent or law that required Brett Benjamin to recuse himself.

All that has ever been levied is mudsling accusations of bias and given that there has never been a connection established between Blankenship and Benjamin or any coordinated efforts in the campaign, that’s all there is, accusations.

5 members of the Supreme Court bought into those accusations and the so called appearance it created without setting any sort of guidelines that resulted in judicial activism.

The problem is that now, any time there is a case of a political donation and a judge, all the opposition has to do is cry bias and the judge must recuse themselves.

If the Justices' were going to overturn the verdict on the appearance of bias, they should have had the courage to set some sort of guidelines for future reference.

Posted By: One Citizen (2:16pm 06-11-2009)
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According to the Huntington Herald Dispatch, WV lawmakers could have easily stepped in and changed the recusal process. And in past attempts to fix the problem, WV majority leader Truman Chafin (D-Mingo) revealed his own prejudice.

TWICE.

Sen. Chafin had actually successfully pushed recusal legislation through the Senate before, but it was regarding his own child custody case. Although it passed, it was vetoed by then Gov. Caperton.

The next time it came up, instead of introducing a bill to fix the recusal process to get Blankenship's traveling pal Monte Carlo Maynard "spiked", Senator Chafin hosted a fundraiser for Spike's re-election. One can but wonder if Benjamin's buddy Blankencheck sent his "warm regards" to Chafin's fundraiser as well.

My photoplay of Donnyz BigBoyz is posted at this link http://tinyurl.com/m4qccm

BTW Manchin's Independent Commission on Judicial Reform has apparently been no more than a political stall.http://tinyurl.com/lk5sg8

Posted By: FYI25203 (11:22am 06-11-2009)
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No Sodbuster, if they were shamed into doing 'something' they would have set some sort of guidelines as to what can be spent or a limit that set's the appearance of bias or show where a low was broken.

There is nothing in the constitution that set's limits on how much can be spent on an election and by whom.

There is nothing in WV law that prevented Don Blankenship from purchasing advertising in a PAC to defeat Warren McGraw, regardless of who benefited from it.

There was NEVER a connection made between Brett Benjamin and Don Blankenship, much less an agreement that Benjamin would rule in favor of Massey if he won the seat.

There was no wrong doing proven, no connection or any sort, nothing to be pinned on Benjamin or Massey. All you have is 5 judges saying it created an appearance of bias.

So what you have here isn’t ‘shame’, it is what is commonly referred to as judicial activism.


http://www.answers.com/topic/judicial-activism

Posted By: sodbuster (8:59am 06-11-2009)
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Well MU if you think the SC was upset that Warren McGraw got beat you are way off base.

This case was just so blatant and obvious they were shamed into doing something.

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