Bias from the bench

February 10th, 2010 Betsy Leave a comment Go to comments

Here’s something from our friend Brian Brown, Executive Director of NOM–National Organization for Marriage, on the Prop 8 case in CA that Jennifer Morse has been involved in.

Brian S Brown

Proposition 8 appeal judge Vaughn Walker seems to have had one goal: to generate sympathy for gay marriage supporters.

In a story last Sunday the San Francisco Chronicle reported that Proposition 8 judge Vaughn Walker is gay and called his orientation, “The biggest open secret in the landmark trial over same-sex marriage.”

We have no idea whether the report is true or not. But we do know one really big important fact about Judge Walker: He’s been an amazingly biased and one-sided force throughout this trial, far more akin to an activist than a neutral referee. That’s no secret at all.

Protect Marriage, the defendants in this case, are effectively being held hostage by Judge Walker and cannot really comment.

But Judge Walker’s bias from the bench includes:

A series of rulings permitting deep and deeply irrelevant “fishing expeditions” into the private and personal motivations and secret campaign strategy of campaign proponents. It wasn’t six guys at Protect Marriage that passed Prop 8, it was 7 million Californians. But Judge Walker went so far as to order the Prop 8 campaign to disclose private internal communications about messages that were considered for public use but never actually used. He even ordered the campaign to turn over copies of all internal records and e-mail messages relating to campaign strategy.

Even though the Prop 8 supporters were forced to turn over private, internal documents and emails, Walker has refused to demand the same from opponents of the measure. In fact, Walker has refused to even rule on a motion to compel the discovery of this information, even though he has already closed testimony in the case. That alone is an unbelievable tilting of the playing field.

Walker has presided over a show trial designed to generate sympathetic headlines and news coverage for gay marriage supporters. Witness after witness was allowed to testify about their “expert” opinion that homosexuals have been discriminated against, that they feel badly when society does not validate their relationships, and that the passage of Prop 8 was simply an echo of historic prejudice and bigotry foisted on society by religious zealots.

To show the lengths that Walker has gone to create a “record” favouring the plaintiffs, he even allowed one “expert” witness — a gay man from Colorado who has never lived in California and was never exposed to any Prop 8 campaign messages — to testify that his parents’ efforts to change his sexual orientation failed.

Keep reading.

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  1. Tim Walstrum
    February 12th, 2010 at 10:02 | #1

    So let’s see by your delusional reasoning African-American judges need to recuse themselves from discrimination cases, and women need to recuse themselves from sexual harassment cases. Your side is scared because your experts our on record refuting some of the things they claim will happen. 2 of your witnesses didn’t appear but their depositions were played in court that showed them having to concede that what they were initially testifying to was incorrect.

  2. Chairm
    February 12th, 2010 at 17:08 | #2

    Tim, your comment mischaracterized the Brian’s reasoning as it appears in that blogpost.

    Before the SF Chronicle reported the open-secret, the actions and decisions of Judge Walker had already shown bias.

    The paramount duty of the Judge is to ensure the fair treatment of litigants.

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