Carlton Reeves Now Judge Reeves

Southern District Chief Judge Louis Guirola swore in Carlton Reeves as a United States District Judge this morning in Judge Wingate's courtroom at the federal courthouse in Jackson.

Congressman Bennie Thompson attended the ceremony, as did most of the federal court
 judges based in Jackson and several Mississippi Supreme Court Justices and Court of Appeals Judges.

Judge Reeves spoke for about ten minutes after being sworn in. It was a moving speech and Reeves was overcome by emotion several times.  

Judge Reeves' chambers will be in a temporary location in the current courthouse until the new federal courthouse opens--hopefully within the next 60 days.

Apparently, there have been delays in construction at the new courthouse. One story I've heard is that contractors did not run enough phone lines for the building and they had to rip up concrete to run additional lines. I also hear that no one can move into the building until it is 100% complete.

Judge Reeves' formal investiture ceremony will be later in the Spring.  

Here is the Clarion-Ledger article on the ceremony.

Breaking News: Judge Yerger Throws Out Eaton's Case Against Frisby Due to Ed Peters-Bobby DeLaughter Related Misconduct

Perhaps the biggest legal development of the year in Mississippi happened today during what is usually the quietest weeks of the year for lawyers and the judiciary.

Hinds County Circuit Court Judge Yerger unsealed an opinion today dismissing Eaton Corporation's case against Frisby due to Eaton's hiring Ed Peters to improperly influence Judge Bobby DeLaughter in the case.

Here is the Judgment of Dismissal.

Here is Judge Yerger's opinion.

Eaton has a market cap. of over $17 billion, is in the S&P 500 and has over 70,000 employees.

 Judge Yerger's opinion states that Eaton in-house counsel were aware of Ed Peters' improper ex parte contacts with Judge DeLaughter. The opinion also refers to evidence that suggests that Eaton's general counsel was aware of the scheme to improperly influence Judge DeLaughter.

Judge Yeger's opinion included the following findings:

  • Eaton and its counsel intentionally hid Peters' involvement from defendants despite knowledge that Peters was communicating with DeLaughter about the case.
  • Eaton Vice President and Chief Counsel Vic Leo sent an email to other Eaton lawyers including General Counsel Mark McGuire that stated that Peters "intends to speak with Court Administrator and the Judge about the trial date. This may take some finessing."
  • The same e-mail stated that Peters forecast that the chances of Eaton winning a particular ruling were 100% [note: nothing is 100% in litigation].
  • In another email Leo told McGuire that Peters had taken DeLaughter's temperature on a meeting about the possible recusal of Judge Tom Lee in the Frisby criminal trial.
  • Eaton's corporate office and Wisconsin counsel were aware of Peters' improper actions. [Note: by this point in the case I believe that Eaton's Mississippi counsel were former Mississippi Supreme Court Justices Reuben Anderson and Fred Banks. I know they took over the representation at some point. Eaton's lead counsel were in Wisconsin. Anderson and Banks have not been implicated to date in Peters' misconduct. They may have had a ceremonial local counsel role in the case. I believe that Mike Allred represented Eaton when Eaton hired Peters].
  • Eaton and its counsel were aware of and sanctioned Peters' clandestine actions.
  • Eaton "turned Peters loose" to "play fast and loose" with the judicial system without ever appearing in the case [note: this means that Frisby was unaware that Peters was behind the scenes sinking its case.].
  • Eaton's counsel failed to present a plausible explanation for their complacency with Peters' conduct.
  • Eaton and its counsel knew of the serious improprieties occurring and stood by with blind eyes.

Judge Yerger determined that in order to protect the integrity of the judicial system it was necessary to dismiss Eaton's case with prejudice. A billion dollar trade secrets case has been dismissed due to successful efforts to improperly influence a judge.

The fallout from Scruggs-gate grows. This is another case where but for Tim Balducci getting caught attempting to bribe Judge Henry Lackey, there would have been a serious miscarriage of justice due to blatant cheating. 

Ed Peters remains the Teflon Man, having received immunity from the DOJ. 

For earlier posts on the case go here.

Cheap Shots in Trial are OK?

The Court of Appeals concluded 2010 with a decision that bothers me. Here is the Court's opinion in Triplett v. River Region Medical Corp.

Facts:

This was a Warren County medical malpractice case against a hospital, doctor and CRNA. River Region got out on summary judgment and the case was tried in May 2008 before Judge Frank Vollor. The case was tried to a defense verdict and the appeal ensued.  

One of the issues on appeal was whether the trial court should have ordered a mistrial after defense counsel dropped this bomb in opening statement:

“a doctor from Viginia is the only one, apparently, [that Triplett's heirs] could find in the whole United States to testify against [River Region].”

Plaintiff's counsel objected and the trial court sustained the objection and advised the jury to disregard the statement. The next morning plaintiff's counsel moved for a mistrial and the trial court denied the motion.

Tim Porter, Patrick Malouf and Johnny Givens with Porter and Malouf in Ridgeland represented the plaintiff. Gene Parker and Penny Lawson of Vicksburg represented the defendants.

Court of Appeals Decision:

On appeal a unanimous Court ruled that the motion for mistrial was untimely because under Mississippi law the objection and motion must be made contemporaneously with the improper remarks. That didn't really seem fair to me so I did a little research and have come to the conclusion that the Court of Appeals is getting the law wrong on this.

My Take:

First, defense counsel's statement was way out of bounds. The Court could have at least acknowledged that.

More importantly, the Court's decision does not explain the rationale for the contemporaneous objection rule. But the Mississippi Supreme Court did explain the rule in 1997 in Herrington v. State, 690 So. 2d 1132 (Miss. 1997). There the Court explained that “contemporaneousness is critical because it allows the judge to avert a mistrial, if possible, by admonishing the jury to disregard the utterance.”

Given the rationale for the rule, it would seem that a contemporaneous objection alone should be enough to preserve the issue. Case law from other jurisdictions supports this conclusion.

A New Jersey District Court ruled in Lyles v. Flagship Resort Development Corp., 371 F. Supp. 2d 597 (D. N.J. 2005) that a contemporaneous objection alone is enough to preserve an issue. The Court observed that the law of the Third Circuit is that an objection alone without a motion for mistrial preserves an issue.

In my opinion the Court of Appeals got this wrong. If the reason for the contemporaneous objection rule is that it gives the judge the opportunity to admonish the jury to disregard the improper statement, then the reason for the rule does not apply in this case. There was a contemporaneous objection and the trial court did admonish the jury. If the reason for the rule does not apply, then the rule should not apply. That's basic common sense.

What really bothers me about this decision is that this involved what appeared to be a planned cheap shot. While I agree that a trial court should not grant a mistrial for every improper statement that attorneys make in trial, I believe that trial courts should err on the side of granting a mistrial when the statement appears to be a planned cheap shot. Otherwise, what disincentive do lawyers have for making cheap shots?  

There was also an issue in the case whether a juror employed by a law firm who represented the hospital should have been struck for cause. The trial court did not and the Court of Appeals affirmed. I also disagree with these rulings.

Having worked at large law firms, I can say without reservation that staff members—at least the ones with a clue—understand where the firm's bread is buttered. Lawyers and their firms are loyal to their clients—-the law requires it—and a law firm employee should not be on a jury deciding the case of one of the firm's clients.    

It's Republicans Sharpening Knives Over Barbour Gaffe--Not Liberals

It's funny how stories on Gov. Barbour's foot-in-mouth statement about the white supremacy Citizens Council include statements that “liberal” blogs have cried the loudest. Technically, this may be true. But it's not the whole story.

Non-conservative bloggers are more apt to publicly criticize a Republican presidential candidate's stupid remarks. But don't believe for a second that other Republican presidential candidates are not sharpening their knives to stab Barbour in the back over the statement.

Raising money has as much to do with getting elected president as anything. It doesn't matter how great of a candidate you are. If you can't raise money, then you can't win.

Primary candidates are often forced out of the election because they run out of money. At this point in Barbour's candidacy, garnering support within Republican ranks—primarily by raising money—is the most important measure of his candidacy. It dwarfs anything that liberals are saying about Barbour.

So the immediate problem with Barbour's statement is that it gives something for Romney, Huckabee, Palin, etc. to attack Barbour on behind the scenes in Republican circles. Statements to big-money Republicans like: “give your money to me. Barbour can't win because of his statements about race” are the immediate threat to Barbour.

If Barbour gets the Republican nomination, then Democrats will revive his Citizens Council comment. But at this point, Democrats are the least of his concerns. Those Republicans with smiles on their faces and knives behind their backs are the threat to Barbour.        

Happy Holidays

Happy Holidays to everyone who reads this blog.

Justice Graves Nomination Not Dead

Today's headlines suggesting that Justice James Graves' nomination to the 5th  Circuit Court of Appeals is dead are misleading. Judicial nominations not yet approved by the full Senate die as a matter of course when the Senate adjourns for the year. That does not mean that Graves will not be confirmed.

The key statement in the article is this:

Rick Curtsinger, spokesman for U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., said President Barack Obama can resubmit Graves' name when a new Congress convenes in January.

This was not unexpected. Carlton Reeves barely got confirmed before the Senate adjourned and his nomination was months ahead of the Graves nomination. Barring something unexpected happening President Obama will re-nominate Graves and he will get confirmed by the full Senate in the first half of 2010.

Meanwhile, I'm hearing that Carlton Reeves will take the oath by the end of next week with a formal investiture later in the year.

Scanners Anyone?

The Sea Coast Echo reports that the appellate record has gone missing in an appeal involving the incorporation of Diamondhead, which is a community in Hancock County near I-10. The Supreme Court is unhappy:

Justice Jess Dickinson issued an order Wednesday demanding that each attorney representing the Diamondhead incorporation opponents file a memorandum explaining why they failed to comply with the Mississippi Rules of Appellant Procedure.

My favorite part of the article is this nugget:

Attorney William Kulick said he vaguely remembers boxes of records, but he does not know what happened to them.

"I mailed them to my clients in Jackson," he said at the hearing. "I assumed they complied with the rules.

I sure hope that by “mailed” he means something with a tracking number, or the buck will probably stop before Jackson.

But should the Supreme Court still be using 20th Century techniques for compiling and allowing attorneys to review appeals records? I can understand why in 1990 the lower court clerk compiled the record and mailed it to the Supreme Court clerk who then allowed the attorneys to check out the record and review it. But do they still do it that way in 2010? How quaint.

I remember working on an appeal around ten years ago while I was still at Baker Donelson. As is customary, we checked the appeal record out from the court clerk. The record had so many volumes that it had its own cart for wheeling it around the office. You could literally hear the record coming. 

You would think that in this day and age the record would be scanned and disk(s) mailed to the parties' attorneys. A scanned record would be more convenient for the lawyers and the Court. I haven't had an appeal in a while so maybe it is now done this way. If not, it should be.  

Update (12-23-10 10:45 a.m.): The record is no longer missing and is back in the chancery clerk's office.

Miss. S. Ct. Reverses $1.15 Million Jury Verdict in Lafayette County Medical Malpractice Trial

On Thursday the Miss. Supreme Court reversed and rendered a Lafayette County jury verdict of $1,150,000 in Berry v. Patten. Here is the Court's opinion.

It was a medical malpractice case involving a death from complications of gastric-bypass surgery. It appears that the target defendant was an anesthesiologist who obtained a defense verdict at trial. The verdict was against a Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist. Most of the Court's nineteen page opinion summarizes the expert testimony at trial. It's pretty dry reading.

Readers without much interest in anesthesiology can probably just skip to the first line of the Court's conclusion:

This lawsuit appears to have been aimed at Dr. Jones, the anesthesiologist, who obtained a defense verdict from the jury. In fact, the plaintiffs proposed a jury instruction that would have allowed the jury to hold Dr. Jones vicariously liable for Berry's negligence.

Reading the whole opinion, it does sound like the jury cleared the target defendant and returned a verdict against a non-target defendant.  

Plaintiff lawyers should familiarize themselves with some of the "technical" defenses raised on the appeal that the Court did not get to.

Justice Dickinson wrote the Court's unanimous opinion.

Bill Walker of Oxford represented the plaintiff. Carl Hagwood and Mary Frances Stallings-England represented the defendant who lost at trial, but won on appeal. 

Haley Barbour's Defense of Citizens Council Shows Ignorance and Stupidity---Puts Presidential Aspirations in Doubt

I'm stunned by Gov. Haley Barbour's recent comments defending the Citizens Council. Here is the Clarion-Ledger article on the story. Tom Freeland has excellent posts about it here and here.

Here is what Barbour said:

You heard of the Citizens Councils? Up north they think it was like the KKK," Barbour said. "Where I come from it was an organization of town leaders. In Yazoo City they passed a resolution that said anybody who started a chapter of the Klan would get their ass run out of town. If you had a job, you'd lose it. If you had a store, they'd see nobody shopped there. We didn't have a problem with the Klan in Yazoo City."

The Clarion-Ledger article provides an accurate description of the Citizen's Council:

The white Citizens Council was "the uptown KKK," Dittmer said, citing the former Delta Democrat Times editor Hodding Carter. Bankers and businessmen were members, Dittmer said.

"They had the power. They didn't have to go kill people to keep from desegregating the schools. They could get them fired from their jobs," Dittmer said.

The Citizens Council and the Klan had the same goals. The Citizens Council was not ok because—unlike the Klan—it didn't get its hands dirty. The Citizens Council was just as nefarious as the Klan and would have had more influence than the Klan on things like preventing the integration of Ole Miss.

For more on the integration of Ole Miss, read Charles Eagles' book The Price of Defiance, which I reviewed here. In my review I stated:

But by 1960 white supremacy was probably more about power and money than racist ideals. Thinking whites had to know that once African-Americans could vote and had equal access to education that whites would lose their monopoly on political offices and patronage. Putting it bluntly, a bunch of dumb rednecks were going to be out of a job. Plus, the "help" might balk at continuing to work for slave wages.

That's where the Citizens Council came in. They were the thinking whites who thought that they could quietly do what the Klan did, without the violence and blood. But make no mistake about it, the purose of the Citizens Council was to maintain white supremacy.

If I had to guess, it would be that Gov. Barbour is ignorant on the Citizens Council. That's not unusual. A lot of people do not know much about our state's history.

But his comment that glorifies the Citizens Council like the movie Birth of a Nation romanticized the Klan? OMG. That's just inexcusably stupid.

I thought—apparently incorrectly—that Barbour was smarter than this. Statements like this place one foot over the edge of a political cliff and the other foot on a banana peel. Think Trent Lott at Strom Thurmond's birthday party.

The Governor needs a governor on his mouth. He needs someone—and it needs to be someone under the age of 45 who knows a little history–-to follow him around and make sure he doesn't make old-white-guy dumb-ass comments like this.

I don't know if Barbour's presidential aspirations can survive this. Seriously. It may be over before it got off the ground.

But I do know that Barbour's presidential aspirations cannot survive any more of this. He simply cannot be the stereotype of an old white guy who romanticizes white supremacy because it was the way of life when he was a boy and it seemed great to him at the time. He's got to be smarter than that.  

Otherwise, we'll get comments like this:

You heard of slavery? Up north they think it was bad. Where I come from it was an institution that provided jobs to African-American immigrants. We didn't have a problem with slavery in Yazoo City. The slaves were happy to have the job. Heck, Granny Barbour even said that slaves sang in the fields.

 

Two Stealth Defense Verdicts Last Week in Jackson Area

There were two stealth defense verdicts in the Jackson area last week.

The first was in a racial discrimination case in federal court in Jackson. Here is the Complaint in Brown v. Jackson Municipal Airport Authority. The trial started on December 13 and the jury returned a defense verdict on December 14. Here are the verdict and judgment.

Jennifer Hall and Alan Moore of Baker Donelson represented the defendant. Louis Watson, Jr. of Jackson represented the plaintiff. Judge Dan Jordan was the trial judge.

The second defense verdict last week was in a medical malpractice case in Rankin County. Heber Simmons' firm was on the plaintiff side and Watkins Eager was on the defense. I do not know anything about the facts of the case.

Thoughts on Carlton Reeves' Confirmation as U.S. Dist. Judge

Here is the Clarion-Ledger's article on Carlton Reeves' confirmation as a U.S. District Judge for the Southern District of Mississippi. The Senate confirmed Reeves in a voice vote on Sunday.

This has been a long time coming to say the least. The fact that Reeves would get the position after President Obama won two years ago was common knowledge.

The fact that it took two years for the confirmation to happen was due to a combination of inefficiency in the Obama administration combined with Republican foot dragging in the Senate. The former is harder to stomach than the latter, since Republicans consider blocking Obama's agenda part of their job. Obama's administration has just been indefensibly slow with making appointments and pushing them through.

Hopefully, the confirmation will mean increased efficiency in the Southern District. Some cases will presumably be reassigned to Reeves from other judges. That should allow for faster rulings. That would please a lot of lawyers and parties who sometimes have to wait a long time for rulings.

It's my understanding that Judge Louis Guirola, Jr. is now the Chief Judge in the Southern District. I am also hearing that Judge Henry Wingate will not be taking senior status anytime soon.

Reeves will be missed on North Congress Street. He arrived at work early, stayed late and came in a lot on the weekends. I am sure that Judge Reeves will bring that work ethic to the bench. If anyone needs a Pigott Reeves Johnson Law Firm sign, I can probably get you a deal on one.

New Posts Starting Monday

I was unable to post this past week due to a trial. We lost, and losing still sucks.

In my absence from blogging, there were several blog-worthy developments this week in Mississippi litigation. I will start catching up with new posts starting on Monday.

Miss. S. Ct. Reverses $1.8 Million Jury Verdict in Welding Rod Case

On Thursday the Mississippi Supreme Court reversed a $1,855,000 Copiah County jury verdict in a 7–2 decision in Lincoln Electric v. McLemore. Here is the Court's opinion.

Facts:

This was a product liability failure to warn case involving a welder's claim that exposure to welding fumes resulted in a neurological disease called manganism. The appeal turned on the statute of limitations.

The case was tired before Judge Lamar Pickard in November 2008.

Here are some of the key dates:

  • September 3, 2002: doctor diagnoses plaintiff with Parkinsonism and tells him it may be related to welding
  • February 2004: plaintiff began filing lawsuits claiming neurological injuries from exposure to welding products
  • October 2005: plaintiff diagnosed with manganism, which is related to welding
  • November 14, 2005: plaintiff filed complaint against defendants, but didn't serve process
  • March 3, 2006: plaintiff filed amended complaint
  • March 14, 2006: plaintif served process on defendants

Plaintiff argued that since it was agreed that welding does not cause Parkinsons, his action arose when he learned that he had manganism in 2005. Defendants argued that plaintiff knew of his injury on September 3, 2002 when he was told that his Parkinsons may be related to welding.

Majority Opinion:

Justice Chandler wrote the majority opinion. The Court ruled that the decision was controlled by Angle v. Koppers, which I previously discussed in this post. In Angle the court ruled that an action accrues when the plaintiff learns of the injury, not the discovery of the injury and its cause.

The Court concluded that plaintiff knew that he had an injury in September 2002 when the doctor informed him that he had Parkinsonism that might be related to welding.

Dissent:

Justice Kitchens dissented in an opinion joined by Justice Graves. The dissent pointed out that the jury found that the plaintiff could not have discovered his injury until October 2005. Therefore, the case was timely filed according to the dissent.  

My take:

I'm not real enamored with the majority's opinion. Was it proper for the trial court to submit the issue of when the plaintiff discovered his injury to the jury? The majority doesn't say. I would have liked for the Court to address this question.

If it was proper to submit the issue to the jury, what is the basis for substituting the Court's opinion for the jury's on a question of fact? The majority doesn't say.

Did everyone agree that Parkinsonism is not caused by welding fumes? If so, is it fair that a cause of action accrues when a doctor incorrectly tells a plaintiff that an illness may be related an activity that would give a plaintiff a claim? That seems odd.

So a plaintiff should file an action to preserve a possible claim based on an opinion from a doctor that the plaintiff knows is wrong? Wouldn't that create Rule 11 issues?

Maybe I am missing something here.

Justice Department Starts Indicting People for Filing Bogus Oil Spill Claims

The New York Times reports that the Department of Justice has charged eight people with filing fraudulent damages claims related to the BP Oil Spill. The article describes some of the indictments:

Among those charged were Cam T. Hang of Louisiana, who, according to the Justice Department, demanded $42,000 for business losses related to a restaurant that does not exist. A Michigan man, Kevin Hall, claimed he lost $9,000 at an ice cream stand in Pensacola, Fla., that, according to his indictment, is similarly mythical.

Good for DOJ. The fact that some people made false claims is perhaps the least surprising development of the entire saga. The same thing happened after Katrina.

Some of these claims sound like plot lines out of a Tim Dorsey novel. Doesn't Serge A. Storms have to be in the middle of the oil spill grift?  

March May be the New February for Presidential Announcements

On the heels of my post this week predicting a February 10 Presidential bid announcement for Governor Haley Barbour, the Wall Street Journal ran an article today that exposes my analysis as poor.

The Journal article points out that early contests have been pushed back from January to February of 2012:

The first four nominating contests—in Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada—have been pushed to February 2012, a month later than in 2008. But potentially more significant was the Republican National Committee's August ruling that any primaries the following month—including those in the normally pivotal Super Tuesday cluster—can't be winner-take-all. Instead, those states will have to award their delegates proportionally to the candidates' vote share, which could make it harder for one candidate to rack up large totals early in the campaign.

Haley Barbour is mentioned in the article with speculation that he wants to wait until the 2011 Mississippi Legislative Session is over before announcing.

I don't expect Barbour to be the last into the field where he would have to come from the back of the field as far as organization.

Once any of the Republicans announce that they are in the race, it could be a stampede to get in by the rest. I will be surprised if that happens later than March or early April.

Jurors on "The Twitter"

The ABA Journal reports on a Reuters Legal finding that mistrials due to internet research and modern forms of communications by jurors is on the rise.

social-networking

The article states:

 Reuters Legal checked Westlaw for challenges related to jurors’ Internet conduct and found 90 verdicts called into question since 1999. More than half the cases are from the last two years. In 28 of the cases, 21 of them since January 2009, judges granted new trials or overturned verdicts.

The wire service also checked tweets with the words “jury duty” in a three-week period ending in December. “Tweets from people describing themselves as prospective or sitting jurors popped up at the astounding rate of one nearly every three minutes,” the story says.

Many of the tweets simply expressed boredom. But many included snap decisions on guilt or innocence. "Jury duty is a blow. I've already made up my mind. He's guilty. LOL,” one tweet read.

That last quote looks like a case of a juror thinking out loud. It's common knowledge that jurors begin to form opinions as early as opening statements. I don't profess to be able to read juries as far as what the verdict will be. But there have been many trials that the jury appeared to have its mind made up—one way or the other—before the trial was over.

I doubt that the internet is greatly increasing the number of jurors who communicate about the trial while it is going on. What is changing is the medium of the communication. Instead of telling a family member or friend about the trial in person, jurors are texting, posting on Facebook and using twitter. This is a reflection of the growth of these forms of communication—not juror conduct as a whole. Now there is a way for jurors to get caught. There didn't use to be.

I believe that the vast majority of jurors take their oath seriously and do not violate the Court's instructions about communications concerning the case. But this shows that courts need form jury instructions that specifically address texting, Facebook, twitter and other electronic communications.

I'm not sure how I feel about internet research by jurors. I've done enough focus groups to know that jurors have questions that don't get answered in trial—often about subjects that the lawyers are prohibited from addressing like liability insurance. In focus groups a know-it-all juror often answers the question—incorrectly. I might would rather have the jurors researching on the internet where they are more likely to get a correct answer.  

Reporter May Have Obama U.S. Attorney Fatigue

Nearly two years since I first blogged about Mississippi U.S. Attorney appointments, Ya'll Politics links this Patsy Brumfield blog article about renewed speculation that President Obama may be about to appoint state Sen. Gray Tollison as the Northern District U.S. Attorney. Tollison's name first surfaced as a possibility in July.

Ms. Brumfield sounds tired of the speculation:

So, I wont' say it's a sure thing.

But I'm told from a very reliable source, with Washington perspectives, that state Sen. Gray Tollison of Oxford will be The Guy. Tollison is mum on the subject.

Of course, that comes after months and months of on/off/confused, and yea even no reports that it was Oxford attorney Christi R. McCoy or Felicia Adams, who's an assistant U.S. attorney in Jackson.

But maybe this time, it's right. We'll see.

My reaction is the same as I perceive Brumfield's to be: fatigue.

It reminds me of the scene from the movie Invincible where Mark Wahlberg tells the Eagles manager that they have his name spelled wrong on his locker. The manager's unenthusiastic response is that he is sorry, but does it really matter?

That's how I'm going to feel if and when Obama ever gets around to appointing U.S. Attorneys in Mississippi. It will be very anti-climatic because it is something that he should have done a long time ago and has totally botched.   

Chip Pickering Sued Over Soccer Dad Fight

As reported on Ya'll Politics and WLBT, Christopher Hester has filed a personal injury lawsuit against former Congressman Chip Pickering. The lawsuit stems from when the two men fought in December 2009 following a youth soccer game.

Here is the the plaintiff's Complaint, which was filed in County Court in Hinds County.

The Complaint alleges that Pickering repeatedly punched and threw Hester to the ground. The Complaint asserts claims for assault and battery, negligence and infliction of emotional distress.

Shortly after the dispute last year a Northeast Daily Journal article described the dispute:

Madison Police Sgt. Robert Sanders says Chip Pickering, a Republican who served 12 years in the U.S. House, was accused of attacking the coach Sunday.

Chris Hester, who claims he was wearing a neck brace at the time, says Pickering yelled at him and pulled him from his car as he tried to leave.

Pickering says he confronted the coach because Hester verbally abused his son so badly the child was crying uncontrollably. He says he defended himself because Hester attacked him first.

Hester coaches the team that played Pickering's son's team.

Good thing it was on a Sunday, or that thing could have gotten really ugly.

Rocky Wilkins and Mac McCool of Jackson represent Hester. 

Look for Barbour to Announce Presidential Bid Around Feb. 10, 2011

With most people now recognizing that Haley Barbour is running for President in 2012, speculation turns to when he will announce that he is running. Look for the announcement around February 10, 2011.

How do I know this? I looked at when people announced in 2007 for the 2008 race. Here is when major candidates announced:

  • Edwards: Dec. 26, 2006
  • Dodd: Jan. 11, 2007
  • Clinton: Jan. 20
  • Biden: Jan. 31
  • Huckabee: Jan. 28
  • Obama: Feb. 10
  • Romney: Feb. 13
  • Giuliani: Feb. 15
  • McCain: Feb. 28

They have a name for candidates who screw around, get coy and "test the waters": Fred Thompson. Thompson waited all the way until Sept. 5 to announce. Don't look for anyone to make that mistake again.

So for Barbour (and other serious candidates) it could be as early as mid-January ,or as late as the end of February. A good guess is in between. Feb. 10 seems like a good a date as any, since it worked for Obama. At least that's how I see it.

Victim in MSU Cowbell Lawsuit was Lucky

The Clarion-Ledger reports today about a lawsuit filed against the Southeastern Conference by an Ole Miss fan who was allegedly beaten with a cowbell at last year's Egg Bowl. The Clarion-Ledger reports:

The suit, filed late last month in Oktibbeha County Circuit Court, seeks unspecified damages from the SEC and commissioner Mike Slive because it says the league had a "knowing refusal" to enforce its own rule on artificial noisemakers that dated to 1974.

In the suit, William Matthew Brasher alleges that Brent Vowell knocked him unconscious with the bell at last year's game at Mississippi State's Scott Field, causing a 4-inch laceration that required staples and resulted in "a concussion, memory loss, mental and emotional distress and anguish, depression, paranoia, anxiety, loss of enjoyment of life and inability to pursue prior educational and professional goals," according to the complaint.

Here is an exclusive photo of the individual defendant (right):

 

Anyone who has ever attended a State game and had the person sitting directly behind them ringing a cow bell probably thinks that Brasher was lucky to be knocked out. When someone sits behind you in a stadium they end up holding the cow bell at your ear level—and close to it.

I am still recovering from the mental and emotional distress and anguish, etc… from sitting in front of a cow bell at a 1982 State vs. Bama game in Jackson. The lady behind me slowly rang that damn thing the whole game. I would have preferred to have been knocked out. Thank god Bama beat the crap out of State or she would have been doing it louder. 

I hope the plaintiff converts the case to a class action on behalf of all us cowbell victims. 

Meanwhile, SEC Commissioner Mike Slive has had a terrible week. He has been repeatedly misquoted after the NCAA cleared Cam Newton to play in the SEC Championship game Saturday:

"The conduct of Cam Newton's father and the involved individual is unacceptable and has no place in the SEC or in intercollegiate athletics," said Mike Slive, Southeastern Conference Commissioner. "The actions taken by Auburn University and Mississippi State University make it clear this behavior will not be tolerated in the SEC."

The word “not” that is scratched out is contained in all the media quotes. Slive couldn't have said that. The actions taken by the NCAA and SEC make it clear that shake downs by recruits' parents will be tolerated by the SEC. That has to be what Slive really said.

Otherwise, it would be like Ole Miss coach Houston Nutt starting his post Egg Bowl press conference by saying: “the results on the field tonight make it clear that State can't beat Ole Miss in football.”

Judicial Performance Recommends Public Reprimand for Judge "Pledge Allegiance to Land of the Free, or Go to Jail"

NMC reported yesterday that the Judicial Performance Commission is recommending to the Supreme Court that Judge Talmadge Littlejohn be publicly reprimanded and fined $100 for jailing lawyer Danny Lampley. Lampley's offense was refusing to say the pledge of allegiance to the flag in court. Seriously. Lampley exercised a First Amendment right and Judge Littlejohn threw him in the slammer.

Based on the comments to NMC's post, the general sentiment is that Littlejohn should take a bigger hit. In October I advocated that Judge Littlejohn be removed from the bench. But I never thought that was a real possibility and concede that it's not. Even if it should be.

I have mixed feelings about the recommendation. I can see the argument that the Commission should not go overboard and recommend that the Supreme Court punish someone too harshly for one bone-headed ruling.

On the other hand, I also see the argument that a stronger message needs to be sent to Littlejohn and other wing-nut judges that they apply the law—they aren't the law. Littlejohn apparently decided that he gets to be the Stalin of his courtroom and can banish lawyers to the Gulag when they refuse to profess their allegiance to the motherland.

I have to believe that Judge Littlejohn knew that he was wrong and Lampley was right. That's probably what caused Littlejohn to go crazy and throw Lampley in jail. Lawyers are supposed to show respect and deference to trial judges when they get something dead wrong. Littlejohn thought Lampley wasn't and blew his top.

It will be interesting to see what the Supreme Court does. I put the odds at 80% that the Court adopts the Commission's recommendation and 20% that the Court imposes a harsher sanction.