In a study by Wisconsin Citizen Action, in 75% of the cases brought before the State Supreme Court, 75% involved campaign contributors on one side or the other. This is NOT just Ohio's problem, we are deep into it too.
NYTimes
October 1, 2006
Campaign Cash Mirrors a High Court’s Rulings
By
ADAM LIPTAK and JANET ROBERTS
COLUMBUS, Ohio — In the fall of 2004, Terrence O’Donnell, an affable judge
with the placid good looks of a small-market news anchor, was running hard
to keep his seat on the Ohio Supreme Court. He was also considering two
important class-action lawsuits that had been argued many months before.
In the weeks before the election, Justice O’Donnell’s campaign accepted
thousands of dollars from the political action committees of three companies
that were defendants in the suits. Two of the cases dealt with defective
cars, and one involved a toxic substance. Weeks after winning his race,
Justice O’Donnell joined majorities that handed the three companies
significant victories.
Justice O’Donnell’s conduct was
unexceptional. In one of the cases, every justice in the 4-to-3 majority had
taken money from affiliates of the companies. None of the dissenters had
done so, but they had accepted contributions from lawyers for the
plaintiffs.
Thirty-nine states elect judges, and 30 states are holding elections for
seats on their highest courts this year. Spending in these races is
skyrocketing, with some judges raising $2 million or more for a single
campaign. As the amounts rise, questions about whether money is polluting
the independence of the judiciary are being fiercely debated across the
nation. And nowhere is the battle for judicial seats more ferocious than in
Ohio.
An examination of the Ohio Supreme Court by
The New York Times found that its justices routinely sat on cases after
receiving campaign contributions from the parties involved or from groups
that filed supporting briefs. On average, they voted in favor of
contributors 70 percent of the time. Justice O’Donnell voted for his
contributors 91 percent of the time, the highest rate of any justice on the
court.
In the 12 years that were studied, the justices almost never disqualified
themselves from hearing their contributors’ cases. In the 215 cases with the
most direct potential conflicts of interest, justices recused themselves
just 9 times.
Even sitting justices have started to question the current system. “I never
felt so much like a hooker down by the bus station in any race I’ve ever
been in as I did in a judicial race,” said Justice Paul E. Pfeifer,
a Republican member of the Ohio Supreme Court. “Everyone interested in
contributing has very specific interests.”
“They mean to be buying a vote,” Justice Pfeifer added. “Whether they
succeed or not, it’s hard to say.”
Three recent cases, two in Illinois and one in West Virginia, have put the
complaints in sharp focus. Elected justices there recently refused to
disqualify themselves from hearing suits in which tens or hundreds of
millions of dollars were at stake. The defendants were insurance, tobacco
and coal companies whose supporters had spent millions of dollars to help
elect the justices.
After a series of big-money judicial contests around the nation, the balance
of power in several state high courts has tipped in recent years in favor of
corporations and insurance companies.
In the 2002 Ohio judicial election, for example, two candidates won seats
that year on the seven-member court after each raised more money than one of
the candidates for governor that year.
Corporate Giving Increases
Judges are required by codes of judicial ethics to disqualify themselves
whenever their impartiality might reasonably be questioned over financial or
other conflicts. Even owning a few shares of stock in a defendant’s company
or seeing a relative’s name on a brief generally requires automatic
disqualification.
But there is an exception to this strict rule: campaign contributions. Very
few judges in the states that elect the members of their highest court view
contributions as a reason for disqualification when those contributors
appear before them.
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Many judges said contributions were so common that recusal would wreak havoc
on the system. The standard in the Ohio Supreme Court, its chief justice,
Thomas J. Moyer, said, is to recuse only if “sitting on the case is going to
be perceived as just totally unfair.”
Duane J. Adams, a plaintiff in one of the class-action suits heard by
Justice O’Donnell, concerning defective cars, said he questioned the
impartiality of the justices who ruled against him. Mr. Adams had sued
DaimlerChrysler under the state’s lemon law, and he grew angry when told
that the company’s political action committee had given money to justices in
the majority.
“At the very least, it’s a conflict of interest,” Mr. Adams said. “These
gentlemen, they should be prosecuted for what I consider is taking a bribe.”
He and the other plaintiffs did not contribute, but their lawyers gave to
the campaigns of five of the justices.
Precisely what contributors want or get for their money is unclear. Some
contributors say they have no agenda beyond ensuring that able and
independent judges are elected. Others surely hope to influence the
justices’ votes in particular cases.
The middle ground, advanced by groups representing business, labor and
plaintiffs’ lawyers, is to support justices who hold views similar to their
own. “Various interests see voting patterns,” Chief Justice Moyer said. The
alignment between contributions and votes, he said, is a matter of shared
judicial philosophy.
If that is right, contributors are not trying to buy votes in particular
cases. But they are trying to buy seats on the court.
And they are succeeding. Not long ago, the Ohio Supreme Court was controlled
by liberal justices whose campaigns had been financed in large part by
plaintiffs’ lawyers and unions. Now that business groups are outspending
their adversaries, the court has become dominated by more conservative
justices. And the court’s decisions are no longer markedly sympathetic to
people claiming injuries.
Justice O’Donnell, a Republican, won his seat with the help of big
contributions from the insurance, finance and medical industries. He is
running for re-election this year, and his opponent, Judge William O’Neill,
is making contributions an issue.
“We have to stop selling seats on the Ohio Supreme Court like we sell seats
on the
New York Stock Exchange,” said Judge O’Neill, a Democrat on the 11th
District Court of Appeals in Warren, in northeast Ohio. He says he will not
accept contributions.
Justice O’Donnell, who has raised more than $3 million since 2000, refused
to be interviewed for this article despite more than a half-dozen requests
to his campaign, his chambers and the court. In a statement, he said, “Any
effort to link judicial campaign contributions received by a judicial
campaign committee for major media advertising to case outcomes is
misleading and erodes public confidence in the judiciary.”
“A judge,” the statement said, “may fairly and impartially consider matters
despite receipt of the campaign contribution by the campaign committee.”
Interest groups play a powerful and generally accepted role in races for
legislative and executive positions. But their increasing role in
identifying and supporting judicial candidates is at odds with the
traditional concept of what judges do.
“The role of the judge and the role of the legislator are completely
different,” said William K. Weisenberg, an
Ohio State Bar Association official. “You want a legislator to vote the
way you would vote. When you go into court, you want someone to listen to
the facts and decide the case on the facts and the law. We don’t want the
umpire calling balls and strikes before the game has begun.”
Influencing the Bench
Many judges concede that sitting on their contributors’ cases creates the
perception that their votes can be bought. But in public, at least, most
insist the perception is wrong.
“All the surveys I’ve seen indicate that generally 75 percent of the people
believe that contributions influence decisions,” said Chief Justice Moyer, a
Republican. But when asked if contributions played a role in courts’
decisions, he said: “I don’t believe they do. I know they don’t for me.”
That view is not universally held.
“It’s pretty hard in big-money races not to take care of your friends,” said
Richard Neely, a retired chief justice of the West Virginia Supreme Court of
Appeals. “It’s very hard not to dance with the one who brung you.”
Indeed, according to a survey of 2,428
state court judges conducted in 2002 by Justice at Stake, a judicial reform
organization, almost half said campaign contributions influenced decisions.
And more than half agreed that “judges should be prohibited from presiding
over and ruling in cases where one of the sides has given money to their
campaign.”
The Times study explored the influence of money on judicial decision-making
by asking two basic questions about the Ohio Supreme Court. How often did it
hear cases involving major contributors? And how did justices vote in those
cases?
The study considered only cases that were both significant and difficult. It
excluded procedural decisions, including whether to hear or reconsider a
case. And only divided cases — those in which there was at least one dissent
— were considered, because those presented the most contentious legal
issues. In the 12 years ended this spring, there were about 1,500 such
decisions.
The study looked at contributors who gave $1,000 or more in the six years
preceding the decision, the term length for justices.
It also considered, for the most part, only the contributors most directly
affected by a ruling: the parties themselves and groups that filed
supporting briefs urging the court to rule a certain way.
Contributions from lawyers were excluded from the study’s main findings.
Lawyers are far more likely than other contributors to give to judges across
the ideological spectrum, and — because their firms often handle a wide
variety of cases — they generally do not have the intensely focused interest
in the outcome of a particular case that their clients do. More than 200
times, moreover, justices sat on cases after receiving contributions from
lawyers on both sides.
The court’s decisions, the study found,
were rife with potential conflicts. In more than 200 of the 1,500 cases, at
least one justice cast a vote after receiving a significant campaign
contribution. On scores of occasions, the justices’ campaigns took
contributions after a case involving the contributor was argued and before
it was decided — just when conflicts are most visible and pointed.
Contributors did well with those whose campaigns they had financed. Of the
10 justices in the Times study, 6 sided with contributors more than 70
percent of the time. Justice O’Donnell, who has been on the court for only
three years and has participated in fewer decisions than most of the
justices studied, had the highest rate — 91 percent.
Lawyers who gave money were not nearly as successful. Five justices voted
for the positions represented by these contributors half of the time, and
the average rate was 55 percent. Recusals in cases involving contributors
were all but unheard of.
Six of the seven sitting justices — all except Justice O’Donnell — agreed to
interviews for this article, and all said contributions had not affected
their decisions.
“There is a lot more to the story than the cold numbers suggest,” said
Justice Maureen O’Connor, a Republican who voted for her contributors 74
percent of the time. Some cases are more significant than others, she said.
Similarly, she and other justices criticized the decision to omit from the
study the court’s terse rulings on whether to hear a case at all. Many of
these decisions are routine or trivial, however, and the rulings themselves
do not contain sufficient information to be readily categorized.
In his statement, Justice O’Donnell said that “selectively screening a
limited number of case decisions results in a skewed outcome.” He did not
elaborate.
But Justice Pfeifer, who voted for his contributors 69 percent of the time,
backed the study’s methodology. “I quite frankly can’t think of another
way,” he said. “You’re using the only yardstick that I’d know of that you
can use.”
Several justices said they found Ohio’s money-fueled judicial elections
distasteful and troubling. They pointed out, though, that Ohio law has
mechanisms to limit contributions and to insulate justices from
contributors, including a ban on personal solicitations by the justices.
Some said they tried to avoid learning the identities of their many
contributors, though they conceded it could sometimes be unavoidable.
Justice Evelyn Lundberg Stratton, for instance, said she had attended 50
fund-raisers during her last campaign.
None of the justices interviewed suggested that more frequent recusals from
contributors’ cases would be a positive step rather than a recipe for havoc.
Last year, though, five justices did recuse themselves from a case involving
a Republican fund-raiser, Thomas W. Noe. They had taken $23,510 from Mr. Noe
and his wife. Appeals court judges filled in for the justices.
“It is not necessary for a judge to recuse himself just because an attorney
or party has contributed to his campaign,” Chief Justice Moyer said in a
statement at the time. “However, this is a high-profile case with political
implications and with potential personal consequences for the campaign
contributor in question.”
Some legal experts say that recusal should be the rule and not the
exception. Indeed, in 1999, the
American Bar Association revised its Model Code of Judicial Conduct to
require judges to disqualify themselves if they received campaign
contributions of a certain amount from a party or its lawyer. But the bar
association did not name an amount, leaving it to the states should they
adopt the code. No state has adopted it.
Unlike campaign contributions, direct gifts to judges, even relatively small
ones, almost always require disqualification.
In 2002, for instance, the Ohio Supreme Court reprimanded a lower-court
judge for accepting football tickets from Stuart Banks, a lawyer who had
appeared before the judge. Yet three of the justices who issued the
reprimand had accepted at least $1,000 each in contributions from Mr. Banks
in the previous 10 years. Those same justices also sat on several cases in
which Mr. Banks appeared before them.
Ruling on a Lemon Law
From the day he leased it in 1996, when it leaked transmission fluid all
over the garage, Duane J. Adams’s Dodge Caravan was nothing but trouble.
“My wife went to start it at the grocery store, and the battery blew up,”
Mr. Adams said. “We didn’t feel safe in it.”
Mr. Adams invoked Ohio’s tough lemon law, which calls for a refund for
defective cars. DaimlerChrysler took the car back after an arbitration found
the car defective but deducted a $6,000 “mileage fee.”
Mr. Adams and other Ohio car buyers filed a class-action lawsuit against
three car companies that routinely imposed such mileage fees in settlements
and arbitrations. Drawing on a 1996 appeals court decision that banned the
fees and the fact that the Ohio Legislature had rejected such fees when it
enacted the law, an appeals court allowed the case to go forward in 2003.
In the first week of November 2004, while the case was pending in the Ohio
Supreme Court, the political action committee of DaimlerChrysler, a
defendant, gave $1,000 each to the election campaigns of Chief Justice Moyer
and Justice O’Donnell. Two months earlier, the committee of a second
defendant, Ford, gave those same justices $500 apiece. From 2000, when the
suit was filed, to 2004, when it was decided, the affiliates of the three
companies gave $15,000 to four of the justices on the case.
Still, all four of the justices continued to sit on the case, and all of
them were in the majority in the 4-to-3 decision issued on Nov. 10, 2004,
just days after the last set of DaimlerChrysler contributions.
The justices ruled that the plaintiffs had voluntarily accepted settlement
offers or arbitration awards with the mileage fee deducted. The ban on the
fees applied only to lawsuits filed in court and not disputes resolved less
formally, the majority said.
The three dissenting justices said the majority’s ruling gave the plaintiffs
an impossible choice: to pursue a lawsuit that could cost more than the car
itself or to accept the reduced sum.
Elaine Lutz, a spokeswoman for DaimlerChrysler, defended the company’s
actions. “The contributions that companies’ PAC’s make are driven by the
campaign calendar, not the judicial calendar,” Ms. Lutz said. Candidates for
the court may accept contributions for about a year before an election and
four months afterward.
Lawyers for Ford also said it complied with Ohio law. “By definition,” said
one of the lawyers, John Beisner, “if you have an elective system, the
judges are going to go to those with the greatest interest in the system to
get their contributions.”
Car company lawyers said the contributions were merely an effort to level
the field against big-spending plaintiffs’ firms. In the lemon-law case,
though, the overall contributions were tilted heavily in favor of the
companies and their own lawyers.
Mr. Adams and the other named plaintiffs gave no money to the justices.
While the case proceeded, their lawyers contributed about $12,000 to five of
the seven justices in the case, dividing their money roughly evenly between
a justice who voted for them and several who voted against them. The law
firms representing the companies gave only to the justices in the majority,
for a total of more than $115,000.
That was consistent with national trends. “The current wars are epic battles
between businesses and trial lawyers,” said Bert Brandenburg, the executive
director of Justice at Stake. “Over the past half-decade, business groups
are outraising and outspending trial lawyers.”
A week after the lemon-law case was decided, the court announced another
ruling in favor of a business. This one halted a class action to support the
medical monitoring of workers who had been exposed to beryllium, a
potentially toxic substance. The vote was 5 to 2. Employees and the
political action committee of the parent company of the defendant, Brush
Wellman, gave a total of $5,700 to four justices, more than $2,600 of it
after the case was argued and before it was decided. All four were in the
majority.
Patrick Carpenter, a spokesman for Brush Wellman, said its political action
committee “contributes to deserving candidates in the interest of advancing
good government” and noted that the workers’ lawyers had also given to the
justices. The lawyers gave about $20,000 to several justices, though most
voted against the workers. Mr. Carpenter also said the company had lost a
2002 decision by a 4-to-3 vote, before the court’s conservative wing took
over.
Michael Fincher, a 48-year-old roofer who was a plaintiff in the beryllium
suit, said the contributions meant he had not received impartial justice. “I
don’t think it’s appropriate, period,” Mr. Fincher said.
Screening the Candidates
Business groups have turned picking potential justices into an art.
“They study very carefully the field of potential candidates, really
studying their backgrounds and what makes them tick, and picking a person
who is liable to be leaning their way,” said Justice Pfeifer, who has shown
an independent streak in his 14 years on the court. He did not name names.
Justice O’Donnell’s campaign materials say he is “rooted in law enforcement”
as the son a Cleveland police officer. They also note that he served as a
law clerk and taught elementary school students and paralegals. In 20 years
on lower courts before his appointment to the Supreme Court in May 2003, he
created a long paper trail of conservative decisions. On the Supreme Court,
he has helped consolidate its transformation from a court that routinely
ruled against corporations and insurance companies to one quite friendly to
business interests.
In 2004, running to complete the six-year term to which he had been
appointed, Justice O’Donnell had a million-dollar advantage over his
opponent that led to an Election Day rout.
Now that same opponent, Judge O’Neill, is back for a rematch. His campaign
slogan: “No money from nobody.”
Contributing to candidates for states’ highest courts can be money well
spent in at least one sense: the courts are very powerful. They have the
last word on most of the issues that come before them. The United States
Supreme Court has no jurisdiction over cases that present pure questions of
state law, and in any event it hears only about 80 cases a year.
The states use various methods to choose their judges. The approaches are
often some combination of nominating commissions, governors’ and legislative
action, and popular voting, including partisan contests and retention
elections. Political machines still play a role in some states. In the
federal system, by contrast, judges are appointed by the president,
confirmed by the Senate and awarded lifelong tenure.
“Although there may be no good method of
selecting and retaining judges, there is a worst method, and Ohio is among
the states to have found it,” Paul D. Carrington and Adam R. Long wrote in a
2002 study of the Ohio Supreme Court in the law review of Capital University
here in Columbus. “That worst method is one in which judges qualify for
their jobs by raising very large sums of money from lawyers, litigants and
special interest groups, and retain their offices only by continuing to
raise such funds.” The problem, the authors found, is not a new one, but one
that grows with the sums involved.
Ohio started electing judges in 1851, and the system seems unlikely to
change. Voters overwhelmingly rejected a proposed return to an appointive
system in 1987. In the 1980’s, a campaign for a seat on the Ohio Supreme
Court cost $100,000, compared with the $2 million a candidate may raise and
spend these days.
Much of the recent spending came from business groups furious with what they
called a liberal “Gang of Four” on the court after a pair of 1999 decisions.
One of the decisions struck down a law revising the treatment of injury
cases. The other interpreted employers’ insurance policies broadly to cover
some off-the-job injuries.
In 2000, business groups mounted a multimillion-dollar campaign to unseat
Justice Alice Robie Resnick, a Democrat who wrote the first decision and
joined the second. One advertisement showed a female judge switching her
vote after someone dropped a bag of money on her desk.
Her opponent was Judge O’Donnell. He refused to denounce the attack
advertisements, which seemed to backfire with voters. Justice Resnick won
the election with 57 percent of the vote.
From that election on, “Ohio became a poster child for everything that was
wrong with judicial elections,” said Mr. Weisenberg, the Ohio State Bar
Association official.
Money poured in, from political parties, from trial lawyers and especially
from business interests. Contributions from people and entities affiliated
with the finance and insurance industries totaled more than $800,000 in
2004. Doctors and the health care industry contributed more than $440,000.
The Balance of Power Shifts
Interest groups on the other side give, too, and the justices they support
overwhelmingly vote their way. But Justice Pfeifer says the balance of
financial power has shifted to business groups.
“I don’t care how well a trial lawyer does
or how big a pot a labor union has,” he said, “they can’t begin to match the
business corporations. It’s not a fair fight.”
Justice Stratton, a Republican, said the recent contributions from business
groups were a predictable consequence of a series of rulings “very strongly
in favor of trial lawyers.”
“You only have the big money coming out,” she said, “when the court has
swung too much to the left or to the right.”
In 2002, Lt. Gov. Maureen O’Connor, a Republican, won a seat on the court,
replacing a more liberal Republican justice and altering the balance. Her
campaign took more than $330,000 from affiliates of insurance companies and
medical groups. Not long after she joined the court, Justice O’Connor wrote
the opinion that overruled the 1999 insurance decision. Only four years
after the court ruled that employers’ insurance policies covered many
off-the-job injuries, it reversed course. “It serves no valid purpose to
allow incorrect opinions to remain in the body of our law,” Justice O’Connor
wrote for the majority. The vote was 4 to 3.
The shift in personnel had a prompt impact on other cases, too. Since then,
law firms that work mostly for plaintiffs have fared poorly in the court. A
look at a sample of 14 big plaintiffs’ firms showed that they won 64 percent
of the cases in the study before 2003. In the next three years, after the
rise of the court’s conservative wing, their success rate dropped to 17
percent. Since 1995, Ohio has imposed campaign contribution limits. They are
$3,000 from individuals and $5,500 from organizations for each judicial
election. Primary and general elections are counted separately.
A Critic Takes On the System
But, depending on how donations from individuals and political action
committees are counted, the limits do not stop some businesses from making
very large aggregate contributions. Affiliates, employees, officers and
directors of the Cincinnati Insurance Company, for instance, gave more than
$200,000 to Ohio Supreme Court candidates from 1998 through 2004.
Joan Shevchik, a spokeswoman for the parent company of Cincinnati Insurance,
Cincinnati Financial Corporation, cited the effort to overturn the 1999
decision as a reason for the contributions, but emphasized that the
corporation itself gave nothing. “As insurance professionals,” she said,
“each of us sees up close the immediate impact that the Ohio Supreme Court
has on the industry, our company and our policyholders.”
There is a small printing press in the garage of Judge O’Neill. In the
evenings, he and his children produce fliers for a long-shot no-money
campaign for Justice O’Donnell’s seat on the Ohio Supreme Court.
“We’re going to do a million pieces for $4,000 from my pocket,” Judge
O’Neill said, explaining that he will not accept a penny in contributions.
Even some of his supporters view his effort as quixotic, notwithstanding the
higher ratings Judge O’Neill gets from many Ohio bar associations.
“They’re out soliciting the next million dollars to beat me,” he said. “The
insurance industry, the manufacturers and now the doctors treat the Ohio
Supreme Court as a personal piece of property.”
Justice Resnick, the last Democrat on the court, is retiring this year, and
her seat is also open, making an all-Republican court next year a distinct
possibility.
Marc Dann, a Democratic state senator running for attorney general, said
Judge O’Neill’s strategy might have been driven by necessity as well as
principle.
“Best case,” Mr. Dann said, “maybe he goes to the plaintiff’s bar and labor
unions, and maybe he raises $300,000. To do a good week of TV in Ohio is
$750,000.”
Judge O’Neill’s assertion that seats on the Supreme Court are for sale
infuriates many in the legal establishment in Ohio, and in July 2004 the
Disciplinary Counsel of the Ohio Supreme Court began an investigation into
whether Judge O’Neill had violated judicial ethics by making similar
statements in the last campaign.
Judge O’Neill laughed when asked if the investigation worried him.
“I am a Vietnam veteran, and I lost my wife 10 years ago,” he said. “I
raised four kids by myself. When you talk about fear, I fear big things in
life. Being hauled before a disciplinary counsel does not qualify.”
For the time being, a federal judge has suspended the investigation on First
Amendment grounds. If the Ohio Legislature is troubled by Judge O’Neill’s
conduct, the federal judge, Ann Aldrich wrote, “the proper solution is to
stop electing judges and make state judgeships appointed offices.”
Judge O’Neill disagreed. He likes elections, he said.
“We have more authority over people’s lives than anyone else in elected
office,” he said. “We decide who goes to jail and who gets out of jail. We
decide what happens to your life savings after you die. We decide whether or
not you will be permitted to finish raising your child. I can’t think of any
other industry that has a more profound impact on people’s lives. And it is
arrogant at best that some committee should make this appointment.”
But Chief Justice Moyer said the flaws in Ohio’s approach were the product
of elections.
“In a perfect world,” he said, “you would have justices being selected not
based on the amount of money their campaign committees can raise from
various interests, but on their character and record — and somewhat on
judicial philosophy, certainly, but in a more abstract way.”
Adam Liptak reported from Columbus,
Ohio, and New York, and Janet Roberts reported from New York. Mona Houck
contributed reporting from New York.