Monday, August 05, 2013

Lake Co. Judge Bans Law Firm From From Practicing Before His Court

When I read the headline on the Northwest Indiana Times' website today, my only reaction was: Can a judge ban a law firm from practicing before his court? Apparently he can in Lake County. The Times' Susan Brown explains why a prominent criminal defense firm, Thiros and Stracci, is no longer permitted to practice before Judge Nicholas Shiralli in a story titled, "Judge banishes prominent law firm from his court, prompting more delays for many cases." According to Brown's story, the action is in retaliation because a member of the firm participated in getting legislation passed this year that blocked Judge Shiralli from becoming Lake County's new juvenile court judge. The law required the juvenile court judge to be chosen through the merit selection process rather than by the sitting judges. The issue arose after Gov. Mike Pence appointed the county's juvenile court judge, Mary Beth Bonaventura, to head up the Department of Child Services:
A Lake County judge has banned the law firm of a legendary criminal defense attorney from his courtroom, prompting the firm's cases to be delayed as they are transferred to other courts . . .
Court officials, who are reluctant to speak publicly, say Lake Superior Court Judge Nicholas Schiralli is transferring all cases handled by the prominent law firm of Thiros & Stracci to other courts because a member of that firm was involved in having legislation passed that contributed to Schiralli not getting named to head the Lake Juvenile Court vacated last spring by Mary Beth Bonaventura . . .
The Lake County judiciary's blistering battle over who would fill the coveted seat of former Lake Juvenile Judge Bonaventura was widely reported statewide after Gov. Mike Pence chose Bonaventura last spring to become state director of the Department of Child Services.
Schiralli did not respond to repeated calls last week from The Times for comment.
James Thiros, son of renowned criminal defense attorney Nick Thiros, now deceased, declined to comment beyond confirming Schiralli is transferring the firm's cases to other courts.
It took the Indiana Supreme Court to ultimately settle the juvenile judge controversy in a decision that led to Schiralli's disqualification on the grounds he did not undergo merit selection as had other superior court judges . . .
Judges can recuse themselves from hearing cases due to a conflict of interest, but I've never heard of a judge recusing himself from hearing any cases where a party is represented by a particular law firm because of past political differences with a member of that law firm. 

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

The Lake County courts are a cesspool of patronage and incompetence. This should surprise no one. Retaliation happens all the time at the rusty county building.

Anonymous said...

I agree with the judge on this one.