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DISILLUSIOINED FROM JUDICIAL POLITICS, DECEMBER 2002
by: Mace H. Greenfield
I grew up very idealistic about lawyers, judges, the courts and government, but
then quickly became very disillusioned as an adult.
I have been a litigant for more years than I have been a lawyer. My own
dissatisfied experiences in the Courts of New York put me on the track to become
a lawyer. My divorce was in Virginia, where I was awarded custody and child
support after trial in 1991. I had no complaints about lawyers judges or the
courts at that time.
After moving back to New York in 1991, my post divorce litigation was in the
Family Court in New York. I was the petitioner. I was mistreated every time I
made contact as though I was a dirt-bag deadbeat dad. Then, the system here told
me: that I was petty wanting the New York order of support corrected to reflect
me as a man and my x-wife as a woman; that I should laugh at my x-wife when they
went after her for arrears she did not owe; I could go on and on. I had never
lost in Family Court in New York State as a litigant, but quickly became a very
bitter disgruntled litigant. I then went on a tirade about the system on radio
as “Mace in your Face.” A Judge then talked me into becoming a lawyer to fight
the system from the inside.
Now I am even more disillusioned than ever. Senator Lack is now to be appointed
to a Court of Claims Judgeship, with backing from the Judiciary, State
Legislature and the Governor’s office. Senator Lack is a man who has
demonstrated the art of road rage, is notorious on Long Island for being nasty
and hotheaded (as reported in Newsday), who should have but refused to resign
from the Senate. How can anyone who has to walk into his courtroom respect the
bench? With his appointment, how can anyone respect the Judiciary, the State
Legislature or the Governor’s office?
Something is severely “lacking.” I find it appalling that both the public and
the integrity of the system are being ignored to fulfill what must be a
political pay back. Just how long until Lack will be appointed an acting Supreme
Court Judge to fulfill what must be his dream? The public good and the integrity
of the system are being ignored, and the trust of the public is being further
eroded and betrayed. In a time of high public mistrust of government, the courts
and lawyers, such sentiments are now being justified by our public officials.
Obviously, there is more politics in judicial appointments than in the election
process, where the public can exercise its’ will.