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The shadowy autocracy of the JIC, the State Supreme Court and the legal elites

By Bill Britt
Alabama Political Reporter

Two State Senators are offering constitutional amendments that would rein in the Judicial Inquiry Commission (JIC) and the Court of the Judiciary (COJ).

The JIC was created to investigate, receive, initiate complaints leveled against sitting judges, and the COJ was formed to hear cases that the JIC felt needed to be adjudicated. In simple terms, the JIC acts as a prosecutor and grand jury, while the COJ is judge and jury.

But, as of late, these two entities seem to be more interested in politics than justice.

Senators Dick Brewbaker and Bill Hightower are determined to either rid the State of this “Star Chamber-like” body of appointees completely or amend the 1901 Constitution by placing a legislative check on its actions.

Hightower recently asked the Legislative Fiscal Office (LFO) to conduct a comparison study on how other states deal with complaints or abuses regarding the Judiciary. The study found that all but two states have a judicial removal process, where a two-thirds majority of the House of Representatives may impeach, and two-thirds of the Senate may convict a judge. This is the typical process followed for removing any elected official in most states.

Why is it necessary to abolish or limit the power of the JIC and the COJ?

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Simple. The JIC and the COJ are being used as a political weapon by women and men who are not accountable for their actions. If the JIC, COJ and the Supreme Court of Alabama were being honest with the people, why will they not release all the documents related to the suspension of Chief Justice Roy Moore? If the process of his suspension is being handled properly, why did Acting Chief Justice Lyn Stuart aided by Associate Justice Mike Bolin quickly move to bar Moore from his office, and fire his staff while his case was under appeal? This is nothing less than a coup d’etat. The French words coup d’etat can be translated “blow to the state” as in the swiping or stroke of a sword.

In Clayton Thyne’s and Jonathan Powell’s, Journal of Peace Research, they define coups as “illegal and overt attempts by the military or other elites within the state apparatus to unseat the sitting executive.”

Many of those who now sit on the JIC see themselves as the Political elites. Their office is so secretive that on their web page, it only lists 401 Adams Avenue, P.O. Box, a fax and phone number. When APR called several months ago to ask who served on the JIC, their attorney refused to give us that information and referred us to the Secretary of State.

For years, some have reportedly exploited their position on the JIC to serve personal ends, according to those who have closely watched the commission. Some, in law enforcement claim, the JIC is merely an extension of the State Bar and that the JIC has been used by certain members as a device to shape judicial outcomes.

Whether anyone agrees with their actions in the Moore case, that is not the issue here. What is at stake is the rule of law and the will of the voters. The unwillingness of the Supreme Court to unseal the documents in Moore’s investigation and the  subsequent trial should raise grave doubts about the validity of the process.

This indicates the JIC is little more than an arm of shadowy autocratic regimes run by liberals and Birmingham lawyers, where judges are removed by commissioners with no accountability or oversight.

Brewbaker and Hightower must press hard to pass an amendment for “coup-proofing” the State’s judiciary.

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The Legislative Fiscal Office (LFO) report says, “Perhaps relevant to the question presented by ongoing issues in Alabama, Michigan’s Commission is specifically not given the power to hear the cases of Supreme Court Justices, and has no mechanism to deal with those cases currently.”

In the last four years, APR has been asked to participate in a Harvard study on legal and illegal corruption. Yearly, the Judicial branch was scored low on both legal and illegal corruption. However, actions taken by the JIC coupled with those of Lyn Stuart’s court have left us no choice but to believe there is corruption at the highest levels of the judiciary.

 

Bill Britt is editor-in-chief at the Alabama Political Reporter and host of The Voice of Alabama Politics. You can email him at [email protected] or follow him on Twitter.

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