The Washington State Bar Association is a private entity, WSBA Finances 2017 valued at $13,0000.00 annually. According to a University of Washington law Professor ” use of county taxpayer funded Prosecutor’s is prohibited under Washington State’s Constitution. The Washington State Bar Association cannot use prosecutors for business purposes at all…”
This begs one question for my taxpayer readers: Did the Washington State Legislature give Snohomish County Prosecutors an exception under Washington State’s Constitution and RCW ?
Snohomish County Prosecutor Adam Cornell has many skeletons in his closet, which obviously will come out just before the election. County voters deserve a little surprise.
Let’s just say, Adam Cornell is not the wholesome honest Prosecutor his friend Scott North at the Everett Herald makes him out to be… http://www.heraldnet.com/news/deputy-prosecutor-is-a-foster-care-success-story/
Adam Cornell has been managing two non-profit groups with from inside the Snohomish County Prosecutor’s Office, Dawson Place and Victim Support Services in spite of Washington State laws (RCW) that prohibit a prosecutor from performing any other function outside of his official Prosecutorial Duties.
RCW 36.27.020
Duties.
Folks,
Here’s what’s on for this Friday: Juvenile Court Basics (Presented by DPAs Leanne Foster and Tim Geraghty / 1 live credit / 3:00pm in the Hearing Examiner’s Room
On deck for 9/16/16: Impeaching Defense Experts with Defendants’ Statements (Presented by DPA Seth Fine) / 1 live credit / 3pm in the Hearing Examiner’s Room
See you then,
a
Adam W. Cornell
Deputy Prosecuting Attorney
Snohomish County Prosecutor’s Office – Criminal Division
3000 Rockefeller Avenue, MS 504
Everett, WA 98201
(: (425) 388-6306
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What is interesting to note here is that Snohomish County Prosecutor Seth Fine, Adam Cornell and countless other Snohomish County Prosecutors are attending CLE classes, while being paid with our county tax monies, and a Washignton Stata Bar Association legal education class is being taught by Snohomish County Prosecutor Seth Fine, during county hours, promoting the private Washington State Bar function musing our public funds.
If this isn’t bad enough, Snohomish County Prosecutor Seth Fine is also being paid as a hearing officer for the Washington State Bar and at the same time, Snohomish County taxpayers are writing him a check to perform private Washington State Bar Association hearing officer functions for the Washington State Bar.
Snohomish County Prosecutor Seth Fine is misusing county offices to hold private continuing legal education classes for the Washington State Bar and working as hearing officer for the Washington State Bar Association.
April 10, 2015
Appeals in Washington: Judges and Lawyers in Conversation
9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.
Location: Sullivan Hall, Room C5
4.5 General and 1.0 Ethics CLE Credits, pending
A View From the Bench
Chief Justice Barbara Madsen, Washington State Supreme Court
My First Term: What I’ve Learned, What Surprised Me, & Tips
Justice Charlie Wiggins, Washington State Supreme Court, in conversation with:
Chief Judge Laurel Siddoway, Division 3;
Judge Brad Maxa, Division 2; Judge Michael Trickey, Division 1
Technology on Appeal
Rich Johnson, Division I Clerk of the Court, in conversation with:
Melissa White; Robert Taylor; Ken Masters, Seminar Co-chair
Appellate Briefs
Chief Judge Laurel Siddoway, Division 3, in conversation with:
Howard Goodfriend; Sidney Tribe; Eric Broman; Janet Dickson; Seth Fine, Snohomish County Prosecuting Attorney Appellate Unit
Oral Argument
Acting Chief Judge Jim Verellen, Division I, in conversation with:
Catherine Smith; Alan Copsey, Solicitor General’s Office; Jim Whisman, Director of King County Prosecutor’s Appellate Unit; Lila Silverstein, Washington Appellate Project
Ethics
WSBA Chief Disciplinary Counsel Douglas Ende in conversation with:
Chief Judge Michael S. Spearman, Division 1; Phil Talmadge; Averil Rothrock; Shelby Lemmel, Seminar Co-Chair
Click Here to Register for this Event (in person or live webcast)
($225 General Registration or Live Webcast • $195 SU School of Law Alumni)
Racism alive and well inside King County Washington Superior Court
“Hating people because of their color is wrong. And it doesn’t matter which color does the hating. It’s just plain wrong.”
― Muhammad Ali
Most attorneys in Washington State have taken and passed Constitutional law while in law school. For me, the right to a fair trial under the 6th Amendment to the United States Constitution is one major component against judicial discrimination.
The Sixth Amendment requires juries and fact finders such as judges to be impartial. Impartiality has been interpreted as requiring individual jurors to be unbiased, well stated,
In Peña-Rodriguez v. Colorado (2017), the Supreme Court held that the Sixth Amendment requires a court in a criminal trial to investigate whether a jury’s guilty verdict was based on racial bias. For a guilty verdict to be set-aside based on the racial bias of a juror, the defendant must prove that the racial bias “was a significant motivating factor in the juror’s vote to convict.”
According to the Washington State Judicial Ethics Commission, Judges, while performing bench trials, are under the mandate as a jury to not discriminate.
Discrimination alive and well inside King County Washington Superior Court
On May 25, 2017, Washington State Judicial Ethics Commission received a complaint against King County Superior Court Judge Douglas North.
Judge Douglas North on October 21, 2015, during a murder trial involving two defendants, presided over a hearing (outside the presence of the jury) to determine whether certain text messages found on the victim’s phone from a person known only as “Charisma” would be admitted. Their relevance and admissibility turned, in part, on whether “Charisma” was a gang member and likely to carry out the threat in the text messages.
During the course of this hearing Judge Douglas North said: “But we don’t have any information, of course, about Mr. Charisma, so we don’t know whether he’s some white guy like me making a threat or somebody who’s actually, you know, more likely to be a gangster.”
The last thing we need is a Judge who is a racist here in Washington State. The right to a fair trial should never be infringed upon for any reason. The Sixth Amendment does not say ” only white guys like me.” The Sixth Amendment has no race, and applies equally to all Americans, whether you’re African American, Native American, Caucasian, Hispanic, etc and a Judge that doesn’t understand this basic Constitutional provisions afforded to all Americans must be removed from office.
In my opinion, King County Superior Court Judge Douglas North must resign without collecting a single welfare check from the taxpayers of Washington State. Washington residents taxpayer monies should not be spent to inflate a racist Judge.
Judge Douglas North plead guilty for making racist comments by Washington State’s Judicial Ethics Commission. A copy of the complaint is provided below.
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