Pubdate: Thu, 17 Aug 2000 Source: Detroit Free Press (MI) Copyright: 2000 Detroit Free Press Contact: http://www.freep.com/ Forum: http://www.freep.com/webx/cgi-bin/WebX Author: L. L. Brasier, Free Press staff writer ACTION AGAINST DRUG JUDGE IS TOUGH ON COURT Warshawsky Penalty Means Heavy Caseload The Oakland County Circuit Court, reeling from allegations a drug judge may have rigged cases in favor of the prosecution, is bracing for what could be a massive workload left by the suspended judge and the appeals expected to be filed in his wake. Chief Judge Barry Howard said he and 16 fellow circuit court judges are considering reassigning the most pressing cases -- involving defendants who have been convicted and are in jail -- to sitting judges handling family matters, such as divorce and custody. There are four such judges on the circuit court bench and two on the probate bench. Howard also ordered Wednesday that all jury deliberation rooms in the courthouse be soundproofed, because one of the allegations involves Judge Meyer Warshawsky eavesdropping on jury deliberations in a drug trial, then advising the prosecutor. At the same time, Howard said Wednesday he expected attorneys representing hundreds of cases handled by Warshawsky, suspended from the bench last week, to ask for reviews and in some cases new trials. "There is the perception out there that in this courtroom, justice may not have been done," said Howard, who is acting as drug judge temporarily. "Which is not to say we will retry hundreds of cases. It may be a hundred, it may be a couple, but we're going to look at each case and decide." The county is expected to begin the soundproofing within weeks. There was no cost estimate available Wednesday. As Howard was working on the fallout of Warshawsky's suspension, Michigan State Police investigators were interviewing prosecutors and other witnesses and were expected to continue their interviews today. The investigation was prompted by Warshawsky's law clerk, who reported to the chief judge last week that Warshawsky tried to help Assistant Prosecutor Beth Hand gain convictions in six drug cases before him. Besides the eavesdroping, the allegations included that he coached prosecution witnesses and allowed sequestered witnesses to watch testimony from a monitor in his chamber. Such allegations, if true, could prompt charges of witness tampering and obstruction of justice. Warshawsky, through his attorney, has denied he assisted prosecutors or acted inappropriately. Hand, who joined the Oakland County Prosecutor's Office in 1992 after receiving her law degree from the University of Detroit Mercy, continues to work as a prosecutor and has declined to comment. She has referred questions to her supervisors, who say they are cooperating with the investigation. Court administrators were working Wednesday with county computer experts to compile a list of cases Warshawsky has come in contact with since he was appointed a visiting judge in 1996. The number, which will include trials and pleas, is expected to be several hundred. Warshawsky, as drug judge, handled cases assigned to him by the circuit court bench and sent hundreds of people to jail on sentences ranging from probation to life in prison. The county is searching for somebody to help with the 100-plus cases that were on his docket when he was removed from the bench Aug. 8. Howard said the bench would look for an elected judge, then put a retired visiting judge in that judge's spot. Professor Alan Saltzman, a criminal law expert at U-D Mercy law school, predicted Howard will face a tremendous challenge in sorting out the massive amount of cases and deciding which ones require new trials. New trials, Saltzman said, would not be automatic in all convictions, but a thorough review of each case that came before Warshawsky would be needed. "Everyone is entitled to an impartial judge. Look at it from a defense attorney's point of view," Saltzman said. "Maybe you don't have any evidence there was bias in your particular case, but you say, 'Look, he did it in all these cases, he's biased.' The chief judge is going to have to look at these cases and decide, in his heart, if he was impartial. It is just an amazing situation." Saltzman predicted Warshawsky's sentencings would come under scrutiny, too. "A judge can have a lot of discretion when it comes to sentencing," Saltzman said. "And part of this is going to wash out because some of the people who may have been affected have already done their time." - --- MAP posted-by: John Chase