Pubdate: Sun, 15 Dec 2002 Source: Traverse City Record-Eagle (MI) Copyright: 2002 The Traverse City Record-Eagle Contact: http://www.record-eagle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1336 Author: Patrick Sullivan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/judge+Gilbert GILBERT SCHEDULED TO RETURN MONDAY Judge Will Begin With Civil Cases, Then Criminal Cases Except Drunken Driving And Marijuana TRAVERSE CITY - When District Judge Thomas Gilbert returns to work Monday morning - after a nearly six-week absence prompted by revelations that he smoked marijuana - he'll be returning to a much different court. In his first week back, he will hear only civil cases such as small claims and landlord-tenant disputes. Those cases represent about 15 percent of the court's docket and are generally less time-consuming than criminal cases. Gilbert is scheduled to take a two-week vacation after his first week back. If he takes that vacation, he also will hear certain criminal cases, except drunken driving and marijuana cases, when he returns in January. Gilbert, who is one of three judges in the 86th District Court, has spent 28 days in rehabilitation for substance abuse. He went on voluntary leave on Nov. 6 after he was spotted taking two puffs from a marijuana cigarette at a Rolling Stones concert in October, a lapse in judgment he blamed on alcohol abuse. Since then, the board of governors for the bar association that represents the district, which includes Grand Traverse, Leelanau and Antrim counties, has called for his resignation. Although some attorneys have come forward to support him, the Antrim County Board of Commissioners last week joined the call for Gilbert to resign. More likely than not, Gilbert will have to preside over cases involving attorneys who have publicly questioned his integrity and called for his resignation. Thomas Byerley, ethics counsel for the State Bar of Michigan, said the lawyers who have criticized Gilbert should have no problem practicing before him. "The ethical key is whether or not the judge feels a bias for or against any party," Byerley said. Byerley said merely calling for a judge's resignation shouldn't rise to an issue that would create a problem in the courtroom. "Everyone has the right to express their opinion on an issue like that," he said. If an attorney or a litigant thinks they can't get a fair hearing before Gilbert, Chief District Judge Michael Haley said the court is willing to listen to motions asking for Gilbert's removal from a case. Byerley said those motions would be ruled on first by Gilbert, then Haley, and finally, if the parties remained unsatisfied, by a circuit judge. Attorney Paul Jarboe, chairman of the district court judicial liaison committee and a bar association board of governors member who called for Gilbert's resignation, agreed. Jarboe said he believes attorneys who have publicly condemned Gilbert should be able to expect fairness in Gilbert's court. "I would hope that not only the lawyer, but Judge Gilbert himself will be prepared to separate his official duties from the public positions that members of the bar have taken about whether he should remain in office," Jarboe said. "There's a separation between the position that he holds and his individual actions," he continued. "I would suspect all lawyers would still have respect for the position that he holds." Haley said the restrictions placed on Gilbert's docket will be indefinite. He said the court has worked with the State Court Administrative Office to prepare for Gilbert' return. Marcia McBrien, spokesperson for the State Court Administrative Office, said Gilbert's restrictions will be indefinite until her office receives more information about Gilbert's participation in substance abuse rehabilitation and recommendations about future treatment and counseling. McBrien said she couldn't say what could prompt approval for Gilbert to preside over drunken driving and marijuana cases. "As you can imagine in a case like this, it's very fact-specific and each situation like this has to be judged on its own merits," she said. "Whatever information he gives to the State Court Administrator will be assessed." Haley does not anticipate the restrictions placed on Gilbert will create a backlog of cases because Haley already handles most of the court's drunken driving cases. Most of those cases are handled in Haley's "drug court," a diversion program for substance abuse offenders. Retired Judge James McCormick, who returned to the court to help prevent a log jam of cases that could have resulted from Gilbert's extended leave, finished a stint as a visiting judge at the court the first week of December. Haley said he doesn't anticipate that McCormick will be needed in the future, even though Gilbert is scheduled to take a two-week vacation shortly after his return. Haley said Gilbert's docket for that period was cleared much earlier in the year so Gilbert's absence won't disrupt the court's docket. But Haley said he is not certain Gilbert will take a vacation. "He may decide when he gets back to not take the vacation," Haley said. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk