Pubdate: Sun, 8 Jun 2003 Source: Traverse City Record-Eagle (MI) Copyright: 2003 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'S FATE UP TO SUPREME COURT Replacement Tapped In Case Of Suspension TRAVERSE CITY - Court officials are tight-lipped about what punishment could be meted out to Judge Thomas Gilbert whose duties were restricted last year after he admitted he smoked marijuana. But District Judge Michael Haley said a replacement, retired District Judge James McCormick, has been lined up in the event that Gilbert is suspended some time this summer. Haley said he has learned what sanction the Judicial Tenure Commission has recommended to the state Supreme Court for approval, but he said he could not say what it is because of court rules. Gilbert, in a separate interview, said he is aware the Supreme Court is considering his case but he said he does not know what punishment has been recommended. Gilbert was indefinitely barred from sentencing drunken driving and marijuana defendants after he admitted to smoking marijuana at a Detroit rock concert in October. After the incident became known, Gilbert took a leave of absence to attend a four-week rehabilitation for alcohol abuse. Haley said Gilbert would likely resume hearing all criminal cases once the Supreme Court has sanctioned the judge or otherwise resolves the case. Last week, the Judicial Tenure Commission released its annual report that described the cases it resolved in 2002. Because Gilbert's case is still pending, there is no mention of it in the report. In fact, court rules bar any officials from the commission or the Supreme Court from discussing Gilbert's case or even acknowledging that a case is pending. The tenure commission, the state's constitutionally established watchdog of judges, follows a lengthy and complicated process when it reviews a complaint against a judge. Last year, the commission closed 627 grievances against state judges. Of those, according to the commission's report, a substantial number were not considered because they dealt with allegations of legal error, which are the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals, or they were complaints against federal judges, who do not fall under the commission's jurisdiction. In 594 of the 627 cases, the commission did not find evidence of misconduct by a state judge and the cases were closed. In 2002, the court issued formal complaints against four judges. The misconduct ranged from making abusive comments to litigants to a judge who failed to perform his duties. The commission also privately cautioned or admonished 15 judges for lesser misconduct, including excessive delays in the performance of their duties, acting unprofessionally, or for having inappropriate contact with litigants from one side of a case without the presence of the opposing side. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk