Judicial Misconduct
This ranges from incompetence and neglect to judicial tyranny.
Cladistic analysis. The following are some forms judicial misconduct can take. They are not exclusive, and instances of misconduct can combine several.
- Exceeding jurisdiction
- Due process violation
- Abuse of discretion
- Bias (usually toward the better connected)
- Criminal conspiracy
- Incompetence
- Dereliction of duty
- Conduct unbecoming (giving a bad appearance)
Documents and activist sites dedicated to the subject
- Family Guardian Fellowship
Law and Government Page, Section 14: Legal and Government Ethics
Corruption, Scams, and Frauds Page, Section 7.4: Government/Judicial Corruption
- Sovereignty Education and Defense Ministry (SEDM)
HOT ISSUES: Dealing with Corrupt Judges (Member Subscriptions)
Litigation Tools Page, Section 1.8: Disciplining Government Officials
Challenging Federal Jurisdiction Course, Form #12.010
Federal Jurisdiction, Form #05.018
How Judges Unconstitutionally Make Law, Litigation Tool #01.009
Logic of Judges, by Jon Roland. Discussion of how judges are logically challenged.
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Judicial Misconduct and Discipline — Testimony of Roger Pilon, Cato Institute.
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Judicial Misconduct — Redress Inc.
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America's Judicial System Lies In Rot — We the People Foundation.
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Judicial Accountability — Victims-of-Law.
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Legal & Judicial Reform Groups — Victims-of-Law.
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Judicial Training Against Pro-Se Litigants — June Wisniewski.
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Fraud and Corruption by State — Emphasis on family law.
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The growing tyranny of the judiciary — Edward Daley, Renew America.
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The Supremacists — Phyllis Schlafly, Spence Publishing.
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