Tony Mauro Gets Results!

Following up on this post, a West Virginia state supreme court justice has, on further consideration, reversed himself and decided to recuse in a case, citing Tony Mauro’s earlier post on the case. (Original story: “A West Virginia Supreme Court justice has refused to take himself out of a case involving the state cap on non-economic damages, even though he pledged during his election campaign that he would never vote to overturn the law imposing the cap.”). And the justice is not happy about the power of the blogosphere, which he says forced him to recuse in this case:

    “Upon further reflection, I am disqualifying myself from the above case. I strongly believe there is absolutely no legal basis for my disqualification. See Republican Party of Minnesota v. White, 536 U.S. 765 (2002). However, it appears to me that the lawyers who moved to disqualify me are attempting to create a ‘firestorm’ by assaulting the integrity and impartiality of West Virginia’s Supreme Court.
    “I promptly sent my disqualification response to the lawyers on September 23, 2010. The next day my response appeared in a Washington internet blog. (See copy attached.) How did a blog so quickly get my disqualification memorandum which was sent only to the lawyers in the case? Why is it newsworthy that a West Virginia judge previously exercised his right of Freedom of Speech?
    “The blog did not have the decency to publish my First Amendment rationale as authorized by Republican Party of Minnesota v. White, or quote the legal rationale from White set out in my memorandum.
    “I could care less if the blogs or press crucify me personally. However, I believe the lawyers are pulling the press’s strings to place our Court in an unfavorable light. A lot of hard work has been accomplished to keep the Court out of the limelight since I took office on January 1, 2009. I don’t want our Court to be publicly maligned by those with a ‘win-at-all-cost’ mentality. I disqualify myself from this case.”
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