Adam Liptak
Herald Tribune
February 6, 2007
Florida - A commission of the
American Bar Association has recommended that the group weaken its
code of judicial conduct by changing, from a mandatory rule to
nonbinding advice, an instruction to judges to "avoid impropriety
and the appearance of impropriety."
Supporters of the change say disciplining judges for violating a
concept as vague as "the appearance of impropriety" is unfair.
Opponents denounce any retreat from the longstanding and widely
embraced standard, and one critic — Robert H. Tembeckjian, the
administrator of the New York State Commission on Judicial Conduct —
has resigned in protest as an adviser to the A.B.A. commission.
"At a time when the A.B.A. is defending judicial independence from
relentless attack," Mr. Tembeckjian wrote in a resignation letter on
Saturday, "I cannot imagine that either the judiciary or the public
will applaud the A.B.A. for relegating the ‘impropriety and
appearance of impropriety’ standard to a virtually meaningless
phrase."
The change is part of what would be the first comprehensive
revisions to the association’s Model Code of Judicial Conduct since
1990; the revisions now go before the group’s House of Delegates,
which meets in Miami next week, before they can become formal
policy. Individual states often look to the model code as a template
for their own judicial ethics codes, violation of which can lead to
punishment as severe as removal from the bench.
The change was a late-breaking development, coming more than three
years after the commission began a periodic review of the code.
The very first canon of the proposed revisions continues to say that
judges "shall avoid impropriety and the appearance of impropriety."
But recently added language in the introduction to the code says
that while that and other canons provide "important guidance,"
judges cannot be disciplined for violating them. The canons are
followed by rules that are more specific (judges may not, for
instance, use the prestige of their offices for financial
advantage), and the new introduction says that only those rules may
serve as the basis for discipline.
Cynthia Gray, the director of the Center for Judicial Ethics of the
American Judicature Society, a nonpartisan group promoting judicial
independence and integrity, questioned the commission’s strategy.
"To leave it in the language and later say the language doesn’t
count," Ms. Gray said, "is strange and inexplicable to us."
Mark I. Harrison, the chairman of the A.B.A. commission, said the
"appearance of impropriety" standard was vague and added nothing to
the rules prohibiting specific conduct that remain mandatory.
"We think it’s a step forward," Mr. Harrison said of the
commission’s decision. "It is important as a matter of due process
and fairness to make clear what would be the basis for disciplinary
enforcement without ambiguity and without confusion."
Jonathan Lippman, New York’s chief administrative judge, disagreed,
saying the "appearance of impropriety" standard was sensible and
workable. "I don’t think this is nuclear science," he said. "Judges
overwhelmingly approve of that standard as a basis on which to go
about their daily business."
The association has urged judges since 1924 to avoid the appearance
of impropriety, and returned to the subject in 1972 and 1990.
"Every time the A.B.A. addressed this standard, it was
strengthened," Mr. Tembeckjian wrote in his resignation letter.
"Until now."
Victoria Henley, the president of the Association of Judicial
Disciplinary Counsel, whose members hear and consider complaints
against judges, said the recent revisions were unlikely to gain wide
acceptance. "If they basically gut the ‘appearance of impropriety’
standard," Ms. Henley said, "it’s unlikely that the A.B.A. will
continue to be responsible for drafting a model code that will be
used by any state."