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Convicted Ex-NY Judge Lands Job at Women's Store
By Daniel Wise
New York Lawyer
New York Law Journal
October 18, 2004
Former Brooklyn Justice Victor I. Barron, who pleaded guilty to
bribery in 2002, is working in a women's clothing shop in Brooklyn
as part of a work-release program.
Mr. Barron's lawyer, Barry Kamins of Flamhaft, Levy, Kamins &
Haft, said that as a disbarred attorney convicted of bribery, the
ex-judge was unable to find work in the financial or legal fields.
Mr. Barron was transferred last month to a prison in Harlem after
serving 23 months of his 3-to-9 year sentence at the Clinton
Correctional Facility. He is eligible for parole next October.
Bag-boy Barron
By Denise Buffa
New York Post
October 16, 2004
Disgraced former Judge Victor Barron
has fallen from the courtroom to the stock room in his new job at
a woman's clothing store in Brooklyn.
Barron, who earned $113,000 a year
as a Brooklyn State Supreme Court justice, now makes $5.15 an hour
in a work-release job, state prison spokesman Jim Flateau said.
Barron served 23 months of a
three-to-nine-year bribery sentence at the upstate Clinton
Correctional Facility before being transferred thanks to good
behavior to a halfway house in upper Manhattan last month.
Now he splits his time between the
halfway house, where he sleeps five nights a week, and Esti's, a
Coney Island Avenue retail clothing shop catering to Orthodox Jewish
women.
When he arrives for work on the B
train each morning, it's a grim homecoming for the 63-year-old
Barron, who was raised in Sheepshead Bay.
"Growing up in middle-class Brooklyn
helps me through this," he said.
Barron became the first sitting
judge in 15 years to be arrested when he was caught on tape taking
an $18,000 bribe from a lawyer.
Under a plea deal, Barron was
sentenced to three to nine years. But he was allowed to keep his
$97,000-a-year pension after resigning his judgeship.
Barron never explained why he took
the bribe, the alleged down payment on $115,000 he had demanded to
approve a personal-injury settlement.
District Attorney Charles Hynes said
after Barron's sentencing that the only reason for "his silence is
plain old-fashioned greed."
Barron was eligible to start
applying for work-release last October but was turned down twice.
"He hadn't spent enough time in
prison," Flateau said.
But, because of good behavior, and
since his crime was nonviolent, state correction authorities
approved the third request, in accordance with state law, officials
said.
On Sept. 1, he was transferred to
the halfway house, Edgecombe Correctional Facility, where he began a
two-week orientation before looking for a job for the first time in
decades.
Barron once had a special parking
spot reserved for him outside Brooklyn Supreme Court but now he
leaves the halfway house by 7:15 a.m. each weekday morning to reach
the West 145th Street subway station and the long ride to the store.
Instead of a judge's workload, he
puts in a 9:30 a.m.-to-5:30 p.m. shift each weekday.
He is registered with prison
officials as being employed as a stock boy. The store's owner,
Esther Burton, could not be reached for comment.
Barron gets to spend the weekend
with his wife at their Sheepshead Bay apartment and returns to the
halfway house on Sunday nights.
He can be released from the work
program as early as April and begin his parole, authorities said.
Stitch in Time
Disrobed Judge Finishing Sentence at Dress Store
By Nancie L. Katz
Daily News Staff Writer
October 16, 2004

Victor Barron, a disrobed former
judge, is no longer dressing down attorneys - he's working with
dresses.
After doing two years' hard time for
bribery, the disgraced silver-haired ex-jurist is living at a
halfway house in Harlem and commuting to Midwood,
Brooklyn,
to work at Esti's, a high-end apparel
After 2 years' hard time for seek-
retailer.
ing.
bribe, ex-judge Victor
Barron's doing work-release
The owner,
old friend Esther Burton, hired him tbree
at Brooklyn shop Esti's.
weeks ago as part
of his work-release
program. She refused to say
yesterday what his job entails.
The judge's bribe-soliciting in
early 2001 triggered a series of probes by Brooklyn District
Attorney Charles Hynes and the state Commission on Judicial Conduct
into Brooklyn courthouse corruption. The investigations have led to
charges of wrongdoing against at least a dozen borough judges.
Last year, Justice Gerald Garson was
indicted for bribery and suspended. Justice Reynold Mason was
knocked off the bench. And the commission could seek the removal of
Garson's wife, Civil Judge Robin Garson, his cousin, Justice Michael
Garson, and Surrogate Michael Feinberg as part of a probe of ethical
violations.
Despite his prison time, Barron -
wearing a plaid jacket and white shirt yesterday - defended his
record on the bench. Lawyers, he said, sang his praises.
"In my last four years, I settled
more cases than any other judge on the bench," he bragged while
walking in the rain to the subway. Correction Department regulations
relegate him to public transportation. "I conferenced 20 to 30 cases
a day."
Barron refused to address the 2000
case in which he told an attorney he would refuse to approve a $4.9
million settlement unless he got $250,000 of the take.
The judge, who can still collect his
$97,000-a-year state pension despite the conviction, was transferred
Sept. 1 from a state prison to the halfway house, where he had six
weeks to find a job. Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) was all set to
hire him, but correction officials killed the idea.
Instead, Barron landed the post at
Esti's - an elegant women's store with designer labels such as
Valentino, Robert Clergerie and Rena Lange, high-end wedding dresses
and dress jackets selling for $2,117 - in the neighborhood where he
grew up.
Chomping pizza and sipping Arizona
Iced Tea at Mama Meya's Pizzeria on Kings Highway before heading
back to Harlem, Barron refused to discuss his work-release program.
He could get paroled as early as April.
"Everybody's been very nice" at
Esti's, he said, adding he wasn't sure what would follow his
ill-fated legal career.
"I have some ideas," he said.
Jailed Ex-Judge Gets Furlough
By Nancie L.
Katz and Robert Gearty
New York Daily News
September 5, 2004
Disgraced
Brooklyn judge Victor Barron has been moved from an
upstate prison to a minimum-security facility in
Washington Heights.
Barron drew
a three- to nine-year prison sentence in October
2002 after he was caught on tape taking an $18,000
bribe from a lawyer.
He was
transferred Wednesday to a work-release program at
the Edgecombe Correctional Facility in upper
Manhattan.
Barron, who
will mark his 64th birthday Tuesday, served 23
months of his sentence at the Clinton Correctional
Center in upstate New York.
"He's
gratified that he's been accepted for a work-release
program," said his attorney, Barry Kamins.
Barron has
six weeks to find a job. Once he finds work, he'll
be allowed to leave Edgecombe for 14 hours each day,
Monday to Friday. He'll spend nights and weekends at
the state facility until his parole date, Oct. 27,
2005. Barron was a state Supreme Court justice for
14 years before his downfall in 2002.
He was
charged with demanding $250,000 from negligence
lawyer Gary Bergenholz as his price for signing off
on a $4.9 million settlement in the case of child
injured in a car accident.
The judge
chopped his demand to $115,000, but by then
Bergenholz had reported the shakedown to Brooklyn
District Attorney Charles Hynes.
Barron
resigned after pleading guilty in a deal that
allowed him to keep his $97,000 annual pension.
$1M PEN'SION
By Kati Cornell Smith
New York Post
October 29, 2002
A disgraced former judge yesterday
was sentenced to three to nine years in prison - where he could
collect close to $1 million from his taxpayer-paid pension while he
serves time on bribery charges. ....
"You have reduced the public's
confidence in the judiciary without a doubt. You've made almost a
joke out of Kings County, and that's terrible," Colabella said. "I
take it as a designed, willful act . . . an act that makes me, as a
judge, squirm."
Barron stopped short of explaining
why he demanded $115,000 from lawyer Gary Berenholtz in June 2001 in
exchange for his stamp of approval on a $4.9 million personal-injury
settlement.
But prior to sentencing, defense
attorney Barry Kamins submitted confidential medical and
psychological reports to show Barron is suffering from Pick's
disease, a form of dementia that causes the personality to change
and social skills to deteriorate.
Announcing plans to appeal the
sentence, Kamins added outside of court that Barron's crime was
"related" to his illness.
"The reason is not greed," the
defense lawyer said.
Incriminating wiretap recordings
paint a different picture, according to Colabella.
"I listened to it over and over
again . . . and I got the distinct feeling Mr. Barron that this was
not a Pick's disease or an Alzheimer's moment," the judge said.
Colabella also hammered Berenholtz
for violating disciplinary rules by waiting six months to report
Barron's bribe demands.
The lawyer helped Brooklyn DA
Charles Hynes nail Barron by wearing a wire when he delivered an
$18,000 cash-down payment at a meeting in the judge's robbing room
this January.
Barron came to court dressed in an
elegant pinstriped suit, and managed to conceal any uneasiness until
court officers snapped on the handcuffs. Barron's wife, Joy, watched
as cops led him out of the Brooklyn courtroom to begin serving his
sentence immediately.
"It will be the largest sentence
ever served by a judge, either in state or federal court, in this
state," said Hynes, who personally prosecuted the case.
"I would have been more satisfied if
he'd given a reason. The only reason because of his silence is plain
old-fashioned greed."
B'klyn Judge
Arrested
Jurist Charged with
Taking 250g Bribe to Fix Case
By NANCIE L. KATZ
Daily News Staff Writer
From: News and Views
January 23, 2002
Veteran Brooklyn judge was charged
with bribery yesterday after allegedly taking as much as $250,000
from a lawyer to fix a case, according to law enforcement
authorities.
State Supreme Court Justice Victor
Barron was arrested one block from his Marine Park home shortly
after 6 a.m. by investigators from the office of Brooklyn District
Attorney Charles Hynes.
Barron, 60, was suspended with
pay by the state Court of Appeals as prosecutors began combing
through other cases handled by the judge, who presided over several
thousand pending civil cases.
The arrest was the first of a
sitting state Supreme Court justice in the city since 1987,
according to the state Commission on Judicial Conduct.
But it is the latest of a spate of
corruption allegations involving the judiciary in Brooklyn, where
judges have been tied to a patronage scandal and other acts of
alleged wrongdoing.
Released Without Bail
A somber-looking Barron entered a
not guilty plea at his arraignment last night before Brooklyn
Criminal Court Judge Martin Karopkin, who released him without bail.
If convicted, he faces up to 15 years behind bars.
Afterward, Barron, who earns
$113,000 a year, refused to discuss the case. His defense lawyer,
Barry Kamins, also declined to comment.
At the arraignment, prosecutor
Michael Vecchione filed a criminal complaint that said Barron had
demanded the bribe on consecutive days last June inside the state
courthouse at 15 Willoughby St. In return, he promised to issue an
order relating to a pending civil case, which sources said involved
a seven-figure settlement.
Law enforcement sources said the
bribe demand was made to a personal injury lawyer who later reported
the incident to authorities. The lawyer, who was not identified, was
fitted with a wire and recorded a meeting last Friday in the judge's
chambers when the "six-figure" bribe was paid, the sources said.
In the complaint, Hynes' chief
investigator, George Terra, said that after taking the payment,
Barron blurted: "The money was worth it to have the civil matter
resolved." Hynes' office declined to identify the personal injury
lawyer or describe the nature of the civil case. The complaint did
not specify the amount of the bribe except to say it was more than
$10,000.
David Bookstaver, a spokesman for
the state Office of Court Administration, announced the judge's
suspension, but declined to comment further. After arresting Barron,
investigators went to the judge's home, a red brick two-family house
on E. 36th St., to conduct a search.
"They came in and went over my home
with a fine-toothed comb. They found nothing," said Barron's wife
Joy, 71, as she stood red-eyed at her front door. "They went over
the car, over everything they could go over. Nothing."
"It never happened, it's not true,"
she said of the bribe allegation. "He has more integrity than any 10
people, and anybody that knows him knows that."
Could Face Removal
Barron, a Democrat, was named a
Civil Court judge in 1987 and elected to Supreme Court in 1999. In
recent years, he has presided over a court part that reviews all
noncity civil cases, trying to settle them before sending them out
for trial.
Even if acquitted, Barron could
still face removal by the Commission on Judicial Conduct.
The Brooklyn legal community seemed
shock by the news of his arrest. "He's a fine judge. I am
flabbergasted," said Edward Reich, a lawyer for 40 years who said he
knows Barron well. "He has always been held in the highest esteem.
The guy is squeaky clean."
Say Judge Pushed For
a Cut
By NANCIE L. KATZ
Daily News Staff Writer
January 24, 2002
Brooklyn judge who allegedly
squeezed a bribe out of a multimillion-dollar personal injury
settlement lucked into a crime of opportunity, authorities said
yesterday.
After Dollar Rental Car reached an
out-of-court agreement to pay $4.9 million to the family of a infant
who suffered "egregious injuries" in an auto accident, the case was
randomly assigned to state Supreme Court Justice Victor Barron for
him to review.
Barron, 60, who is expected to be
indicted today on bribery charges for allegedly accepting $18,000
inside the Willoughby St. courthouse from the family's lawyer,
apparently had his eyes on a bigger prize.
Law enforcement sources say the
payment represented the first installment on a $125,000 payoff
Barron set as his price for approving the settlement. Under state
law, a judge must approve any settlement involving injury to a child
or incapacitated person.
Barron, a judge since 1987, was
arrested Tuesday near his home in Marine Park. He pleaded not guilty
and was immediately suspended. He faces up to 15 years in prison if
convicted.
Judge Signed
The sources said Barron first
demanded a payoff on June 11 when he told the lawyer he wanted a
$250,000 cut from the lawyer's legal fee, which was set at one-third
of the $4.9 million settlement.
To get the judge's signature, the
lawyer, who has not been identified, agreed to pay $125,000, the
sources said. The judge signed the order and repeated his request
for the money the next day.
Between June and January, the lawyer
"hoped it would go away," said a law enforcement official. When
Barron summoned the lawyer back in early January, the lawyer
reported the situation to District Attorney Charles Hynes.
The charges have mystified the
Brooklyn legal community, which described Barron as hardworking.
Neighbors say the judge and his wife live modestly.
But another law enforcement source
said investigators are pouring over Barron's other cases. "Everyone
thinks, if he was so comfortable in doing this right in his
chambers, he might have done it a million times," the source said.
Hoped Bribe
Bid Was Joke
Lawyer Tried to Ignore Judge's
250g Demand, Da Says
By ROBERT GEARTY
and NANCIE L. KATZ
Daily News Staff Writers
January 25, 2002
Attorney Gary Berenholtz first
thought the judge's demand for a six-figure payoff was all a big
joke. But, authorities said, when state Supreme Court Justice Victor
Barron threatened to ruin his career and derail his client's
multimillion-dollar personal injury settlement, the lawyer knew the
Brooklyn judge meant business.
That's when Berenholtz, 54, went to
authorities and donned a recording device for a meeting with Barron
in which he handed the judge $18,000 in cash as the first
installment on a $115,000 bribe. Yesterday, Brooklyn District
Attorney Charles Hynes announced that a grand jury had charged
Barron, 60, with bribe receiving in a one-count indictment that
identified Berenholtz as the informant who helped prosecutors nab
the judge.
Berenholtz declined comment on the
case yesterday, saying it would be inappropriate for him to speak
publicly. But his law partners made it clear the 54-year-old
Manhattan lawyer did "the right thing." "It took a lot of guts,"
said partner Robert Sharron. For months, Berenholtz and his
colleagues tried to laugh off Barron's payoff demands.
It had seemed like a routine case. A
car rental company agreed last year to pay $4.9 million to a family
hurt in a crash, including an infant girl who was blinded and
suffered permanent brain damage.
But Hynes said Barron saw it as an
opportunity to line his pockets. He said the judge summoned
Berenholtz to the courthouse at 15 Willoughby St. on June 11 and
took the lawyer on a sidewalk stroll. Hynes said Barron told
Berenholtz he was "troubled" by the fact that the lawyer had once
represented both the infant and her mother a potential conflict
because the infant technically could have sued her mother as the
other driver. The judge said he might make the conflict an issue,
but could forget it and approve the settlement if he received a
$250,000 cut from Berenholtz's legal fee.
"We took it as a lark," said Joseph
Frost, another partner. "I said, 'Forget about it. It's not going to
happen.'" Sharron said: "When I first heard, I thought it has to be
a joke." He said Berenholtz "felt sick" over the whole thing.
'Take It or Leave It'
In shock, Berenholtz returned the
next day, saying he could not pay that much, Hynes said. Hynes said
the judge told Berenholtz, "$115,000 cash. Take it or leave it." The
DA continued, "The lawyer said, 'Sign the order.'" Hynes said
Berenholtz didn't pay, hoping the whole thing would just go away. He
heard nothing until Jan. 4, when Barron summoned him to court.
That's when Berenholtz went to the
district attorney. At a meeting Jan. 18, the lawyer handed Barron an
envelope with 180 "prerecorded" $100 bills in a transaction that was
monitored by authorities. "I don't want to make any more telephone
calls to get you over here to make these payments," Hynes quoted
Barron as growling to Berenholtz.
Barron pleaded not guilty at his
Criminal Court arraignment on Tuesday. He was immediately suspended
from the bench by court officials. Yesterday, his attorney Barry
Kamis said, "Judge Barron has been a respected member of the
judiciary for the past 14 years. We look forward to an opportunity
to litigate the charges in court."
Judge Pleads
Not Guilty
Wiretap Reveals Shocking Details
In B'klyn Bribery Case
By NANCIE L. KATZ
Daily News Staff Writer
February 9, 2002
Moments after allegedly taking an
$18,000 bribe, Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Victor Barron
proclaimed that he deserved the money, saying, "I put my neck on the
line."
The outburst of bravado as well
as other damning statements were recorded on audiotape Jan. 18,
when Barron met in his locked chambers with lawyer Gary Berenholtz,
who was wearing a wire.
In an exchange punctuated by nervous
laughter, the pair joke about a malpractice case pending before
Barron. Then the lawyer explains to Barron, "Look, this is not easy
... I couldn't take [out] a lot of money at once, you understand
that?"
"Shh, shh," Barron responded,
according to a transcript of the tape released by the Brooklyn
district attorney's office yesterday. "What I cared about was that
... I don't ever want to call you. You understand?"
Berenholtz then handed the judge
$18,000 180 marked $100 bills, according to the transcript.
"You know it's ... done. Done.
Whatever," Barron said.
The judge, who was suspended from
the bench Jan. 22, the day of his arrest, pleaded not guilty
yesterday to a charge of bribery in Brooklyn Supreme Court.
He faces up to 15 years in prison if
convicted.
Prosecutors accuse Barron of
demanding $250,000 from Berenholtz in exchange for signing off on a
$4.9 million payout to settle a lawsuit.
The suit stemmed from an accident
that left a baby severely brain-damaged. By law, a judge had to
approve the settlement because it involved an infant.
On June 12, Barron lowered his
demands and reached a deal with Berenholtz, who agreed to pay him
$115,000, prosecutors said.
'I Look Like an Idiot'
But Berenholtz did nothing until the
judge summoned him to his chambers at 15 Willoughby St. last month,
prosecutors charged. "I just want to make sure I'm protected,"
Berenholtz sighed to Barron, according to the transcript.
"Excuse me, not a lot more difficult
than if there was no fee," Barron retorted. "I'm the one who looks
like an asshole on every decision, on every decision, every order.
...
"I put my neck on the line. I look
like an idiot, all right?"
After warning Berenholtz he could
have made trouble over a potential conflict of interest in the
settlement he signed, Barron warned the lawyer not to talk to
anyone.
"I'm not going to say anything to
anybody. What, are you crazy?" Berenholtz said.
But the lawyer already has turned to
Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes, who insisted yesterday
that he would prosecute the case himself his first in 14 years.
Four Judges Investigated
The plea and details of Hynes' sting
operation came a day after state officials announced the New York's
third highest-ranking judge was taking over the scandal-plagued
Brooklyn courts, where at least four judges are under scrutiny for
alleged wrongdoing.
Brooklyn's chief judge, Michael
Pesce, was reassigned to an appellate court.
Westchester County Supreme Court
Justice Nicholas Colabella presided over Barron's arraignment in a
jittery courtroom packed with Brooklyn's legal elite.
Hynes didn't request bail, accepting
defense lawyer Barry Kamins' assertions that Barron, 60, was not a
flight risk and had "devoted his life to public service."
Hynes revealed that prosecutors had
recovered the $18,000 that disappeared with Barron the weekend after
the Jan. 18 meeting.
He declined to comment when asked
how investigators had lost and recovered the money, then denied that
the cash was ever missing.
The Conversation
Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice
Victor Barron was indicted on charges of taking an $18,000 bribe
from lawyer Gary Berenholtz. Here is a partial transcript, released
by the Brooklyn district attorney's office, of their encounter Jan.
18, when the bribe allegedly took place:
Berenholtz: "... This is not easy,
you know. I couldn't take [out] a lot of money at once, you
understand that?"
Barron: "Shh, shh, shh. ... I don't
ever want to call you. ... You understand? ... You said you'd come.
You don't come for two weeks."
Berenholtz: "No, no. I tried the end
of last week. You weren't around and then I ..."
Barron: "Listen, I understand your
problem. That goes without saying."
Berenholtz: "It's not, it's not
easy. I brought 18 [thousand dollars] today. ... Robert [Sharron,
Berenholtz's partner] took nine and I took nine and here it is."
The audiotape then picks up the
sound of paper being transferred.
Barron: "... Done, done. Whatever."
Berenholtz: And I could ... I'll see
if I can come next week again if I can."
Barron: "All right."
Berenholtz: "Okay. (sigh, laughs).
You know it's a very difficult thing. I just want to make sure I'm
protected."
Barron: "Gary, excuse me. Not a lot
more difficult than if there was no fee. ... I'm the one who looks
like an asshole on every decision, on every decision, every order
and, and, and and that's, that's that's ... I put my neck on the
line. I look like an idiot, all right?"
Berenholtz: "All right, all right.
Take it easy."
A little later in the conversation
Barron: "Now, listen to me. One
thing I'll say. I know you understand, I know. ... You and Sharron
is one thing. God forbid, not to mention [any of this] to him, you
understand that?"
Berenholtz: "I'm not going to say
anything to anybody. What, are you crazy?" (laughing)
Barron: "All right. Goodbye."
Berenholtz: "Okay. Have a good one."
Berenholtz: "Okay. Have a good one."
Judge: We'll Fix
Courts
By JOE MAHONEY
Daily News Albany Bureau Chief
February 26, 2002
ALBANY A top state judge vowed
yesterday to do "whatever needs to be done" to fix the
scandal-plagued Brooklyn courts.
Judge Jonathan Lippman promised
"appropriate changes" but stopped short of saying precisely what
action he would take saying he would not "prejudge" the judges
facing charges of
wrongdoing or misconduct.
"We recognize the public has to have
respect and confidence in what we do," Lippman, the state's top
administrative judge, told reporters after appearing before a
legislative panel.
Lippman, who this month named his
deputy, Ann Pfau, to oversee a shakeup of Brooklyn Supreme Court,
said the move was "not the usual appointment," but a necessary
response to a diminished public confidence in the judicial system.
"We, of all people, don't prejudge
anybody, but we don't close our eyes that there have been questions
raised," Lippman said. "Whatever needs to be done will be done."
Payoff Indictment
Eight Brooklyn judges are facing
allegations of wrongdoing or misconduct. Last month, Judge Victor
Barron was indicted on charges he demanded $115,000 in exchange for
signing off on a civil lawsuit settlement.
The Daily News reported Feb. 7 that
Lippman yanked top Brooklyn Judge Michael Pesce for allegedly
failing to report the allegations against Barron. The next day,
Lippman announced Pfau's appointment.
Pfau said her mission is a crucial
one because "what happens in one court impacts on every court in the
state. ... No matter where there is a perception [of wrongdoing] we
deal with it assertively and energetically. This is the place the
people have to go for justice."
Earlier yesterday, Lippman urged a
legislative panel examining Gov. Pataki's proposed budget to
increase fees paid to lawyers who represent the poor in Family
Court.
Noting that some Manhattan lawyers
refuse cases because of the low pay, Lippman said the $40-
per-hour fee for incourt work should
be raised to $75 an hour. "This whole system is going down the
tubes" because of the low pay, he said.
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