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Judge Dread
By Brad Hamilton
New York Post
December 19, 2004
EXCLUSIVE - He could be the
worst judge in the state.
At least that's what some
people in Columbia County are saying about Paul Czajka, a local
jurist under fire for allegedly making outrageous rulings, including
giving custody to an abusive mom who "circumcised" her boy with a
lit cigarette.
The boy's father and at
least six other litigants filed complaints about Czajka to the
state's court watchdog, casting him as a vindictive tyrant who's
sided with bad parents to favor lawyers he once worked with when he
was the district attorney or in private practice.
The judge also has been hit
with a federal civil suit in Manhattan by Wall Street financial
consultant John Chase, who claims Czajka ruled for his ex-wife
Kristin despite her facing bank fraud charges.
"He's the most
complained-about judge we've ever seen," said George Courtney, who
heads the Columbia County chapter of the statewide Fathers' Rights
Association.
But it's not just men he's
outraged.
Three complaints are by
women, including Michelle Mayer, a battered wife and mother of four
who says Czajka illegally removed her kids because she exposed them
to beatings she suffered by her ex-husband, though he was arrested
when she called the cops.
But no action has been
taken against Czajka (pronounced ch-EYE-kah), 50, a politically
connected Republican who narrowly won re-election to a 10-year term
despite being ripped by one of the most respected lawyers in the
state.
Complaints to the state's
Commission on Judicial Conduct allege:
* The judge failed to
protect a 13-year-old boy who's allegedly endured years of abuse,
including the nightmarish circumcision, a scalding with hot water on
his side and broken ribs.
The boy also accidentally
severed his fingertips when his mother allowed him to play with a
chainsaw, according to a complaint by the father, carpenter John
Calkins, 32, who's been battling for custody of the kid.
Calkins claims the mother
once informed him that her family knew the judge.
* Czajka has in two cases
jailed fathers in custody fights, one who served time for violating
a court order by discussing custody with his wife after an accident
in which she got drunk and smashed into a telephone pole, injuring
one of her daughters.
* Czajka engaged in a
"vendetta" against another father, plumbing contractor George
Ihlenburg, who did work at the judge's home and believes he was
targeted because Czajka wasn't happy with the job, his complaint
says.
* Czajka railroaded an
elderly husband, Herbert Stickles, 69, into a sex-abuse conviction
after false charges were brought against the man, by allowing his
lawyer to not present a defense, according to his wife, Pat.
She claims the case was
retribution for her suing the county after being sickened by the
social-services building where she worked in Hudson, an office put
up over an old oil-storage facility.
A court observer, John
Dunne, said of the jurist: "The criticism is he's often insensitive
to the needs of women and children."
Dunne is the former head of
the state senate's judiciary committee and now part of a blue-ribbon
panel to restore public confidence in how New York judges are
elected.
He served as a juror in a
case before Czajka — though it wasn't a family matter — and told The
Post he came away with an "unfavorable" opinion of him, though he
wouldn't elaborate.
So Dunne crossed party
lines to back challenger Pam Joern, who slammed Czajka — who handles
criminal, family and surrogate cases — claiming he's too quick to
remove kids from their parents.
Figures show that rural
Columbia County has the highest number of children in foster care
per capita in the state: 4 per 1,000 — the statewide average is 2.5.
"The problem is he's an
attractive man and kind of charming, but he gets on the bench and
he's destructive," said Joern, a 54-year-old lawyer. "He's an
arrogant, narcissistic, nasty person. He's got a huge chip on his
shoulder."
Said Philip Mann, an
advocate who encouraged the litigants to tell their stories, "Chief
Judge Judith Kaye and Gov. Pataki were both sent these complaints,
and I believe it was their acquiescence that empowered Judge Czajka."
The CJC has never publicly
censured Czajka and dismissed the Mayer and Ihlenburg complaints.
Czajka, saying ethics
prevented him from discussing cases, said, "There has never been a
case before me where a parent has alleged to have burned a child's
penis."
Please go to:
www.petitiononline.com/czajka
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