Judicial Misconduct
This ranges from incompetence and neglect to judicial tyranny.
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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
- 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.