Fan-freakin-tastic News
These are the other stories that need to come to light about the judge in Utah who is so fond of abusing her position.
Authorities are investigating whether a controversial Utah judge secretly knocked 10 years off a sex offender’s prison sentence.Third District Judge Leslie Lewis allegedly had an ex parte (one side only) conversation with a defense attorney and subsequently reduced his client’s sentence by 10 years without consulting prosecutors.
“We did an investigation regarding allegations of misconduct,” Salt Lake County District Attorney David Yocom said Monday. “We have filed a complaint against the judge before the [state Judicial Conduct Commission.]”
The complaint claims Lewis asked the defense attorney not to tell prosecutors about her plan to reduce the sentence. It also accuses Lewis of altering the date of the sentencing change.
If the allegations are ruled valid, the Utah Supreme Court could reprimand Lewis or remove her from office.
Oh, the details of the story are even better. Quoting liberally because it’s just that good.
Defense attorney Roger Kraft said it all began with a bad day he had in Lewis’ courtroom on Feb. 10. Kraft was before Lewis for the sentencing of his client, 46-year-old James Robert Scott, who had pleaded guilty to three counts of sodomy on a child.The attorney said he left the courtroom feeling furious over the way Lewis had treated him and his client.
“There’s nothing harder than trying to make a sex offender not look so bad in front of Judge Lewis,” Kraft told The Salt Lake Tribune. “But every argument I made, she argued with me, she interrupted me.”
And when Kraft noted that his client had been molested as a boy, Lewis argued that experience made Scott all the more culpable because he knew how it felt to be abused, Kraft said.
Kraft’s experience with Lewis was apparently not an anomaly. In a survey of judges, Lewis scored low on questions about her courtroom demeanor and whether she is free of bias.
Lewis ordered Scott – who had sexually abused a 7-year-old girl – to serve 30 years to life in prison by running three 10-to-life terms consecutively.
Prosecutors had asked for 30 years to life, but a pre-sentence report recommended 15 to life.
Back at his office after the sentencing, Kraft penned a letter to Lewis to vent his frustration. “It is my job to argue BEFORE the court and not WITH the court,” Kraft wrote.
A month later, on March 15, Kraft got a phone call from Lewis, who offered an apology.
“She said she went back and watched the video [of the hearing] and said I was 90 percent correct in my letter,” Kraft said.Kraft said his letter did not ask Lewis to reduce Scott’s sentence. But during their phone conversation, Kraft said he told the judge, “I’m hoping our [courtroom] banter didn’t cost my client an additional five or 10 years.”
After Kraft reminded her of the stiff sentence, Lewis said, “If I still have jurisdiction, I’m going to change that,” according to Kraft.
Offering to reduce Scott’s sentence by 10 years, Lewis promised to send Kraft documentation of the change, he said.
Then Lewis said something that turned Kraft’s pleasure to discomfort.
”She said, ‘I would appreciate it if you don’t discuss this with the prosecutor,’ ” Kraft recalled. ”She said it at least two, and maybe three, times.”
Kraft said the situation put him in an ethical dilemma.
”I’m bound and sworn to look after the best interests of my client,” he said. ”I’m feeling elated that she’s going to try to reduce the sentence by 10 years. On the other hand, did she just tell me not to talk to the prosecutor?”
Lewis never sent anything about the sentencing change to Kraft, who said he didn’t learn Lewis had actually reduced Scott’s sentence until July 26, when he got a call from a public defender who wanted to discuss Scott’s petition to the Utah Court of Appeals.
”When I became officially aware she had changed [Scott's sentence] I was saying, ‘Holy crap! What am I supposed to do?’ ” Kraft said.
Kraft said he decided to report the matter to prosecutor Patricia Parkinson, who also was unaware of the sentencing change.
The proper way to try to change a sentence is with an appeal or with a motion asking the court to reconsider, Kraft said.
Once a sentence has been handed down, said Yocom, ”there is not a way for the judge to go back and change it” without notifying the prosecution.
Letting sex offenders out early as an apology for her biased behavior. The people of Utah have been given a gift on a silver platter. Damn, I wish we had enough money flowing into that state to run a commercial or two. Obviously, for a judicial rentention election, it wouldn’t happen, but one can dream.
Is it wrong I feel giddy inside that someone like this might be taken off the bench? Based on the hits I’m seeing of people looking for more information, I really hope she is removed. If these kinds of developments keep coming up (and I’m told behind the scenes there are so many more stories like this), then I’ll need a Judge Leslie Lewis category! Don’t let me down Utah, please get this woman out of the court system. It’s not about hunting, it’s about abuse of the judicial system.
No obviously related posts.

Good Lord! I’ve been practicing 30+ years, and I’d be shocked as hades if a judge called me up about a case. That just isn’t done. If there’s a scheduling detail to be worked out, the judge’s clerk might call you. If it’s anything beyond that, the clerk will set the time for a conference call and include the other side.
But to initiate an ex parte contact, secretly pledge judicial action, and then tell the attorney to keep it secret from the other side is beyond the pale. That’s essentially corruption, even tho no money changed hands.
I do appreciate the terrible position the defense attorney was put in, too. If he does tell the other side, his client, whom he is pledged to try to protect, no matter how scummy, gets ten extra years. If he doesn’t tell the other side, he’s concealing an improper contact. No matter what he does, he winds up in the wrong.
Glad this is coming out before, instead of after, the election.
[...] I didn’t have just one last post about Utah’s Judge Leslie Lewis before I left. I missed this editorial this morning by the Salt Lake Tribune calling for people to vote against her. Oh happy dance. Doesn’t mean you shouldn’t tell anyone you know in Utah to vote against her. Also doesn’t mean people shouldn’t keep up the pressure. If somehow she slips by this election, the Judicial Conduct Commission needs to act on her secret deal to cut the sentence of a sex offender. [...]
[...] The increased attention to her because sportsmen put her insanity on display brought this front page story highlighting how she cut secret deals to knock 10 years off of a child sexual predator without telling the prosecution. In fact, she requested that the prosecution never be told about the change after the sentence has already been issued. Wrong doesn’t even begin to describe that kind of action. Honestly, I don’t understand how that doesn’t get her automatically thrown off the bench and disbarred so she can’t even practice again. [...]