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Maria Lopez

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Maria Lopez is a Cuban-American former judge and is currently a television jurist on the syndicated television show Judge Maria Lopez.

Judge Lopez made legal history as the first Latina appointed to the bench in Massachusetts when she was selected as a District Court Judge by Governor Michael Dukakis. Judge Lopez continued make her mark on history as the first Latina to be appointed to the Massachusetts Superior Court in 1993. Lopez served as a Superior Court judge and as an assistant attorney general in civil rights division of the office of the Massachusetts Attorney General.

She is married to Stephen Mindich, owner of the Boston Phoenix newspaper; they live in Newton, Massachusetts. She has two sons, Michael Michaud (born in 1983) and David Michaud (born in 1985), who both attended the University of Michigan; they are her sons from her first marriage to Richard Michaud.

Lopez holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Government from Smith College and a Juris Doctor from Boston University.

Demoulas Versus Demoulas Case

In the 1990s, then Judge Lopez presided over the civil trial for control of shares in the DeMoulas supermarket chain. The trial and subsequent appeals process made this one of the largest and longest civil lawsuits in Massachusetts history. In addition to its length and cost, the trial was notable for attempts by lawyers of Telemachus "Mike" Demoulas to have Judge Lopez removed from the case due to allegations of bias after the jury found that he had defrauded his late brother George's family of shares in the family owned business. After numerous appeals however, Judge Lopez's rulings were upheld.

Allegations of misconduct were raised by Lopez's former law clerk, Paul M. Walsh against attorneys for Telemachus Demoulas. He alleged that he was lured to Nova Scotia under the pretext of a job-interview, only to be queried for information the lawyers could then use to prove bias on the part of Judge Lopez (Walsh incident).

In October 2006, the state Board of Bar Overseers issued a recommendation to disbar lawyers Gary C. Crossen and Kevin P. Curry, and issue a three year suspension to lawyer Richard K. Donahue based on their conduct in the Walsh incident (Board of Bar Overseers' decision).

Charles "Ebony" Horton Case

Charles "Ebony" Horton was tried for and pleaded guilty to kidnapping, assault with intent to rape a child under 16, indecent assault and battery on a child under 14, assault and battery, and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon. Horton, while dressed as a woman, used a ruse to lead an 11-year old boy to an abandoned warehouse where he forced to the boy to simulate sex acts after holding a screwdriver to the child's neck (Boston Channel).

During the sentencing phase of the trial, Suffolk County District Attorney David Deakin who had asked Lopez to give Horton an eight to ten year jail sentence, tried to protest her decision to sentence Horton to house arrest and five years' of probation. Judge Lopez, who was angered by the presence of members of the media, proceded to upbraid the prosecutor as she suspected he had alerted the press (Lopez's outburst in court). During her outburst, she angered members of the victims family by referring to the case as a "low-level" offense. Judge Lopez's decision also angered residents of the Mary Ellen McCormack housing development in South Boston where Horton would serve his house arrest (Ebony Horton case). Horton was later evicted from the housing development based on the conviction.

The sentencing caused politicians in the state including then Governor Paul Cellucci to suggest that mandatory minimum sentencing should be enacted by statue to remove judicial discretion in cases such as Horton's (Fatherhood Coalition.org).

Three years later the Massachusetts Commission on Judicial Conduct found that Lopez had abused her office and lied under oath and that she ought to apologize and serve a six-month suspension (Massachusetts Commission on Judicial Conduct's verdict re charges against Lopez).

Retired Judge E. George Daher who headed the commission's investigation, suggested Judge Lopez should not be punished for her in court behavior, but for her "feeble attempt at coverup" (Comments by Judge George Daher). This was the same Judge Daher who had presided over the eviction hearings for Horton when he served as Boston Housing Court Chief in 2000. Rather than apologize and accept a suspension, Judge Lopez resigned on May 19 2003 (Judge Lopez resigns).

Television show

On September 11 2006, Judge Maria Lopez debuted, a half-hour show where real life disputants come to settle a case. An episode may include two smaller cases or one big case, such as "The Dirty Videographer Was A Lemon".

After one year on the air, the Judge Maria Lopez ranked last among nine syndicated judge shows, only gathering a Nielsen household rating of 1.0, far below the top ranked Judge Judy show. Among all 160 syndicated shows ranked, the Judge Maria Lopez show placed 118th in viewership.[1]

Her controversial style

During her sentencing of an admitted child molester, Charles " Ebony" Horton, critics questioned Lopez' outburst that led to an investigation of her behavior on the bench. The judicial review found Lopez lied under oath and showed bias against prosecutors. This led Judge Maria Lopez to resign from her position. Lopez's letter addressed the chief justices of the courts (MA Commission on Judicial Conduct).

I sincerely apologize for my loss of temper in court. Accepting the recommendation of the hearing officer that I be suspended for six months and publicly endorse his findings would no doubt be the easiest and most expeditious way to maintain my judicial position. However, I cannot dishonor my 14 years on the bench, my principles, or the Massachusetts Judiciary by admitting to that which I did not do, Lopez wrote (Judge Lopez resigns).

Fighting would require that we continue on a road that would subject her family and herself to this constant kind of morass that has been going on. She has simply decided that it is not worth it. Her effectiveness on the bench would be compromised after these proceedings. She has become a lightning rod for both the media and public opinion. It was her decision to step down, Lopez's own attorney, Richard Egbert, said (Judge Lopez resigns).

In addition to her controversal style, she is also one stone cold fox! OW!! I could hit that minus the glasses and robe. Keep the gavel in yo mouth babe!

References

  1. ^ Jessica Heslam (2007-07-24). "Gavel comes down on Maria: Ex-Boston judge ranks last among TV rivals". Boston Herald. Retrieved 2007-07-24. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)