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Judge of the Day: Why Don’t You Crack Open a Red Stripe And Chill Out?

Virgin Islands are nice.jpgGroundhog Day just passed, which means that we still have an interminable amount of time left before the Sun returns with its cancerous rays of happiness. In times like these, I often ponder the much better quality of life available in tropical climes (assuming you are flush with hard currency). Sunny days, swaying palms, and friends who are laid back, not laid off.

But unlike the lifestyle displayed in beer commercials, sometimes tropical rat race (lizard longjump?) can be just as punishing as what we have up north:

An assistant attorney general got out of jail Tuesday after V.I. Superior Court Judge Leon Kendall had him arrested for appearing 10 minutes late to a court hearing.

The Virgin Islands Attorney General did not appreciate having one of his employees thrown in jail for tardiness:

In a news release Tuesday, Attorney General Vincent Frazer said he was pleased that Kendall had accepted Bethel’s apology to the court and allowed him to be released from jail without paying a high bail.

“As an officer of the court, I respect the authority of the judiciary and expect my attorneys general to do the same,” Frazer said. “I regret if any comments I made regrading the matter may have offended or appeared disparaging to the court.”

In a published report Tuesday, Frazer was quoted as saying he considered Kendall’s action “a very far-reaching abuse of judicial discretion.”

Instead of blaming the judge, maybe A.G. Frazer should have looked to his own house. Being ten minutes late seems to be the least of his surrogate’s problems.

Details after the jump.

You have to wonder if Assistant Attorney General Jesse Bethel takes this whole “lawyer” thing seriously. Showing up late to court is a party foul, messing up a plea agreement should get you kicked out of the party:

Speaking Tuesday evening, Bethel explained the events leading to Monday’s court hearing. At a pre-trial conference Friday, he said, the defense attorneys — Steven Hogroian, representing Ford, and Samuel Joseph, representing Paris — claimed Bethel offered them a plea of involuntary manslaughter. The attorneys presented a tape recording of a conversation which they said documented the offer.

Bethel acknowledged he said “involuntary” in the conversation. But, he said, “I meant to say voluntary.” He continued, “If I misspoke or made a mistake, that’s not the end of it. There is a greater requirement of fact. This is not a word game. We need to establish on record what the facts of the case will support.”

Then Bethel dazzled listeners with his 1L Contracts knowledge:

The defense is “not entitled to a plea of involuntary manslaughter,” Bethel said …

“It’s called a meeting of the minds,” the assistant attorney general said. “In contract principle a meeting of the minds is the same thing agreed on by all parties. It is the policy of the Department of Justice that plea deals are offered in writing for the protection of the defendants and the government.”

If I screwed up a plea agreement and was resorting to contracts to make it right, I might be a little late to my judicial smack down as well. Jesse Bethel might need to change his latitude.

Prosecutor Released After Getting Jailed for Being 10 Minutes Late [St. Croix Source]

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