Amicus Curiae in Defense of the Integrity of the Courts

 

All this for a cunt ass Fraud dirty ass judge ? 


The integrity of the judicial record is the lifeblood of our legal system. When the official record is altered, or when documents appear years later in contradiction to contemporaneous filings, the credibility of every proceeding is undermined. In this matter, the State’s December 11, 2017 reply made no mention of a December 1, 2017 “judgment.” Yet the docket now reflects such a judgment, marked as “scanned per Fitzgerald’s wishes” and even noting that conditions were modified “without hearing.” This conflict between the contemporaneous filings and the current record is not a technical quibble. It strikes at the very foundation of due process: the right to a fair and accurate record.


Compounding this, in April 2019 the elected District Attorney of Dallas County himself moved to recuse not only his office but all assistants, citing the appearance of impropriety and requesting an attorney pro tem. That motion acknowledged that continued participation by the office risked tainting the prosecution. Yet the motion was denied, and the same conflicted office carried on. The State thus confessed conflict, but the court chose convenience over integrity.


Together, these two features — a corrupted record and the rejection of the State’s own recusal request — do more than prejudice a single litigant. They corrode the prestige of the law itself. If courts cannot guarantee that records are authentic, and if conflicts are disregarded even when raised by the prosecutors themselves, then the promise of equal justice is replaced by the perception of a rigged process designed to protect insiders.


The public’s faith in the courts is not a luxury; it is the foundation of a civil society. To permit corrupted records and conflicted prosecutions to stand unaddressed is to degrade that foundation. To correct them is not only to remedy individual injustice but to reaffirm that in Texas, and in America, the law governs all — including judges, prosecutors, and clerks.


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