Cocke County General Sessions Judge John A.
Bell has provided the long-anticipated answers and explanations to formal
charges of judicial misconduct filed against him before the Tennessee Court of
The Judiciary.
The judge's responses came in supporting
documents filed Monday afternoon along with a motion for summary judgment in
which defense attorney Gordon Ball asks that the formal charges be dismissed in
advance of the judge's September 22 administrative trial before the court of
the judiciary in Newport.
Attorney Ball's motion for summary judgment
contends that the charges against Judge Bell should be dismissed because of
"the lack of genuine issues of material fact for trial on any of the four
counts listed in the [Notice of] Formal Charges and that each of the four
counts...are unfounded, entitling Judge Bell to judgment as a matter of law."
Judge Bell has been formally charged with four
counts of "judicial misconduct" by an investigative panel of the court of the
judiciary, an action which could result in the judge's censure or a
recommendation for impeachment and removal from office.
The panel also found that Judge Bell was
disqualified from hearing cases involving misdemeanor probation, yet continued
to hear such cases despite having been informed in writing about a year ago
that his actions were improper.
The document listing the formal charges against
Judge Bell was filed on May 6 by Disciplinary Counsel Joseph S. Daniel at the direction
of the three-judge panel of the Tennessee Court of the Judiciary and formally
served on Judge Bell on May 8. The members of the panel were judges David G.
Hayes, Don R. Ash, and Gregory D. Smith.
The primary issues raised in the notice of
formal charges concern alleged nepotism in Judge Bell's handling of misdemeanor
probation cases in sessions court, an incident in February 2006 in which the
judge allegedly threatened Newportian Dan Metcalf with a contempt of court
citation for remarks he was alleged to have made outside of the courtroom on a
courthouse bench, and his alleged acceptance of a $100 appearance fee, which
the defense refers to as "a love offering," for speaking at a local church and
did not report the payment as required by law.
In the supporting document to his motion for
summary judgment on behalf of Judge Bell, attorney Ball answers each of the
formal charges one-by-one. The answers
are supported by a series of nine documents totaling more than 150 pages
including affidavits, statements, and depositions from county officials and
others involved in the actions which led to the formal charges.
The documents include affidavits from Cocke
County Director of Court Services Jennifer Shelton, Cocke County Mayor Iliff
McMahan, Cocke County Attorney Fletcher Ervin, East Tennessee Probation Inc.
Owner Tommy Large, expert legal consultant Lucian T. Pera, and Grace Missionary
Baptist Church Pastor Steven Downard, along with a 103-page sworn deposition
from court of the Judiciary Investigator James T. LaRue.
The documents address the formal charges
against Judge Bell individually.
CREATION OF THE
DIRECTOR OF COURT SERVICES
The first count of the notice of formal charges
alleges that Judge Bell violated a 2005 amendment to the Tennessee Supreme
Court's Rules of Judicial Conduct.
Specifically, that canon requires that "when a
judge refers litigants to community resources as a condition or requirement
relating to litigation, such referrals shall be made impartially and on the
basis of merit. A judge shall avoid nepotism and favoritism."
Newport resident Tommy Large, who is married to
Judge Bell's wife's sister, incorporated East Tennessee Probation Inc. to provide
private probationary services. Shortly after the company was incorporated,
"Judge Bell selected the company to provide probationary services for the Cocke
County General Sessions Court," the investigative panel found.
"Large was the executive director/chief
operating officer of the corporation from its inception, was [in that position]
on July 1, 2005, and has continued to be [in that position] to the present,"
according to the notice.
The court's notice alleges that Judge Bell
became aware of the 2005 amendment sometime before the 2006 general election.
He was reelected to the position in August 2006 and began a new term of office
on September 1, 2006.
Soon after the election, Judge Bell is alleged
to have tried to "circumvent the 2005 amended supreme court rule," Daniel
alleges in the notice of formal charges.
"Judge Bell sought to create an artificial
barrier for his continued utilization of East Tennessee Probation Inc. as the
exclusive probation provider for Cocke County General Sessions Court,"
according to the notice.
Daniel alleges that Judge Bell "created or had
created a Memorandum of Agreement
effective September 1, 2006, which ostensibly vests the authority for the selection
of a private probation company provider with the Cocke County mayor."
This Memorandum
of Agreement created a position of "director of court services" for Cocke
County, and Juvenile Probation Officer Jennifer Shelton was named "at the
direction of Judge Bell" by Cocke County Mayor Iliff McMahan to fill that
position, Daniel alleges in the court record.
The investigative panel alleges that there is
no legal authority for this agreement or for the establishment of the position
of "director of court services."
The written purpose of the "director of court
services" was "to select, utilize, change, coordinate with, and...make all
decisions concerning provider services" for general sessions and juvenile
courts in Cocke County.
Despite that stated intent, "no probation
provider other than East Tennessee Probation Inc. has been asked to provide
probation services...pursuant to this agreement," the investigative panel found.
As the provider of probation services to
general sessions court, East Tennessee Probation collects fees which the court
orders be paid by defendants who are on probation.
According to the affidavits of Shelton, Mayor
McMahan, and County Attorney Ervin, Judge Bell, who first took office after
defeating incumbent Judge Marcus Mooneyham in 1988, met with Ervin and Mayor
McMahan in the fall of 2006.
At that meeting, "Judge Bell informed [those
present] of a recent change in state law which he said prevented him from
selecting the court services in Cocke County General Sessions Court," according
to Ball's motion.
In an attempt to come into compliance with the
new law, "Judge Bell produced a proposed 'memorandum of agreement' between the
county mayor and himself as general sessions and juvenile judge.
"The proposed memorandum...created a new office
within the office of the county mayor, [called] director of court services, and
Judge Bell proposed that Jennifer Shelton, youth services officer of the
juvenile court, be appointed as director of court services without additional
compensation," the motion continues.
Under that memorandum, the director of court
services "is given the discretion to select whichever probation services
company she believes is best qualified to handle those services in general
sessions court and may invite other companies to provide services to that
court."
In her affidavit that "the position consists of
a myriad of responsibilities, primarily selecting and utilizing services for
the court. The position did not consist of a pay raise, as I had just been
given a raise."
According to the court documents, Shelton had
earlier planned to leave her position of youth services officer in order to
accept a position in the office of Circuit Judge Rex Henry Ogle, but that Judge
Bell negotiated with the county commission for an $8,000 raise in order to keep
her as youth services officer. The raise had nothing to do with her appointment
to the new director of court services position.
"I did not know about the creation of this
position in advance, nor did I know that I had been selected to be the director
of court services," Shelton swore in her affidavit. "I had not discussed the
position with Judge Bell prior to him informing me that I had been selected to
fill this position."
Both Shelton, Ervin, and McMahan say that the
only discussion among them about the issue was the question of whether Shelton
might eventually be entitled to further financial compensation from an already
financially strapped county budget.
According to Mayor McMahan's affidavit, after
informing McMahan and Ervin of the
change in state law, "Judge Bell proposed that a new position, a court services
officer, be created as part of the executive branch of the county government.
The mayor's affidavit then abruptly changes to
third person, reading, "But Mayor McMahan did not feel comfortable giving Ms.
Shelton direction and he requested that she not report directly to him for
these duties."
Jumping back into the first-person, the mayor's
affidavit continues, "I did not want to create a situation where Ms. Shelton
might use her additional duties to seek a pay increase, especially since she
had recently received an $8,000 salary increase,"
After amending Judge Bell's proposed memorandum
to reflect the mayor's financial concerns, the three agreed on the terms of the
proposal.
Taken together, the affidavits deny that there
was any consideration of politics or family relationships in the creation of
this position.
POLITICS, NEPOTISIM
The motion before the court of the judiciary
denies that Large is related, even by marriage, to Judge Bell and alleges that
the decision to contract with East Tennessee Probation was in no way related to
politics, nepotism, or as a way to provide financial benefits to either Large
or Judge Bell.
"Judge Bell was not involved in Large's
decision to start East Tennessee Probation...and...it was and is the only licensed
probation services company in general sessions court in Cocke County," attorney
Ball's motion reads.
It claims that when Mayor McMahan asked Shelton
why she did not contract with the East Tennessee Human Resources Agency
(ETHRA), which provides probation services for Cocke County Circuit Court, "she
responded that she could not find where [ETHRA was] licensed to provide
probation services in Cocke County for adult misdemeanor defendants" and that
Cocke County has no written contract with either ETHRA or East Tennessee
Probation.
"No one instructed Ms. Shelton to use a
particular probation service, including East Tennessee Probation Inc., in her
job as director of court services," it continues.
The motion also claims that, since 2006, Judge
Bell "has introduced Ms. Shelton to one other probation services company that
provided probation services to other counties and informed her that it was her
decision alone whether to hire a probation company.
"Large has neither offered [to] nor paid Judge
Bell, directly or indirectly any remuneration for anything related to East
Tennessee Probation's [providing] of probation services in general sessions
court," the motion continues.
In her affidavit, Shelton agrees.
"I have never felt pressure from anyone, including Judge
Bell, to use East Tennessee Probation Inc.," she says in the document.
"Mr. Large's company was, and is, the only licensed probation
services in general sessions court in Cocke County," Shelton continues. [Mayor
McMahan] "asked me why I didn't use ETHRA for probation services and I
responded that I could not find where they were licensed to provide probation
services in Cocke County for adult misdemeanor defendants."
The formal charges filed against Judge Bell by the
investigative panel of the court of the judiciary allege that Judge Bell has
used his relationship with Large to financially benefit Bell's brother-in-law
by controlling the fees levied through misdemeanor probation.
"Failure to pay these fees, or to report as directed to
take drug tests, for which the individual is sePerately charged, is a reason
for Judge Bell to revoke the suspended sentence and require the individual to
serve a jail sentence or to extend the probation term," according to the
investigative panel's findings.
Extensions of probation for failure to comply
with even the smallest of the terms of probation means more costs to the
probationers and more fees paid to East Tennessee Probation.
"These fees provide income to the company,
which in turn pays Large a salary," the panel found.
This "never-ending cycle of probation" has been
cited by many defendants as their reason for waiving consideration of
relatively minor offenses to the Cocke County Grand Jury, clogging the circuit
court docket with speeding, light law, open container, registration law,
financial responsibility law, and other misdemeanor violations instead of the
more serious felony charges traditionally reserved for circuit court.
"Judge Bell allows Large to sit on the bench
adjacent to him in court sessions [and] it is known by the general public in
Cocke County that Large has a familial relationship to Judge Bell and that
Large receives compensation as a result of those who are required to undergo
supervision by East Tennessee Probation Inc.," the investigative panel found.
The panel alleges that, taken together, these
"actions and/or inactions of Judge Bell" are in violation of at least five
canons of the Supreme Court Rules of Judicial Conduct and sections of state
law.
The panel alleges that Judge Bell's conduct
"does not promote public confidence in the integrity and impartiality of the
judiciary," that the judge "has allowed family relationships to influence his
judicial conduct," that his probation referrals "are based on partiality and do
not avoid favoritism, that the conduct "was and is willful," and that his
actions were "calculated to bring the judiciary into public disrepute and
adversely affects the administration of justice."
The second count of the notice of formal
charges alleges that Judge Bell was automatically disqualified from hearing
"any and all cases in which Tommy Large and/or East Tennessee Probation Inc.
are involved" because of his family relationships.
Defendants should not have been required to
file a formal motion of recusal in such cases, the panel alleges.
Further, the panel alleges that Judge Bell
continued hearing such cases "even after being specifically informed of the
applicable provisions" of the Code of
Judicial Conduct by Disciplinary Counsel Daniel by letter on June 18, 2007.
The documents filed in support of Judge Bell's
motion for summary judgment deny these allegations; in fact, they contend that
most of these practices are nothing unusual.
Concerning Large's practice of sitting on the
bench beside Judge Bell in the courtroom, the defense motion contends that
"this is not unusual, since it is necessary for an agent of the probation
services company to be present in court when a defendant is sentenced to
probation."
"I understand that questions have been raised
regarding where Mr. Large sits in the courtroom," Shelton says in her sworn
affidavit. "However, [he] sits in court in the same location as every previous
probation services officer has sat, and the same place probation officers sat
when Judge Mooneyham was on the bench prior to Judge Bell's election."
In previous documents filed in the case, Judge
Bell's attorney has alleged that many of the complaints now facing Judge Bell
have been litigated before and not found to be improper.
But that alleged investigation occurred during
1999, before the amendment to state law the judge is now accused if having
violated, was adopted by state legal authorities.
Attorney Ball alleges that the issues on the
case "have already been litigated and decided by the Tennessee Court of the
Judiciary in favor of Judge Bell," according to the response. "Specifically,
the [court] found that the facts now alleged...do not rise to the level of an
ethical violation.
"The court found that utilization of East Tennessee
Probation Inc.'s private misdemeanor probation service in 1999 by Judge Bell
was appropriate and that such use did not amount to an ethical violation [and]
that an improper relationship did not exist between Judge Bell and East
Tennessee Probation Inc.," according to Judge Bell's earlier response.
But those judicial proceedings were held in
1999, at a time when the arrangement between sessions court and East Tennessee
Probation Inc. may not have been considered improper.
"The Tennessee Court of the judiciary [in 1999] made
findings of fact that Judge Bell was not related to Mr. Large by blood or
marriage (In fact, Judge Bell and Mr. Large are not related, but are merely connected
through two sePerate marriages.)," according to Judge Bell's response.
"A LOVE GIFT"
In count four of its Notice of Formal Charges against
Judge Bell, the court of the judiciary's investigative panel alleges that in
March of 2004, Judge Bell was a guest speaker at Grace Missionary Baptist
Church and was paid $100 for the appearance.
"Judge Bell made no report of this extra-judicial
compensation on his required Public
Disclosure Report of Extra-Judicial Compensation for the year 2004," the
investigative panel found.
Failing to disclose the payment was a violation of another
canon of the Code of Judicial Conduct,
the panel alleges.
In his sworn affidavit, Pastor Downard testified that the
judge spoke at Grace Missionary Church in March 2004 and received "a love gift"
collected from the church' congregation which is listed in the church's
financial ledger as "Speaker John Bell: $100.00."
"Such gifts were at that time and are currently presented
by the church to any speaker," Downard testified. "in February 2008, the court
of the judiciary's investigator showed up one day and requested information
about the $100 gift to Judge Bell in March 2004.
"I explained to the investigator that the $100 check was a
'love gift' to Judge Bell [from the church]. Although the investigator asked me
for additional information and stated that he would 'call back,' I have not
heard from him since," the affidavit continues.
In a deposition taken by attorney Ball in the case, investigator
LaRue testified that he was told that "Judge Bell had made a practice prior to
the last election of touring about the counties, giving his [Christian]
testimony and an account of his service to the United States Army [during the
Iraq War] and that he had received income from this.
In following up on this information, which he said came
from former Sessions Judge Mooneyham, he said, '"I think I went to all the
churches in Newport,' and although there were 'a lot' of churches in Newport,
he found 'no evidence that Judge Bell received any checks from any other
church,'" according to the defense motion.
"And although Mr. LaRue testified that he had numerous
'statements' that Judge Bell had received 'cash' at other churches, Mr. LaRue
had no information of the amounts of cash purportedly given to Judge Bell, and
had scares information regarding the names of ay witnesses who would testify to
that effect."
However, the issue before the court of the judiciary is
not whether Judge Bell received any such gifts or appearance fees, but whether
he failed to report those fees to state officials under the required Public Disclosure Report of Extra-Judicial
Compensation
POLITICS, DAN
METCALF, AND
OTHER
ALLEGATIONS
Count three of the Notice of Formal Charges
filed against Judge Bell concerns an alleged threat to hold Metcalf in contempt
of court for alleged statements made outside of the courtroom.
On February 6, 2007, Metcalf, who worked as a
bail bondsman at the time, was sitting on a bench downstairs at the Cocke
County Courthouse.
Scottie Ellison, a local man who was facing
charges of passing bad checks, reportedly asked Metcalf for advice, telling the
bondsman he had been drug tested numerous times while on probation on the bad
check charges.
"He asked me what I thought about it, and I
told him I thought it was pretty strict to have someone repeatedly drug tested
on a bad check charge," Metcalf has said. "That was the extent of the conversation."
Apparently, Ellison spoke to someone from East
Tennessee Probation and told that person that "he had overheard Dan Metcalf
talking to others in a sePerate area of the courthouse about the propriety of
private probation services in Cocke County," according to the three-judge
investigative panel's findings.
The representative of East Tennessee Probation
brought the matter to Judge Bell's attention and the judge called Ellison to
the bench in open court.
"In this bench session, which is not recorded,
it is the contention of Judge Bell that Ellison stated that Metcalf had earlier
told him that 'probation was crooked [and] you was crooked,'" according to the
panel's findings.
Metcalf was not in the courtroom for this bench
conference and denies making statements of that nature to Ellison.
"Accepting these statements as true, Judge Bell
had Metcalf immediately brought into open court and sworn," the panel found.
"Judge Bell thereupon admonished Metcalf in open court that he considered
Metcalf's remarks to be 'contemptuous and slanderous.'"
The judge did not tell Metcalf what comments he
was talking about, nor did he give Metcalf an opportunity to respond, but he
"threatened Metcalf in open court with contempt if he heard that similar
statements were being made by him in the future," according to the panel's
findings.
"The threat of contempt by Judge Bell in open
court under these circumstances was improper and in violation of [specific
canons of] the Code of Judicial Conduct"
and state law, the investigative panel alleges in count three.
In his motion, attorney Ball alleges that this
complaint was politically motivated by the judge's political adversaries,
specifically former Judge Mooneyham, former Cocke County Jail Administrator Michael
McCarter, Metcalf, and unnamed others.
The motion also argues that Judge Bell's
actions were not in violation of Tennessee law or even the free speech
provisions of the U.S. Constitution: even comments about an elected public
official during an election year.
This opinion largely comes from Pera, a Memphis
attorney with a seven-page resume who describes his current occupation by
saying, "I also counsel and represent lawyers, law firms, and others on
questions of legal ad judicial ethics and the professional responsibilities of
lawyers and judges.
"I have been retained to serve as an expert in
a number of legal malpractice, lawyer disciplinary, and other matters involving
the conduct of lawyers and judges," Pera says in his affidavit.
He says he has "provided Judge Bell my full and
complete legal analysis and opinions related to the judicial disciplinary
complaint filed [against him] by Dan A. Metcalf in a letter I wrote to Judge
Bell dated December 4, 2006.
"In my opinion, Judge Bell's actions did not
violate Tennessee law; rather, they followed an appropriate practice identified
by other courts," Pera says in his affidavit. Mr. Metcalf's conduct and speech
in the courthouse on February 6, 2006, could be seen by a judge in Judge Bell's
position, acting reasonably to fall within the category of conduct that
Tennessee contempt law aims to prohibit.
"In my opinion, Judge Bell's response to Mr.
Metcalf appears to have been, if anything, restrained and temperate. Rather
than attempting to hold Mr. Metcalf in contempt, and rather than then
instituting a charge of indirect criminal contempt, Judge Bell instead merely
warned Mr. Metcalf, on the record, that his actions could be construed as
contempt and warned Mr. Metcalf that, if he continued in his course of conduct,
Judge Bell would follow the course of action laid out in [the rules of court].
As stated in my December 2006 letter, I am aware of no authority condemning the
practice of issuing such a warning."
The affidavit and letter both stop short of
pointing out that during the hearing when Metcalf was called before the court,
Judge Bell never explained to Metcalf what specific comments or behavior, Judge
Bell considered improper.
"At the time, I had no idea what he was talking
about and he never really explained it to me," Metcalf said. "I assumed it had
something to do with a bail case I was handling or something that had happened
in the courtroom. It was only later that I found out what he meant."
In his December 4, 2006, letter to Judge Bell,
which is attached as an exhibit to the motion for summary judgment, Pera has a
basic explanation for the situation: politics.
"The incident at issue arose during the course
of an election campaign for the position of Cocke County general sessions
judge, in which you were challenged in your bid for re-election by Phil Owens,"
Pera wrote in 2006.
Mr. Metcalf...was involved in working with
and supporting the campaign of your
opponent, Phil Owens," he wrote.
Among the issues during the campaign was the
very question which is now the focus of the state disciplinary action.
Although some local residents may disagree,
Pera contends that "the physical layout of the courthouse is such that Mr. Metcalf was situated where
people going to and from your courtroom were
required to pass by, and within earshot of, his location.
"Although you have expressed your opinion that
the conduct of Mr. Owens' campaign was inappropriate and unethical, I have not formed an opinion
on this topic," Pera informed Judge Bell.
The letter suggests that Judge Bell believed
that there had been several previous incidents which were directly related to
"Mr. Metcalf's activities on the first floor of the courthouse," although
Metcalf contends he was at the courthouse to monitor the appearance of his bail
bond clients in court, to visit with friends in one of Cocke County's primary
gathering places, and, he concedes, to "talk politics."
But Judge Bell told Pera, according to his
letter, that about two weeks earlier, "Mr. Metcalf was pointed out to you by a
litigant as someone who was telling people in the courthouse that "the
court [referring to your court] was just
a money racket." The litigant was also confused about Mr. Metcalf's position, saying that he believed
he was one of "your officers," which Mr. Metcalf was not.
"Mr. Metcalf's conversation with this
particular litigant had made enough of an impression upon the litigant that you
were obliged to engage in conversation with him to defend your actions and the
court from the charges Mr. Metcalf had made.
"About a week before February 6, 2006, another
litigant told you that Mr. Metcalf was slandering the court in the same general
location on the first floor of the courthouse, including statements that your court was "a money
racket," that Cocke County General Sessions Court probation was "a racket," that you were
"crooked," and other such statements.
Another such incident occurred before February
6, 2006, in which you overheard a
litigant, in an argument with
personnel in the Juvenile Court Clerk's office, asserting that the requirement of certain filing fees was "a
money racket," Pera wrote. "The litigant later told you that he was just repeating something that he had heard
downstairs in the courthouse, and he apologized to you for the comments."
Pera contends that Metcalf's alleged behavior,
"included 'repeated accusations of corruption and misconduct were being
consciously and directly targeted toward litigants before your court and were
being made against the court in the courthouse.
"Based upon my review of the facts and law
applicable to the situation at hand, it is my
opinion that you did not violate the law of Tennessee in warning Mr.
Metcalf regarding the contemptuous nature
of his conduct and speech.
Under Tennessee law, actions that constitute
"abuse of, or unlawful interference with, the
process or proceedings of the court" are considered to be criminal
contempt.
Even during an election season in which Judge
Bell was a candidate and valid election issues were being discussed, "such
actions occurring outside of the presence of the court are considered to
be indirect criminal contempt," Pera
alleges.
"It is, of course, conceivable that a court
reviewing a finding of indirect contempt against Mr. Metcalf for his conduct
regarding Mr. Ellison might conclude that his actions and speech were, in fact,
protected by the First Amendment [of the U.S. Constitution], and thus reverse
such a contempt finding," Pera points out.
"It is
well-settled, however, that First Amendment rights are subject to
greater regulation when those rights are
exercised in connection with court proceedings, whether by participants in
court proceedings or by those whose
conduct or speech otherwise has a substantial likelihood of materially prejudicing an adjudicative
proceeding,: he continues. "Thus, while the fact that Mr. Metcalf was part of
an electoral campaign for your opponent might be seen by some as meaning that
the First Amendment would absolutely protect his conduct and speech, it seems
likely to me that, even if such conduct and speech were protected by the First Amendment when
undertaken at some location distant from the court and its proceedings, a very different First
Amendment analysis would likely apply to identical conduct and speech undertaken in or near the
court, especially where the conduct or speech
interfered with, or was likely to interfere with, proceedings before the
court.
"It appears to me that, in issuing the warning
that you did to Mr. Metcalf, you had apparently concluded that his continuing conduct and speech posed a
substantial likelihood of materially prejudicing proceedings before your court, and it appears
to me that such a conclusion was reasonable," Pera wrote.
"If
another judge, brought in later to try a contempt charge on these facts,
were to find that, based on whatever
factual record emerged, Mr. Metcalf
s conduct did not pose a substantial
likelihood of materially prejudicing
proceedings before your court, in my opinion, that would in no way diminish the reasonableness of your action in
issuing the warning.
"I have not been provided with, nor have I
found in my research, any Tennessee case
law that would make it clear that Mr. Metcalf s conduct was immune from contempt based on the First Amendment."
"Absent such case law, a judge in your position
would seem to me wholly justified in
taking merely the first step in a possible indirect contempt proceeding.
"Issuing Mr. Metcalf an appropriate warning
that his conduct risked such a charge...appears to me that the only potential
impropriety of which you might be accused is
using the court's power and authority to chill the First Amendment
rights of Mr. Metcalf. Given the state
of the law, any such accusation would appear to me to be groundless," Pera
concluded.