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Cahill says he speaks for society in sternly dispensing justiceSunday, March 19, 2006
KELLI HEWETT TAYLOR News staff writerIn a matter of seconds, Jefferson County District Judge Robert Cahill can shift from drill sergeant to kindly grandpa - depending on the defendant. Cahill, who hears cases ranging from capital murder to animal hoarding, has been both praised and criticized for his stern, sometimes profanity-laced lectures to defendants. He is especially prone to reprimand those involved in drug-related crimes or family violence. "I am of the opinion that when I put on that robe, I'm not just telling a defendant my opinion, I'm speaking for every citizen in this county who pays taxes and wants to have a little peace and quiet," said Cahill, a former Jefferson County prosecutor and private-practice attorney. Cahill is a defendant himself in a class-action suit that says illegal immigrants with forged identification have faced higher instances of no-bond orders, as well as sentencing that required them to leave the state or the country. Cahill, 59, a conservative Republican, has served on the bench for 17 years. His courtroom decor includes a pair of photographs showing Alabama's now-defunct chain gang and a gun-toting warden. In front of his bench, a framed letter from an inmate is posted where defendants stand to address the judge. In pencil, the letter tells of the horrors of incarceration, with a frowny face drawn at the bottom. In his office, Cahill, who is Catholic, keeps a picture of Pope Benedict XVI. During the week, he leaves at noon to attend Mass. `A cop's judge': Cahill credits his three elected terms as judge to the support of law enforcement, earning him the reputation of being "a cop's judge." "I come from the school that I will do whatever it takes to get you not to come back - embarrassing you, standing on my head or confronting you," Cahill said. "Sometimes you have to be plain blunt with people." In November, for example, Cahill was hearing a pornography case against a mother who allowed a man to photograph her partially nude teenage daughter. "I don't know what type of human being you are," Cahill told her. "Animals don't treat their babies like that. I hope you never have a child again. You don't deserve to be a mother." Cahill has inspired plenty of stories outside the courtroom. "He is one of those larger-than-life characters; it's fun to watch him," said Allen Goodwine, a deputy district attorney who prosecutes cases in Cahill's court. Goodwine said Cahill is tough on crime and more likely to decline to set bond. But, Goodwine said, he's never seen justice slanted toward or against any group of people. "One of the speeches, or lectures, I hear him give is that, `I've got to do what I said I would do 17 years ago: Treat everyone the same,'" Goodwine said. The judge's flamboyance inspired the Judge Cahill character in the 2004 mystery novel "Sober Justice," written by former Birmingham attorney Joe Hilley. The fictional judge confronts a lawyer about his drinking problem but still offers the lawyer the case of a lifetime. "He has a real vivid personality that was perfect for books," said Hilley, of Fairhope. He also included Cahill in his follow-up legal thrillers, "Double Take" and "Electric Beach," due out on May. "He's a law-and-order kind of judge - which is the kind of judge I think you want to have in criminal cases. He's smart. He's sharp." Hilley said the class-action lawsuit's claim that Cahill discriminated against Hispanics doesn't fit the profile of the Cahill he knows. "I've never seen him do anything wrong," Hilley said. "I've never seen him treat anyone differently from anyone else." Sensitive to bias: Cahill was the first Catholic Republican elected in Jefferson County and is the grandson of Italian and Irish immigrants. He has his Italian grandfather's immigration papers from when his grandfather landed at Ellis Island in the late 1890s. Cahill said his own experiences make him sensitive to ethnic or cultural bias. He said that decades ago a cross was burned in front of his wife's family's house because neighbors thought her family was selling the home to a black person. "I know what it's like to be treated ugly because of perceptions of people," Cahill said. He said no-bond orders are often issued at the request of police officers. He said he had a strong working relationship with police and hasn't had reason to quiz them on details. As for his demeanor in court, Cahill said, "I am loud," he said. "My wife thinks I'm hard of hearing. That's just me. I was that way as a prosecutor." Cahill spent much of his youth as an only child in Homewood. He graduated from Auburn University with a major in economics and minors in political science and history. He earned his law degree from Cumberland School of Law and was a prosecutor in Anniston and Jefferson County before becoming a judge. Cahill, who lives in Hoover, has been married to his high school sweetheart, Josephine, for 38 years. They have three daughters and several grandchildren, whom he frequently mentions from the bench. "My faith and my wife are my life," Cahill said. Cahill said he knows his tough talk with some defendants is successful because every time he's at a restaurant, a store or a wedding reception, former defendants come up and thank him for what he's done. He says he's asked them if he should soften his tactics, and they consistently tell him no. Cahill says in the few minutes he interacts with them in court, he wants to make an impact. "I used to see some courtrooms when I was in practice where you felt like you were buying an insurance policy or closing on a house," Cahill said. "Society expects when that person stands before you for 2½ minutes that you will change their life." E-mail: ktaylor@bhamnews.com |
If the liberals don't want the illegals to leave the country, the judge should order the illegals deported to a Blue state that wants them.
Ordering illegal immigrants to leave is different than ordering "Hispanics" to leave. What's up with the title of this article?
Good judge ping
Catholic judge being attacked by liberal newspaper ping
PING
Give this judge a medal and a promotion...to the next vacancy on the SC.
Betcha poor Anel didn't have any car insurance either. I like this judge--we need thousands more like him.
Check out this judge ping.
Wow, I really like this judge! More should follow suit and I think they will, since the Federal Government has abdicated its responsibility in protecting our borders.
These people are sworn to protect their local communities. The Government has boxed them in.
Judge John Hardwicke, previously the Chief Administrative Law Judge for the state of Maryland and now the Executive Director of NAALJ, maintains an office at the law school.
The National Association of Administrative Law Judges (NAALJ) announced it will move its headquarters from Chicago to the University of Baltimore School of Law, coinciding with the appointment of the state's former chief administrative law judge, John Hardwicke, as the nonprofit group's executive director.
Hardwicke will have an office at the school, where he will conduct NAALJ affairs and organize and promote its national conference, which will be held in Baltimore in November. The group has about 850 members.
In Maryland, the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) handles all contested state administrative law cases.
The National Association of Administrative Law Judges (NAALJ) is the largest professional organization devoted exclusively to administrative adjudication devoted to the executive branch of government. It is a non-profit corporation founded in 1974 in the state of Illinois. Its voting members include: state, federal, and local administrative law judges, administrative judges, hearing officers, referees, trial examiners, agency chairs and commissioners, as well as higher appellate authorities, exercising a wide variety of subject matter jurisdiction. Associate members include law professors and attorneys involved in administrative law. As of March 1, 2005 had approximately 850 dues paying members
Sigh...
There's no such thing.
They are illegal aliens.
Felony jay walking? Man they're tough in Alabama.
And there is something wrong with various law enforcement agencies cooperating?
So9
She ain't got no rights under the constitution, because she ain't no citizen of the United States.
Period.
(And for all you idiots that wish to argue that, please tell me my rights under the Mexican constitution or whatever they call it.)
Why do these people continue to insist on this crap?
Is it because of the bleeding heart liberal kumbayah-chanting, birkenstock-wearing, warm and fuzzy nitwits?
Or is it some ambulance chasing lawyer who sees only a dollar to be extorted from the government?
No matter. We don't need either one in our society.
Nor do we need the illegal crybaby whining "immigrant".
I'm fed up with this crap.
"The director of the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild in Boston, which works on behalf of immigrants, says an Alabama judge enforcing immigration law is as inappropriate as if he were enforcing Mississippi law. "
Does this group find against liberal Supreme Court justices using non-US law to decide cases?
Can't have it both ways.
Well, I think this sort of thing ought to happen more often. This is phase three of the solution to the illegal immigration problem.
2. Assess punitive fines on employers who knowingly hire illegals.
3. Detain and deport any illegal who comes in contact with an officer of a local, state, or national government agency.