I have used six primary sources of information, and use the initials after the name in the reference table below:
Here is the full list of positions and candidates. I have a check mark in front of the candidates that I endorse, include a link to a post in which I perform my analysis (if available), and indicate the endorsements by the six sources cited above to help you decide for yourself (assuming you don't like my picks).
AP
| CA | Rep | Dem | CRC | RF | DC | |
| Circuit Court Judge, Div. 1 | |||||||
| John R. McCarroll |
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| Circuit Court Judge, Div. 2 | |||||||
| Curtis Johnson |
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![]() | James F. Russell (analysis) |
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| Circuit Court Judge, Div. 3 | |||||||
![]() | Karen R. Williams |
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| Circuit Court Judge, Div. 4 | |||||||
| Ritta L. Stotts |
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| Circuit Court Judge, Div. 5 | |||||||
| Kay Robilio |
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| Circuit Court Judge, Div. 6 | |||||||
| Lawrence Pivnick | |||||||
![]() | Jerry Stokes |
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| Circuit Court Judge, Div. 7 | |||||||
| Donna M. Fields |
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| Circuit Court Judge, Div. 8 | |||||||
| D'Army Bailey |
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![]() | Larry E. Parrish (analysis) |
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| Circuit Court Judge, Div. 9 | |||||||
| Robert (Butch) Childers |
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| Chancery Court Judge, Part 1 | |||||||
| Walter Evans |
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| Chancery Court Judge, Part 2 | |||||||
![]() | Arnold Goldin (analysis) |
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| Carlee McCullough |
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| Chancery Court Judge, Part 3 | |||||||
![]() | Kenny Armstrong |
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| Karen Tyler | |||||||
| Criminal Court Judge, Div. 1 | |||||||
| Tonya C. Saafir |
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![]() | Paula Skahan (analysis) |
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| Criminal Court Judge, Div. 2 | |||||||
| W. Otis Higgs, Jr. |
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| Criminal Court Judge, Div. 3 | |||||||
| John P. Colton |
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| Criminal Court Judge, Div. 4 | |||||||
![]() | Carolyn Wade Blackett |
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| Richard Parks | |||||||
| Criminal Court Judge, Div. 5 | |||||||
![]() | Jim Lammey (analysis) |
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| Dewun R. Settle |
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| Criminal Court Judge, Div. 6 | |||||||
![]() | W. Fred Axley |
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| Latonya S. Burrow |
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| Criminal Court Judge, Div. 7 | |||||||
![]() | Lee V. Coffee |
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| Doris Holt | |||||||
| Larry Nance | ![]() | ||||||
| Janet Lansky Shipman |
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| Criminal Court Judge, Div. 8 | |||||||
| Chris Craft |
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| Criminal Court Judge, Div. 9 | |||||||
| Alicia Howard | |||||||
![]() | Mark Ward (analysis) |
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| Criminal Court Judge, Div. 10 | |||||||
| James C. Beasley, Jr. |
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| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 1 | |||||||
| Lynn Cobb |
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| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 2 | |||||||
| Phyllis Gardner |
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| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 3 | |||||||
| John Donald |
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![]() | Charles McDonald |
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| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 4 | |||||||
| Keith Alexander | |||||||
| Joe Barton | |||||||
![]() | Deborah Henderson |
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| Tony Kizer |
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| Stanley Less | |||||||
| Regina Morrison Newman |
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| Gloria Smith | |||||||
| Shannon Toon | |||||||
| Wayne Vandeveer | |||||||
| Joeseph K. Willcox | |||||||
| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 5 | |||||||
| Betty Thomas Moore |
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![]() | Evan Nahmias |
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| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 6 | |||||||
| Lonnie Thompson |
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| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 7 | |||||||
| Tyrone Paylor |
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![]() | Ann Pugh |
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| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 8 | |||||||
| Tim Dwyer |
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| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 9 | |||||||
| Joyce Broffitt |
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| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 10 | |||||||
| Anthony Johnson |
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| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 11 | |||||||
| Mischelle Alexander-Best |
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![]() | Karen Massey |
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| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 12 | |||||||
| Gwen Rooks |
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| Bryan Davis | |||||||
| Bren Olswanger | |||||||
| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 13 | |||||||
![]() | Louis J. Montesi, Jr. |
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| Terrance Tatum |
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| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 14 | |||||||
| Larry Potter |
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| General Sessions Criminal Court Judge, Div. 15 | |||||||
| Loyce Lambert Ryan |
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| Probate Court Judge, Part 1 | |||||||
| Robert Benham |
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| Probate Court Judge, Part 2 | |||||||
![]() | Donn Southern |
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| Karen D. Webster | |||||||
| Juvenile Court Judge | |||||||
| Jayne R. Chandler | |||||||
| Veronica Coleman |
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| Earnesine Hunt Dorse | |||||||
![]() | Curtis Person |
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| William T. Winchester | |||||||
Technorati Tags: Tennessee Politics, Tennessee Shelby County Judicial Races of 2006, Judicial Endorsements, Replacing Left Wing Activist Judges.
The Commercial Appeal issued a strong endorsement for Ward:
The choice in this race is a no-brainer. Judge MARK WARD, appointed to the position in 2004, clearly deserves a full term.But once again, it is attorney Richard Fields that has the full story (emphasis added):In the 2005 bar association ratings, Ward, 49, scored the highest of any judge, state or federal, in the survey. His entire legal career has been focused on criminal law as a teacher, private attorney and public defender.
His opponent, attorney Alicia Howard, has limited criminal trial experience.
Judge Mark Ward is an exceptional judge and person. Appointed to his position in 2005, he was rated by the Memphis Bar Association in the survey of its members as the best judge in Shelby County and was selected “Judge of the Year” for 2005. This is significant as most members of the Memphis Bar Association are civil practice lawyers. He has over 30 years experience in the criminal justice system as the assistant public defender, an Adjunct Professor of Law in Criminal Procedure at the School of Law-University of Memphis, a clerk on the Criminal Court of Appeals, and private criminal defense practice. He also is the author of the authoritative Tennessee Criminal Trial Practice. His education background includes a B.A. – Law Enforcement and M.A.’s in Criminal Justice and Religion.Given Judge Ward's outstanding credentials and the respect of his peers, one wonders at Ms. Howard's judgement at attempting to knock off such an obviously qualified opponent. Furthermore, both politcal parties in Shelby County have endorsed Judge Ward — a rare occurance.His opponent, Alicia Howard, has virtually no criminal jury trial experience. Her last employment as an Assistant City Attorney involved no criminal work. After leaving the City Attorney’s Office, she filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy in Jackson, Tennessee in 2000. Her 20 years of practice have been undistinguished and does not make her in any way fit to replace Judge Ward.
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Criminal Court Judge |
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| Alicia Howard | |
| Mark Ward | |
Mark Ward has been endorsed by:
Lammey earned an endorsement from the Commercial Appeal, albeit a weak one:
Two impressive candidates -- Asst. Dist. Atty. JIM LAMMEY and defense lawyer Dewun Settle -- are running to replace retiring Judge Joseph Dailey. Both Lammey, 49, and Settle, 41, have strong backgrounds handling difficult cases in Criminal Court. And both have credible ideas about making the courts operate more efficiently.But Attorney Richard Fields has the goods on Dewun Settle (emphasis added):However, we recommend Lammey because of his broader experience as a chief prosecutor in Division 3.
Dewun R. Settle is his opponent and he has serious problems. In 2000, Mr. Settle received a public censure from the Tennessee Board of Professional Responsibility where he neglected his client's legal matter and failed to file a brief in the Court of Criminal Appeals and was found in willful contempt of court. He also is involved in current litigation with his ex-partners, including Curtis Johnson, for debts of their former law firm. He also has a $9,000 judgment against him in 1998 for legal malpractice involving a personal injury case.Lammey has 15 years experience as a Shelby County Assistant District Attorney, serving in the Major Violators Unit and the Violent Crimes Prosecution Unit and prosecuting over 50 homicides. He has earned the respect of fellow prosecutors and defense attorneys alike.
On the other hand, Settle has been censured, found in willful contempt and guilty of legal malpractice.
As I said, this one is a no-brainer:
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Criminal Court Judge |
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| Jim Lammey | |
| Dewun R. Settle | |
Jim Lammey has been endorsed by:
The Commercial Appeal has a short bio for Goldin:
Chancellor ARNOLD GOLDIN, 56, was appointed to the bench in 2002 to replace the late Floyd Peete Jr. He was elected in 2004 to finish the remainder of Peete's term. Goldin is one of the most respected judges on the bench, has earned accolades from attorneys who appear before him and should be re-elected. Goldin has a solid legal background, with 28 years of law experience.More impressive are the write-ups by local attorneys. David Caywood writes:
Those of us who have practiced before Chancellor Goldin are of the opinion he is one of the finest Chancellors that any of us can remember. When you walk into his Courtroom he usually knows more about your case than you do and he is fair to all parties and renders timely and scholarly opinions.While Richard Fields effuses:
Chancellor Arnold B. Goldin is one of the finest Chancellors in the history of Shelby County. He was appointed in 2002 and elected to fill and unexpired term in 2004. He was voted Judge of the Year in 2004 by the Young Lawyers Division of the Memphis Bar Association and is past president of the Tennessee Trial Lawyers Association. He has also served as Honorary Chairman of the Committee to preserve the legacy of Dr. Benjamin L. Hooks. He is always wellprepared, fair to all parties, and his written opinions are timely and scholarly.Running against Goldin is someone completely unqualified for the position. Here is the Commercial Appeal's blurb:
His opponent is Carlee McCullough, 38, an attorney in the City of Memphis' office of contract compliance. McCullough says Chancery Court should have a woman serving on the bench and, because the court handles many divorce cases, none of the current judges "have experienced divorce. Therefore a divorcee's perspective is not represented."Yeah, that's what I want. A bitter divorcee presiding over divorce cases.
But the full story is actually much, much worse, as related by attorney David Caywood (emphasis added):
She was recently divorced from Scott Crawford , a former attorney who went to Federal prison as a result of his involvement with the Gangster Disciples. Before their divorce, Ms. McCullough and her husband owned the Ivy Cat, the former Justine s Restaurant. It was a financial disaster and investors lost all of their money. Ms. McCullough has twice been declared ineligible to practice law in California as a result of not paying her Bar dues and not taking the mandatory Continuing Legal Education programs. In addition , without having the required license Ms. McCullough is presently passing herself off as a CPA which is a violation of Tennessee law. She has been warned about this by the State of Tennessee Department of Commerce and Insurance and was sent notices May 8 , 2006 and May 22, 2006. As of yesterday, July 10 , 2006, Ms. McCullough has not responded to the Complaint. However, in her present job with the City of Memphis assisting minority vendors, she has been involved with Reginald French's contracts with the City of Memphis which have been the subject of news media stories. In addition the records reflect Ms. McCullough has been involved in only two (2) cases in Chancery Court and in each of those she was a litigant. One of those was her own divorce case which she handled herself and another was where she was being sued. If that were not enough she was only licensed to practice law in the State of Tennessee last year, 2005. Ms. McCullough has no standing to become a member of our Judiciary.Meanwhile, attorney Richard Fields calls Ms. McCullough "the most dangerous judicial candidate on the ballot" (emphasis added):
Ms. McCullough’s personal and professional life have been marked with serious problems. Ms. McCullough was married to Scott Crawford, a former attorney who went to federal prison recently concerning his involvement with the Gangster Disciples. Before their divorce, Ms. McCullough and her husband operated the Ivy, the site of the former Justine’s. It was a financial disaster and her investors lost all of their money. Ms. McCullough is liable for over $50,000 in judgments which she is paying off at approximately $400 per month.Before returning to Memphis, Ms. McCullough was licensed in California, and her law license was suspended twice for non-payment of fees.
As the City of Memphis Contract Compliance Officer, Ms. McCullough has certified a business as a minority contractor that was in fact operated by white males. In 2004, American Medibanc was certified as a female business enterprise for an ambulance fee billing contract of over $1 million per year, which in fact was being operated by two white males. It was recently determined that while Medibanc had the contract, it did not have the capacity to do electronic billings for all of its accounts, and the City of Memphis may have lost over $2 million in untimely billings to Medicare and other insurances. Ms. McCullough has taken no action to recoup these funds.
She now seeks to award the ambulance fee collection contract to Affiliated Computer Services even though the services will be subcontracted to a firm in Philadelphia. This contract was protested in April of 2006, but the protest hearing has not yet been scheduled.
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Chancery Court Judge |
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| Arnold Goldin | |
| Carlee McCullough | |
Technorati Tags: Tennessee Politics, Tennessee Shelby County Judicial Races of 2006, Arnold+Goldin, Carlee McCullough, Avoiding Unqualified Judges.
Incumbent Judge Paula Skahan was appointed by Gov. Bredesen in 2004. She is white, a lesbian and devoted Democrat.
Her opponent is Tonya Saafir, a young black attorney that has overcome many obstacles to earn her law degree, who is also a Democrat.
I have met Saafir several times and find her to be intelligent, personable and well spoken. The first time I heard her speak I wrote about it and generated a fire storm of comments. It was quite entertaining, except to Saafir who was being smeared quite badly. There were questions about her "Muslim" name and background (false) and the fact that her kids are "half-Muslim" (which doesn't even make sense — is there such a thing as "half-Christian"?). Out of the blue, someone even threw in a shot at Angelo Cobrasci, the force behind the Shelby County Conservatie Republican Club.
John Farmer did a little digging and has an extensive post on the smear campaign.
In the meantime, I have dug a little and have not found anyone who believes that Paula Skahan is a tyrant or an activist judge. The Commerical Appeal says of her:
Skahan, 45, worked as both a prosecutor and defense lawyer for 19 years before becoming a judge, and is familiar with all aspects of the Criminal Court operation at 201 Poplar.Attorney Richard Fields notes:
Judge Paula Skahan was appointed by Governor Bredesen as Criminal Court Judge in 2005 after serving as a public defender, assistant district attorney, and in private practice as a criminal defense attorney. She has handled capital cases as a private attorney as well as over 25 felony jury trials and thousands of other cases in her 19 years of practice. She is supported by law enforcement officer associations as well as defense attorneys and prosecutors. She has received national recognition as the recipient of the “Spotlight Award” from the National Association of Women Judges.Meanwhile, Tonya Saafir has limited experience and does not even practice criminal law. Richard Fields is not impressed:
Her opponent, Tonya C. Saafir, is completely unqualified to be a criminal court judge. She has practiced law for only 2 ½ years with virtually no criminal jury trial experience. She filed bankruptcy in 1998. In 2004 she was sued in General Sessions Court for non payment of debts, yet on November 28, 2005, she purchased a 2006 Cadillac Escalade, and no lien is recorded with the state against this vehicle. On April 8, 2003, she filed a Uniform Civil Affidavit of Indigence in her divorce complaint.Bottom line: Tonya Saafir has agressively pursued improving her life, achieving one goal after another. But it is too soon for this one: she simply does not have the experience to make a claim to a criminal court bench at this point in her career.
It is too bad that Saafir did not choose to go after a true activist judge like Childers.
But as these are the only two choices in this race, I will be voting for the more experienced, most qualified candidate: Paula Skahan.
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Criminal Court Judge |
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| Tonya C. Saafir | |
| Paula Skahan | |
Technorati Tags: Tennessee Politics, Tennessee Shelby County Judicial Races of 2006, Paula Skahan, Tonya Saafir, Avoiding Unqualified Judges.
The Commercial Appeal notes:
Circuit Court Division 2: Judge JAMES F. RUSSELL is seeking a second full term on the bench. He was appointed in 1997 and elected the following year. Russell, 61, spent 26 years in private practice before being appointed to the bench, and his judicial service has been exemplary. His opponent is Curtis Johnson, 39, a Memphis attorney who has been censured twice by the Board of Professional Responsibility of the state Supreme Court for mishandling cases. He offers no strong alternative to Russell's re-election.Attorney David Caywood is more explicit:
Judge James Russell is running for reelection in Division 2 of Circuit Court. He has an outstanding record and is a member of the Vestry at St. John s Episcopal Church. His opponent has twice been publicly reprimanded by our Supreme Court Disciplinary body, the Board of Professional Responsibility. In addition he has several judgments rendered against him in General Sessions Court for nonpayment of debts. Judge Russell's opponent was also sued in Chancery Court for paternity and child support where it was alleged he caused the woman to quit her full time job and then withdrew all financial support from her.Caywood includes copies of the Supreme Court censure which reads in part:
Memphis lawyer Curtis D. Johnson was publicly censured by the Tennessee Supreme Court on July 27 2004. Pursuant to Section 16 of Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 9, Johnson submitted a guilty plea in exchange for a stated form of discipline. He acknowledged that he had. been negligent in the handling of certain client matters, that he had charged an excessive fee and that he had failed to adequately communicate with his clients.Another attorney, Richard Fields, agrees:
Judge James F. Russell has been a Circuit Judge since 1996. His 9 years as a judge and his experience in private practice for 26 years has resulted in his ability to run a fair and efficient courtroom with respect and collegiality. He is exceptionally gracious to all parties.James Russell has been endorsed by:Judge Russell was rated the best overall Judge in Circuit Court (Memphis Bar Association 2005 Survey) and received the 2002, “Judge Charles A. Rond Judge of the Year Award.” He served as President of the Memphis Bar Association in 1992 and is a member of the Special Judicial Ethics Committee appointed by the Tennessee Supreme Court.
Unfortunately, his opponent Curtis D. Johnson, Jr., may be the most unqualified candidate in all the judicial races. Mr. Johnson has received two public censures by the Tennessee Board of Professional Responsibility in 2001 and 2004 for mishandling client matters. He has a series of judgments and pending cases against him in general sessions court for court reporter bills, expert witness fees, and a personal injury case. He also was sued in Chancery Court for paternity and child support where it was alleged that he withdrew all financial support when the mother, a client, would not terminate the pregnancy. He currently has a $13,000 judgment for back child support with a contempt aspect still pending. He filed for bankruptcy in 1998. Mr. Johnson clearly does not have the qualifications to be a judge, much less a practicing attorney.
We must conform the system to the Constitution, not the constitution to the system.That is a quote from Larry Parrish, candidate for Circuit Court Judge Division 8, made during an address to the local chapter meeting of the Tennessee Firearms Association on May 17th of this year.
Larry E. Parrish has my unqualified, enthusiastic endorsement.
Parrish has been a federal prosecutor for ten years and has over 75,000 hours of litigation experience. He grew up in Nashville and was active in the state Democratic Party but as time went on he found that people were compromising principals in the name of politics, so he entered into the Judicial system.
Parrish said, "Nothing in our country needs revolutionizing like the judiciary," as justice and the rule of law have all but disappeared from our trial courtrooms. He said that before he goes into a courtroom an exchange with his client will go like this:
Parrish: OK, we have the facts on our side and we have the law on our side.Parrish said that the law and facts have become meaningless; it all depends on which judge you get. Some judges rule by personal opinion, ignoring precedent. It is as if "there are 10,000 little kings in black robes". In fact, Parrish says, some of the most egregious violations of the law come from conservative Christian judges — it's just the culture.Client: So we're going to win?
Parrish: I have no idea!
Worse yet, according to Parrish the appeals process rarely works because appeals courts don't like to overrule one of their own. In spite of this, Parrish has filed ethics complaints against judges who have ruled in violation of the law. Furthermore, he worked with legislators to formulate legislation aimed at reforming the appeals process. (And after Republicans take a majority in the House, perhaps we can get some of that legislation passed!)
Parrish believes that we need to get back to the time when judges ruled according to the law, even when they believed the law is wrong. He picked D'Army Bailey to run against because Bailey is as far left as you can get and Parrish is as far right as you can get (note: Bailey is running for his fourth 8-year term).
Parrish spoke of other things, like the need to upgrade the technology in our courts and that we must hire good clerks. But Parrish believes that the most important issue is to punish judges who rule in violation of the law.
Oh yeah, did I mention he's pro-2nd Amendment? The way it was written, that is. You remember, individual right and all that stuff.
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Circuit Court Judge |
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| D'Army Bailey | |
| Larry E. Parrish | |
More on the race from the Memphis Flyer.
Other endorsements for Larry Parrish:
Those who endorse D'Army Bailey:Technorati Tags: Tennessee Politics, Tennessee Shelby County Judicial Races of 2006, Larry E. Parish, D'Army Bailey, Replacing Left Wing Activist Judges.
Larry Hensen feels fairly strongly that everyone should be thrown out except William C. Koch, Jr. in the Middle Division of the Court Of Appeals.
TeamGOP has endorsed the candidates researched and chosen by the Tennessee Federation of Republican Women, saying:
"Rank and file Republicans across this state should not be timid about standing by their convictions on this important issue when others may choose to sit on the sidelines," said Ward. "Judges who use precedent and scholarship to interpret laws and the Constitution deserve our thanks and our support. Those judges who choose to legislate from the bench or let dangerous criminals out of of jail to create more mayhem should be sent home."Meanwhile, the TFRW notes that any judge voted out of office will be replaced by Democrat governor Bredesen. According to their website, the TFRW reasoning is driven more by ideology than research, which is not what TeamGOP
However, I will say that a whole slate of judges appointed by Bredesen is a scary thought, and so I am carrying forward the Tennessee Federation of Republican Women's recommendation:
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Supreme Court |
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| YES | William A. Barker | |
| NO | Cornelia A. Clark | |
| YES | Janice Holder | |
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Technorati Tags: Tennessee Politics, Tennessee Court of Appeals, Tennessee Criminal Court of Appeals, Tennessee Supreme Court, Tennessee Judicial Races of 2006.
Brad Jobe
“A” Rated and NRA-PVF endorsed
Brad is also endorsed by the Tennessee Right to Life. Looks like I picked a winner.
In the poll released by UT this week, the margin of error was 7 points when looking at the Republican Senate Primary. When you subtract that out of the lead of Bob Corker over Ed Bryant, then Corker only leads by 4 points.
Poor Bob. All that money spent, and only a 4 point lead.
And, I heard at lunch hour a radio ad by Corker touting his missionary trip to Haiti and his belief that each life is precious. That may be true. A line or two later, the announcer states something along the lines that many Pro Life Leaders in TN support Bob Corker. That statement is false. Many do not. One or two might. Brian Harris of TN Right to Life has said that that organization will not support Bob Corker even if he wins the primary. TN Right to Life is the big dog among the right to life groups.
For the Corker campaign to air such an ad, they either don't care that they are misleading you, or they don't think it will matter - that, come election time, enough barely informed voters will vote for Corker without knowing the details.
No offense to Van, but he cannot win at this point and is only splitting the conservative vote.
Ed Bryant can win this race, Ed Bryant is a rock solid conservative, and we need to each look at our calendars and carve out time to go do campaign work for Ed.
This is exactly right. Liberal Bob Corker raised the most money and even kicked in a bunch of his own in a blatent attempt to buy this election. When the voters of conservative-trending Tennessee didn't go for that, he began resorting to attack ads and misrepresentations of his positions.
Ed Bryant has the TN Right to Life endorsement because he is the true conservative in this race. AND he is our best bet to beat Ford Jr.
Little more than 62 percent of Tennessee students graduated with regular high school diplomas on time three years ago — 7.4 percentage points below the national high school graduation rate of 69.6 percent that year.In addition, Tennessee now ranks 45th in the ranking of states able to keep their kids in school, a stunning drop from the already-low rank of 30th just last year:
In 2000, Tennessee’s [school dropout] rate was the same as the rest of the nation at 11 percent. But by 2004, the national rate improved to 8 percent while Tennessee remained unchanged.Who to blame?
Sen. Roy Herron (D-Dresden), chair of the Select Committee on Children and Youth, said the report was alarming.Ah yes, Head-Democrat-In-Charge blames the study. Of course, he couldn't possible blame poor leadership (i.e., Gov. Bredesen).“The study is either false or unconscionable in reporting that our children are this poorly treated,” Herron said.
And then there's this:
Nationally, Tennessee ranked 46 on how children in the state are faring in several areas including infant mortality, low birth weight babies and teenage pregnancies.We should change our state motto. Something like: Best State to Live In . . . If You Got No Children.
Technorati Tags: Tennessee Education Failure, Failing Our Children, Killing Our Future, School Dropouts, Governor Phil Bredesen, Another Bredesen Failure.
I'll cover the canned speech a little later, but first I must tell you that immediately after Ed's (first) talk I walked up to shake his hand. He looked at me carefully, reached out to shake my hand and said, "It's good to see you again."
As far as I can recall, I have met Mr. Bryant exactly one time: over a year ago on February 24, 2005. Why can't I have a memory like that?
After a few pleasantries, I told Ed that I was glad to hear that he believed that the 2nd Amendment allows citizens to carry weapons for self protection. I then swept back my sports jacket on my side and showed him my belt, saying, "I wear this empty holster so that every day I am reminded that our freedoms are being taken away. Not just the Second Amendment, but all our rights. So that issue is very important to me."
We then talked about the importance of protecting our rights and the need for real conservatives on the Judiciary Committee (which, given his background, I believe he would be chosen to serve on).
As to his speech, I actually heard Ed Bryant twice tonight: at a small "meet and greet" and then (after a short walk down the hall to a larger room) at the local Bartlett chapter of the GOP. So the following is the paraphrasing of a compilation of the two talks. Basically, Ed said: