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New Column: Conscientious Judge Railroaded for Denying Restraining Order Based on False Domestic Violence Charges

2007-10-29
By

My new co-authored column, Virginia Supreme Court Should Reinstate Local Judge Who Was Suspended for Doing His Duty (10/26/07), defends conscientious judge James Michael Shull, who smoked out a woman who sought to extend a restraining order based on false charges of domestic violence. The column ran in the Coalfield Progress, a newspaper in Wise County, where Shull serves.

I have examined the evidence in this case and it is clear to me that Shull is being railroaded. The case provides a sad but excellent example of what can happen to judges who take their responsibilities seriously when adjudicating domestic violence claims.

Most of all, the case is an infuriating example of how lightly our legal system takes false accusations against men. In this case, everyone agrees that Judge Shull was placed in a very difficult situation, and that he had to make a tough call where children could have been in imminent danger. Nobody even disputes that he got it right–and it doesn’t even matter!

The Virginia Supreme Court will decide Shull’s fate next week. The column, co-authored with Mike McCormick, Executive Director of the American Coalition for Fathers and Children, is below.

Virginia Supreme Court Should Reinstate Local Judge Who Was Suspended for Doing His Duty
By Mike McCormick and Glenn Sacks

The Virginia Supreme Court is currently considering removing a judge who should instead be honored. James Michael Shull, a local district judge who sits in Lee, Scott and Wise counties, has been suspended since December 20, 2006, and may be removed from office by the Supreme Court on November 2.

Shull’s problems stem from a case which came before him on December 15, 2006. In that case, Tammy G. had obtained a domestic violence protection order against her husband Keith G., claiming that he had stabbed her.

Protection orders based on dubious domestic violence accusations are a serious problem, both in Virginia and the United States as a whole. Under a protection order, one spouse—usually the father—is booted out of the marital home and pushed to the margins of his or her children’s lives. The orders are often used as custody maneuvers, or as punitive measures by angry intimate partners.

Some judges simply rubber stamp protection order requests. Others may doubt the veracity of the charges but nevertheless decide to “err on the side of caution” by granting them. Shull, to his credit, carefully examined the evidence in the G. case.

At the time of the G. hearing, the couple’s two young children, then ages three and five, were staying with their paternal grandmother. Keith testified that he hadn’t harmed Tammy, and that if she did have a wound, she had cut herself. Keith also testified that Tammy had committed a similar act on March 22, 2006, harming herself and then calling the police to report that Keith had attacked her.

Shull reasoned that he had to find the truth in order to protect the children from either a father who had stabbed their mother, or a mother who is a psychologically disturbed cutter.

Shull examined the wounds and found that they were four small, nearly identical, razor blade-like slices, all in a row, spaced evenly apart—hardly the type of wounds one would receive in domestic combat, and entirely consistent with Keith’s allegations that Tammy had cut herself.

Shull also examined the Wise County Sheriff’s Incident Report about Tammy G.’s March allegations. According to the report, G. “gave a statement that she had done this to herself to get attention,” and “admitted that she had self-inflicted her wounds.” The report discusses charging G. with filing a false police report over the incident.

G.’s credibility is further impugned by the fact that the Virginia Board of Nursing suspended her nursing license indefinitely in 2005 after G. admitted stealing numerous controlled substances from the hospital where she worked for “her personal and unauthorized use.” These included syringes of Morphine, Demerol, and Dilaudid, as well as OxyContin and other drugs.

Shull got in trouble because, according to the Virginia Lawyers’ Weekly, Tammy and Teresa Castle, the deputy clerk, claim that, in order to inspect the wound, he directed Tammy to expose herself twice during the hearing. The Virginia Judicial Inquiry and Review Commission “summarily suspended” Shull for “a substantial and serious breach of the dignity and decorum required in a Virginia courtroom.” He remains under suspension.

Shull and Daniel Fast, Keith G.’s attorney, assert that G. had offered to lower her pants both times in order to show Shull the wounds. According to the VLW, neither side disputes that “the privacy curtains in the courtroom were pulled before G. exposed herself.”

G.’s wound was on her right thigh, she was wearing pants, and the only way Shull could examine the wounds was to have her lower them. Perhaps Shull should have acted more cautiously. However, his need to protect the G. children by ruling correctly in this difficult, contentious case vastly outweighs G.’s privacy concerns. Most importantly, no party in the dispute is even claiming that Shull made the wrong decision in finding that the wounds in question were self-inflicted.

The JIRC Commission also asserts that Shull violated judicial ethics by making an allegedly ex parte call from his chambers to the hospital to verify that G. had indeed been treated there. Yet such calls are not particularly unusual, and Shull made the call as part of his duty to protect the G. children.

Shull’s conscientious pursuit of the truth in the G. case, for which he faces removal, was admirable. We urge the Virginia Supreme Court to dismiss these charges and reinstate him.

Alicia M. Crowe’s Real Dads Stand Up!
Alicia M. Crowe’s new book Real Dads Stand Up! explains what every single father should know about child support, rights and custody. www.realdadsstandup.com
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Didn't make Oprah's Book Club. And Ronnie doesn't care. Man up. Buy the book now on Amazon.com. Or listen to Ronnie tell a story at escaping-from-reality.com.


  • college activist

    NOW sponsored “judicial education retreats”????

    Interesting, Ille have to do some research into that one!!

  • CaptDMO

    SO help me out here-
    There’s no dispute that this woman is Munchausen/false report/ false accuser ?
    There’s no dispute that she’s an addict using a variety of IV drugs?
    There’s no dispute that she’s guilty of (not proscecuted, and I suspect GRAND) larceny?
    There’s no dispute that the husband is not guilty of ANY charges?

    This woman makes no complaint that the Judge demanded to see her wounds?
    This woman dropped her pants willingly? (I’m going to ASSUME she wasn’t commando but who cares?)
    Her privacy was maintained with a privacy curtain?

    Teresa Castle, deputy clerk, Wise County Court joined this woman in
    a complaint to Virginia Judicial Inquiry and Review Commission that Tammy G. exposed herself twice during the hearing. AND JIRC DIDN’T SHOW THEM THE DOOR
    IN A HURRY?

    Exposed her what? Evidence?

    Perhaps a review of how many of these honorable folk have participated in NOW
    sponsored judicial education retreats

    just sayin’

  • college activist

    Thanks hugo.. This case should be used by fathers to show what these women are doing…at the expense of their children!!

    Fathers mourning the alienation of their children from them…should act on this one!!

  • foxhole_104th

    Thank you Hugo. I will be sending my letter and will try to get everyone I know to do the same.

    patriotsofamerica@move-off.org

    http://www.move-off.org

  • tonysprout

    Disgusting!

  • Hugo

    Supreme Court of Virginia
    100 North Ninth Street, 5th Floor
    Richmond, Virginia 23219
    (804) 786-2251

  • foxhole_104th

    I think we should flood the Virginia Supreme Court with letters and e-mails in support of this honorable judge. Does anyone have any contact details?

    patriotsofamerica@move-off.org

    http://www.move-off.org







Right.

Man up.

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