THE ALABAMA JUDICIAL INQUIRY COMMISSION:
concerns are whether a judge acts with ill will, bad faith, or malice.
Judge Roy Moore did NOT; read below where a Judge DID.
Alabama's Judicial Inquiry Commission,
on November 12, 2003, removed from office Alabama's highest Judge,
Chief Supreme Court Justice Roy Moore.
On November 15, 2002, the same Commission upheld for Judge Burt Smithart
in this well-documented case of bad faith, ill will,
malice, and his being willfully negligent.
The above components were the sole basis of my case:
bad faith, ill will, malice, and willful negligence.
Judge Burt Smithart has allegations
against him in Federal Court also,
so why wasn't he suspended
pending the outcome?
The people have a right
for that question to be answered. Smithart's actions were those of wreckless disregard for human life.
Enclosed are supporting documents
of Beverly Brabham's case.
The complaint to the
Judicial Inquiry Commission and supporting documents
are rife with the criteria that should
at least have Judge Smithart
reprimanded in some form. He
acted with willful, wreckless disregard for a human being's life.
Instead, the J.I.C. protected their
'own' without question.
The documents are self-explanatory.
Sincerely,
Beverly Brabham
The Alabama Judicial Inquiry Commission
heard the following
complaint on Judge Burt Smithart from Beverly Brabham
on November 15, 2002.
Attorney, for Beverly Brabham, Scott Johnson, sends Motion to Judge, that his deliberately harmful error be corrected. Judge Smithart ignored the Motion to Correct Harmful Error.
Judge Gaither's Affidavits Judge Gaither wrote the second Affidavit after discovering that Judge Smithart lied about Judge Gaither's testimony in the above order
It is an ominous sign of an irretrievably broken system when the United States Federal Courts refuse to protect a citizen's guaranteed Constitutional Rights! Who else are they to be guaranteed by???
Beverly Brabham's plea to the Alabama Judicial Inquiry Commission for justice and relief. The Commission turned a deaf ear. The case was rife with bad faith, ill will, and malice.