Court Opinion

ID: 4126074
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-02-15 07:18:14.803574+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:50:14.817336
License: Public Domain

FILED
No. 16-0670 – In re Callaghan                                               February 9, 2017
                                                                                released at 3:00 p.m.
                                                                              RORY L. PERRY II, CLERK
Matish, Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part:                   SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
                                                                                 OF WEST VIRGINIA 

              The majority considers the recommendation1 of the Judicial Hearing Board of two

concurrent one-year periods of suspension without pay to be too lenient, instead ordering

two consecutive one-year suspensions without pay be imposed, plus a $15,000 fine, costs,

and a public reprimand. While I concur with the majority’s reasoning as to the

seriousness of this matter, I respectfully disagree as to the length of the suspension. The

entire circumstance merits additional charges and punishment because, after reviewing

the record presented and hearing oral argument, it is my opinion that the punishment is

still not severe enough, because of the numerous violations that occurred with the so-

called Obama flyer alone.

              Judge-elect Callaghan committed, at minimum, three violations of the Code of

Judicial Conduct, Rules 4.1(A)(9), 4.2(A)(1), and 4.2(A)(4), and one violation of the

Rules of Professional Conduct, Rule 8.2(a), and, there needs to be, at least, a one-year

suspension for each violation.

              The Formal Statement of Charges put him on notice, without any violation of his

due process rights, of numerous violations that occurred for each so-called Obama flyer
                                                            
1
 Pursuant to Rule 4.8 of the Rules of Judicial Disciplinary Procedure, the Judicial
Hearing Board “shall file a written recommended decision with the Clerk of the Supreme
Court of Appeals.”
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mailed (the exact number is unknown), to the voters of Nicholas County, and over 6,700

voted in the election. Additionally, Judge-elect Callaghan claimed that his best tool in

advertising was his personal and/or separate campaign Facebook pages. He estimated that

he attracted at least hundreds of people, which for each occurrence of someone accessing

his personal and/or separate campaign Facebook pages, caused his campaign to

knowingly distribute information with reckless disregard for its truth, making false

statements with respect to each repeated publication.

       This Court has previously discussed the issue of multiple offenses occurring

within the same course of conduct. In State v. McGilton, 229 W. Va. 554, 729 S.E.2d 876

(2012), the Court held a Defendant may be convicted of multiple offenses of malicious

assault under West Virginia Code § 61-2-9(a) (2004) against the same victim even when

the offenses were a part of the same course of conduct. Syl. Pt. 9, Id. The Court went on

to explain such convictions do not violate the double jeopardy provisions contained in

either the United States Constitution or the West Virginia Constitution as long as the facts

demonstrate separate and distinct violations of the statute. Id.

       Additionally, the majority could have just as easily found violations for each

untruthful statement of the so-called “Obama flyer,” which included: (1) the photo-

shopped pictures of President Obama and Judge Gary Johnson with the beer, since there

was no party attended with President Obama where alcohol was served; (2) that Judge

Johnson was not invited by the President; (3) that President Obama was not even present;

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(4) that Judge Johnson did not go to the White House; and (5) none of this had anything

to do with Judge Johnson defending jobs in Nicholas County. Each of these violations,

having occurred in the so-called “Obama flyer” that was mailed to the voters and having

been placed upon two separate Facebook posts, would amount to a multiplier of, at a

minimum, three separate postings or publications, for a minimum of fifteen violations, in

and of itself, justifying as much as a fifteen-year suspension.

       Furthermore, four of Judge-elect Callaghan’s flyers make reference to a Juvenile

Drug Court fee and a “Hidden Price to Justice in Nicholas County” with respect to the so-

called Juvenile Drug Court fee of $5 which, by virtue of West Virginia Code § 49-4-716,

does not and could not exist with respect to funds being collected for a Juvenile Drug

Court, but rather only exist with respect to a Teen Court, a totally unrelated type of

treatment court. While Judge-elect Callaghan testified that he used these terms

interchangeably, a first year law student, in five minutes, reviewing West Virginia Code §

49-4-716 and § 62-15-4, could tell they are not the same, and, in fact, Judge-elect

Callaghan explained in his January 25, 2016, email to his media company that he knew

the difference, yet he used untruthful information in these flyers.

       Furthermore, one of Judge-elect Callaghan’s flyers contains a color photocopy of a

$100 bill, which appears to be a violation of 18 U.S.C.A. § 475, which prohibits using the

likeness or similitude of any obligation of the United States in any notice, circular,

handbill, or advertisement that is printed, distributed, circulated, or used. While there is

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an exception under 31 C.F.R. § 411.1 that authorizes color illustrations, they must be of a

size less than three-fourths or more than one and one half in linear dimension of an actual

$100 bill and one-sided. The exhibit provided to the Court is one-sided, however, it does

not appear to be less than three-fourths, nor is it more than one and one half in linear

dimension of an actual $100 United States currency bill, assuming that, the exhibit is an

actual sized photocopy of the notice, circular, handbill, or advertisement that was printed,

distributed, circulated, or used. All of these additional violations were apparently tried by

the parties by consent, and should have also been cause for appropriate sanctions, or at

least considered as aggravating circumstances justifying additional sanctions.

       As a country, we have gone far astray from what is right and what is good. We

have become the most connected nation with our cell phones, smart phones, tablets,

computers, and social media, while simultaneously becoming the most disconnected

nation because of our cell phones, smart phones, tablets, computers, and social media. In

trying to one up the next guy at his expense, we fail to realize that we harm ourselves in

the process. Once you hit “Send,” it is out there forever, and you cannot take it back.

       As a judge or judicial candidate, you are expected to have a standard to live up to,

not only in your personal life and how you conduct yourself on the bench, but how you

run a campaign to secure the trust of the public in voting to elect you. It is disturbing to

me that Judge-elect Callaghan admitted to reading the Code of Judicial Conduct when he

decided to run. However, the Code of Judicial Conduct was later changed and adopted

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December 1, 2015, yet Judge-elect Callaghan, in his testimony, never admitted to stating

specifically that he read the new Code of Judicial Conduct nor talked about any Code of

Judicial Conduct to the media company he hired. Also, the media company admitted to

not having talked with Judge-elect Callaghan about it either.

       The falsity used by Judge-elect Callaghan in his campaign perpetrated a fraud

upon the voters of Nicholas County, the 28th Judicial Circuit. By his own actions, he has

shown that he is unfit to hold a judicial office, and, at the appropriate time, a new election

should be held.

       Judge-elect Callaghan may very well have won the election fair and square based

upon other factors in Nicholas County, or the fact he pointed to in one of his other flyers

that after a certain amount of time, things need changed, but instead he resorted to certain

falsities, which definitely are not to be tolerated in a judicial election. We may now live

in a world of “fake news” and “alternate facts,” but if we cannot trust, honor, and respect

our Judges and Justices, who can we trust?

       Since Judge-elect Callaghan was first an attorney running for a judicial office, I

would give him a one-year suspension as an attorney, followed by a year for each

violation of the Code of Judicial Conduct, for a total suspension of four years. However,

the possibility exists under the facts of this case that the suspension could be for much

longer, as stated above. Therefore, I respectfully dissent as to the length of punishment,

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and would order Judge-elect Callaghan to serve four one-year consecutive periods of

suspension from the bench, without pay, in addition to the fines and costs imposed by the

majority.

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