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Showing posts with label Allegheny Co. PA Judge Donna Jo McDaniel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allegheny Co. PA Judge Donna Jo McDaniel. Show all posts
Saturday, December 8, 2018
Allegheny Co PA Common Pleas Judge Donna Jo McDaniel gets booted from resentencing hearing of SO
An appeals courts rules against your court ruling and remands the case for resentencing. What do you do? If you're Donna Jo McDaniel, you respond by making the same ruling in defiance. This worthless excuse of a judge needs to be removed from the bench.
https://www.post-gazette.com/news/crime-courts/2018/11/28/allegheny-county-judge-donna-jo-mcdaniel-sex-offender-superior-court-remand/stories/201811280162
Superior Court removes Allegheny County judge from sex offender's resentencing
PAULA REED WARD
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
pward@post-gazette.com
NOV 28, 2018
The state Superior Court, in a rare move Wednesday, ordered Allegheny County Common Pleas Judge Donna Jo McDaniel to be removed from a case, finding that there was “substantial evidence” that she “demonstrated bias and personal animus” against both the defendant and the public defender’s office representing him.
The three-judge panel of the appellate court wrote a blistering 13-page opinion that also ordered that Anthony McCauley be sentenced again by a new judge. It is one of a series of opinions by the Superior Court dating to January 2017 in which Judge McDaniel has been questioned for her sentencing of sex offenders.
“The trial court’s animus and hostility to appellant’s counsel and the [Allegheny County] Public Defender’s office appears to be deep, unwavering and demonstrates an unjustified bias against the Public Defender’s office,” wrote Superior Court Judge Alice Beck Dubow.
The Superior Court also criticized Judge McDaniel for using inappropriate sarcasm in her written opinion; for denying McCauley a fair and constitutional sentencing hearing; and for failing to follow previous Superior Court orders, therefore wasting judicial resources.
Ordered to redo an 'unreasonable' sentence, judge responds by imposing the exact same punishment. In a footnote, the appellate court also chastised her for including the full name of the child victim in McCauley’s case in her opinion.
“Not only do we disapprove of this practice, but it is also contrary to [Pennsylvania law], which makes it a criminal offense for an officer or employee of the court to reveal the name of a minor victim of sexual abuse in documents available to the public,” Judge Dubow wrote.
Although the prospect of referring Judge McDaniel to the Judicial Conduct Board was raised by the prosecution during oral argument on McCauley’s case in April, the Superior Court opinion does not mention the disciplinary organization.
Judge McDaniel could not be reached for comment.
Amie Downs, the county’s spokeswoman, declined comment on behalf of the public defender’s office.
The most recent case to bring scorn from the Superior Court was an appeal of a second sentencing proceeding for McCauley, 45. He was convicted in 2014 of rape and years-long abuse of a girl.
Initially, Judge McDaniel sentenced McCauley to 20 to 40 years in prison. On appeal, McCauley’s defense attorney questioned whether that penalty was mandatory or discretionary.
The Superior Court sent the case back to Judge McDaniel in October 2016 and told her to clarify that question.
At resentencing in December 2016, she did not address that issue, the court found, and instead changed the penalty only slightly — to 20 years less two days to 40 years less four days.
Judge McDaniel did not allow McCauley to speak, did not review a new pre-sentence report for him, and did not provide any of the due process that is required for a criminal sentencing, the Superior Court concluded.
That prompted new appeals from the public defender’s office, which represented McCauley, and a request that Judge McDaniel recuse herself.
She refused.
In its opinion Wednesday, Superior Court wrote that it did not like Judge McDaniel’s behavior in the case.
“In particular, the trial court’s opinion is filled with gratuitous comments denigrating appellant’s counsel and the Public Defender’s office,” the panel wrote.
The three judges said they believe she made a “veiled threat” questioning the attorney’s and office’s credibility and implied that their continued appeal of her sentence could be “harmful to other criminal defendants who may actually have meritorious claims.”
The panel also criticized Judge McDaniel for sarcasm it said she used in her opinion.
“This sarcasm is disrespectful to appellant, counsel and the seriousness of the sentencing process,” they wrote.
Four times in the opinion, the panel said it was either “troubled” by Judge McDaniel’s actions or found them “troubling.”
The court cited her failure to follow its instructions on remand, including on two sex offender cases in which she was ordered to resentence the defendants and gave them the same penalties she’d previously imposed.
“This has resulted in an extensive deployment of judicial resources to review, analyze, and rectify the court’s deficient sentencing hearings,” the panel wrote.
In both of those cases, Judge McDaniel sentenced the defendants to twice what guidelines recommended.
At both hearings, Judge McDaniel said from the bench that she conducted a statistical analysis of her cases from 2012 to 2016, claiming that her sentences for sex offenders were comparable to those of other judges.
In its opinion Wednesday, the Superior Court noted that Judge McDaniel did not include any of her analyses in the certified record, making it impossible for the panel to consider her conclusions.
Still, it continued, “a statistical analysis would not compel a different result.”
President Judge Jeffrey A. Manning said late Wednesday that he had not seen the opinion and could not comment on it.
“Judge McDaniel is an extremely bright and dedicated judge who has for many years protected the rights of the accused and at the same time guarded the rights of the victims and witnesses in very serious, often vicious, sex offender cases which can spark significant disagreement between counsel and the court,” Judge Manning said.
“I will review the opinion and abide by the lawful orders of the appellate court.”
Sunday, January 15, 2017
PA: Allegheny County Judge Donna Jo McDaniel caught redheaded... er, "redhanded," regularly exceeding sentencing guidelines
Supporters of specialized "sex offender courts" should take notice, as this corrupt judge has been caught abusing her powers by exceeding state sentencing guidelines. Of course, she isn't going to be punished despite showing a pattern of this behavior. She shouldn't even have a job at this point.
http://www.post-gazette.com/local/city/2017/01/15/Pennsylvania-Superior-Court-questions-whether-Allegheny-County-Common-Pleas-judge-is-over-punishing-sex-offenders/stories/201701120030
Superior Court questions whether Common Pleas judge is over-punishing sex offenders
January 15, 2017 12:00 AM
By Paula Reed Ward / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
The Pennsylvania Superior Court questioned whether a veteran Allegheny County judge is meting out overly harsh sentences in sex assault cases in a strongly worded opinion ordering that a defendant be resentenced.
In the 36-page opinion last week, the appellate panel suggested that Common Pleas Judge Donna Jo McDaniel, who presides over sex offender court, has shown a pattern in those types of cases.
“We note our awareness of a possible emerging pattern in this particular sentencing court of routinely sentencing sex offenders in the aggravated sentencing range and/or outside the guidelines,” wrote Superior Court President Judge Emeritus John T. Bender.
The opinion then cited in a footnote another of Judge McDaniel’s cases, that against Gabino Bernal, who last month also was awarded a second new sentencing hearing on charges of unlawful contact with a minor, indecent assault of a person less than 13 and corruption of minors. The Superior Court panels in both cases included the same members, Judge Bender, Judge Lillian Harris Ransom and Senior Judge John L. Musmanno.
Judge McDaniel did not respond to a request for comment.
In Bernal’s appellate brief, filed by the Allegheny County Public Defender’s office, his attorneys listed 14 cases currently on appeal — 10 for sexual offenses — in which Judge McDaniel sentenced the defendants to serve the maximum possible penalty and ran multiple sentences consecutively.
“There will always be cases where circumstances call for, if not practically compel, sentences which exceed the standard guideline recommendations,” Judge Bender wrote, noting that trial judges have wide discretion. “However, we expect that sentencing courts understand that a standard range sentence is the norm and, consequently, that sentences which exceed (or fall below) the standard recommendation should be relatively infrequent by comparison.
“The appearance of bias, and doubt regarding a court’s commitment to individualized sentencing, both rationally emerge when such a pattern of routine deviation from sentencing norms is demonstrated by adequate evidence.”
In the most recent case, captioned as the Commonwealth vs. A.S., the defendant, now 21, pleaded guilty on Feb. 17, 2015, in two separate cases to four counts of indecent assault of a child less than 13, two counts of unlawful contact with a minor, two counts of endangering the welfare of children, two counts of corruption of minors, sexual assault, indecent assault and incest.
The charges involved his siblings, which is why he is identified in the opinion only by his initials.
At sentencing on June 24, 2015, Judge McDaniel ordered A.S. to serve 7½ to 15 years in prison.
However, under the sentencing guidelines in the case, the standard range on the first case would have been 3 to 12 months incarceration -— she gave him 30 to 60 months, which was outside of the aggravated sentencing range.
In the second case, the standard recommended range was 36 to 54 months, and Judge McDaniel gave A.S. 60 to 120 months, which was in the aggravated range.
A.S. challenged the sentence, arguing that Judge McDaniel relied on information not present in the case to support the punishment she meted out.
Among the statements made by Judge McDaniel at sentencing that the defense -— and subsequently the Superior Court -— said were untrue were:
• That the defendant had prior sexual contact with the victims, as well as with another minor, several years earlier.
The Superior Court said that the record in the case does not substantiate that claim, and that the pre-sentence investigation showed that the defendant had no prior convictions as a juvenile or adult, and there was no evidence he was ever charged with another offense.
• That the defendant did not seek psychiatric help for his sexual misconduct until after he was arrested.
The appellate panel found that the court record directly contradicted that finding, and that it was A.S. who went to an area hospital with depression and suicidal ideation and disclosed what he had done, prompting the investigation to begin.
Then, when interviewed by the police, A.S. again admitted his crimes, the court found.
“The clear impression given by the sentencing court was that [A.S] only self-servingly sought mental health treatment for his sexual dysfunction after he was arrested. This is a clear misrepresentation of the record,” Judge Bender wrote.
• That the impact of the crimes on the victims must be “absolutely horrendous.”
At sentencing, Judge McDaniel received letters from the two victims in the case, who wrote that they have forgiven their brother and miss him. Both wrote that they did not want him to go to jail and that they would like him to continue treatment.
“I think in spite of the letters that your brother and sister sent me, that the impact on them must be absolutely horrendous,” Judge McDaniel said at sentencing. “I can’t imagine a child of that age, children of that age going through being attacked by someone that they loved and trusted.”
But the Superior Court wrote that outside of those letters, there was nothing in the record concerning the impact of the crime.
Most concerning, the opinion continued, all of those impermissible factors considered by Judge McDaniel, appeared to guide her sentence above the recommended guidelines.
The court found a “disconnect” in evidence presented in the case which “told a wildly different story” than the sentence crafted by Judge McDaniel.
A.S. is a young man with no prior record of any kind, Judge Bender wrote, who has admitted his crimes and is seeking treatment. He has a supportive family that has forgiven him and wants to assist him in continuing his treatment.
Referencing the possible trend presented by the Bernal case, Judge Bender wrote that Judge McDaniel’s sentence of A.S. tends “to match such a pattern, given the extreme dissonance between the circumstances of this case and the sentence(s) imposed. This invites the obvious question: if the circumstances at issue here do not warrant a standard or mitigated range sentence, when, if ever, will such a sentence be warranted?” Judge Bender wrote.
Although the court did not go so far as to remove Judge McDaniel from the case against A.S. -— saying it did not have the authority to do so on its own -— it did suggest that he is able to ask for her to recuse herself from the resentencing. “in which context he may seek to develop a record of a pattern of bias, if one can be demonstrated by competent evidence.”
The Superior Court made a similar recommendation in its Dec. 19 opinion on Bernal, which it remanded for resentencing a second time.
Bernal was first sentenced by Judge McDaniel in 2013 to serve nine to 18 years in prison. However, the Superior Court found that punishment to be in error and ordered a new sentencing hearing.
Judge McDaniel then resentenced Bernal in 2015. Although the defense said at that hearing the guidelines called for three to 12 months incarceration in the standard range for the felony count, and probation for the misdemeanors, Judge McDaniel ordered Bernal to serve a total of six to 17 years in prison. That punishment included the statutory maximum for each count and stacked each one to run consecutively.
Bernal argued in his second appeal that Judge McDaniel abused her discretion and used the sentence as “retribution” for the crime.
“[T]he record reflects that the sentencing judge was determined to impose the maximum sentences permitted by statute, regardless of the guidelines,” the Superior Court wrote.
Paula Reed Ward: pward@post-gazette.com, 412-263-2620 or on Twitter: @PaulaReedWard.
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