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State Supreme Courts 
 
Panel selected to hear complaint against justice's rape ad
Gableman
MADISON, Wis. (Legal Newsline) - Recently elected Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman received good news and bad news Wednesday.

Gableman found out he will be formally sworn in Friday at 3 p.m., having won election to a 10-year term in April, but also discovered that judicial misconduct proceedings against him are advancing.

Court of Appeals Chief Judge Richard Brown selected three circuit judges to hear allegations that Gableman knowingly endorsed false statements about his opponent in an election ad. The judges will then report their findings of fact and conclusions of law and recommend any discipline to the Supreme Court, which will review the report and issue a final decision.

The judges are Harry Snyder, of Court of Appeals District 2, Ralph Adam Fine, of Court of Appeals District 1, and Neal Nettesheim, a reserve judge. Snyder is the presiding judge.

The state Judicial Commission says Gableman knowingly made false statements about his opponent in the April election, incumbent Louis Butler. A Gableman ad said Butler found a loophole to put a pedophile back on the streets, where he molested another child.

"The advertisement directly implied and was intended to convey the message that action or conduct of Louis Butler enabled or resulted in (Reuben Lee) Mitchell's release and Mitchell's subsequent commission of a criminal molestation," the complaint says.

"Each of these statements of fact constituting the message is false."

Butler was a public defender from 1979-92 and represented Mitchell for three years while Mitchell appealed his conviction. He was found guilty of raping an 11-year-old girl with a learning disability.

Both the Court of Appeals and Supreme Court agreed with Butler's argument that certain evidence had been wrongly admitted during Mitchell's trial, though the error was not significant enough to grant Mitchell a new trial.

He was released on parole in 1992 and three years later convicted of second-degree sexual assault of another child.

"Louis Butler did not cause, facilitate or enable Mitchell's release from prison and had no responsibility for or connection with Mitchell's subsequent commission of a crime," the complaint says.

"Prior to publication of the advertisement, Judge Gableman was familiar with the facts and holdings of both the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals decisions...

"At the time Judge Gableman approved and published the advertisement, he had no reason to believe that Louis Butler had any responsibility for or involvement in Mitchell's release from prison in 1992 or that any action by or work of Louis Butler had anything to do with Mitchell's commission of the subsequent criminal molestation referred to in the advertisement."

From Legal Newsline: Reach John O'Brien by e-mail at john@legalnewsline.com.

Filed Under: State Supreme Courts


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