Showing posts with label Justice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Justice. Show all posts

Friday, 4 May 2018

Justice R K. Agrawal says, independence of the Judiciary One of the foundations of democracy । न्यायपालिका की स्वतंत्रता लोकतंत्र की बुनियाद में से एक : न्यायमूर्ति आर के अग्रवाल

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नई दिल्लीः सुप्रीम कोर्ट के निवर्तमान न्यायाधीश आर के अग्रवाल ने शुक्रवार को कहा कि न्यायपालिका की स्वतंत्रता लोकतंत्र की बुनियाद में से एक है और बार की स्वतंत्रता न्यायपालिका की स्वतंत्रता की पूर्व शर्त है. न्यायमूर्ति अग्रवाल सुप्रीम कोर्ट में चार साल के कार्यकाल के बाद शुक्रवार (4 अप्रैल) सेवानिवृत्त हुए. उन्होंने कहा कि स्वतंत्र समाज के लिये बार और बेंच अपरिहार्य हैं. न्यायमूर्ति अग्रवाल ने कहा , ‘‘ न्यायपालिका की स्वतंत्रता लोकतंत्र की बुनियाद में से एक है और वकीलों ने लोकतंत्र के स्तंभ को कायम रखने के लिये कठोर प्रयास किया है. बार की स्वतंत्रता न्यायपालिका की स्वतंत्रता की पूर्व शर्त है , जिसके जरिये अगर जरूरत पड़ी तो उनकी स्वतंत्रता का समर्थन किया जा सकता है. ’’ उन्होंने सुप्रीम कोर्ट बार एसोसिएशन द्वारा आयोजित कार्यक्रम में अपने विदाई भाषण में यह बात कही.


प्रधान न्यायाधीश दीपक मिश्रा ने आज कहा कि न्यायाधीशों का यह कर्तव्य है कि वे वकीलों के प्रति सम्मान दिखाएं , भले ही उनकी आयु या दर्जा कुछ भी हो. न्यायमूर्ति मिश्रा कार्यक्रम में मुख्य अतिथि थे. उन्होंने कहा , ‘‘ सुप्रीम कोर्ट एक है. बार हमें प्रोत्साहित करता है और हर मौके पर हमने बार के युवा सदस्यों से कहा है कि वे मार्गदर्शक फरिश्ता बनें. यह उम्र नहीं बल्कि बार में प्रवेश आपको महत्वपूर्ण बनाता है. आपका चाहे कोई भी कद या दर्जा हो , आप सम्मान के हकदार हैं और यह न्यायाधीशों का कर्तव्य है कि वे बार के सदस्यों के प्रति सम्मान प्रकट करें , भले ही उनकी उम्र या दर्जा कुछ भी हो. ’’ 


न्यायमूर्ति अग्रवाल पर प्रधान न्यायाधीश ने कहा , ‘‘ वह एक काम से मुक्त हो रहे हैं --- अगर आप ईर्ष्या महसूस कर रहे हैं तो आप उनका बहिष्कार कर रहे हैं. अगर आप उद्विग्न हैं तो आप उन्हें काम करने के लिये पांच साल और दे दें. कब , कहां और कैसे , मैं नहीं कह सकता. ’’ उन्होंने कहा , ‘‘ लेकिन अगर यह बार की इच्छा है तो आपको जरूर मिलेगा. मैं इसे बार की ओर से सहमति मानता हूं कि आप उन्हें कहीं और देखना चाहते हैं. मुझे उम्मीद है कि इसमें कोई असहमति नहीं है. ’’ 


न्यायमूर्ति अग्रवाल उत्तर प्रदेश के रहने वाले हैं. उन्हें 17 फरवरी 2014 को शीर्ष अदालत के न्यायाधीश के तौर पर शपथ दिलाई गई थी. न्यायमूर्ति अग्रवाल ने कहा कि युवा वकील ‘‘ कानूनी वातावरण की ऑक्सीजन हैं. ’’ उन्होंने कहा , ‘‘ अगर हम उन्हें ड्राफ्ट करने और दलील पेश करने का उचित मौका देते हैं तो यह उन्हें अधिक जिम्मेदारियां लेने में सक्षम बनाएगा. युवा वकील कानूनी वातावरण की ऑक्सीजन हैं. ’’ न्यायमूर्ति अग्रवाल ने कहा , ‘‘ बार और बेंच का संबंध एक ही सिक्के के दो पहलू हैं. न ही एक को दूसरे पर प्राथमिकता हासिल है. दोनों मुक्त समाज के लिये अपरिहार्य हैं. ’’ 


(इनपुट भाषा)




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Thursday, 3 May 2018

Justice Department Releases New Sexual Harassment Guidelines

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The policies direct sections to systematically track sexual harassment claims. Each allegation must specify the nature of the claim, whether it was reported to the inspector general or to security, and the disciplinary action taken. And they say that managers must account for such allegations before giving an employee an award or other public commendation.

But the guidelines allow each unit to decide how best to enforce many of the new directives, a decision that critics say does not comply with one of the inspector general’s top recommendations of equal policy enforcement across the department.

The department’s sprawling network of prosecutorial offices and other outposts employ more than 115,000 staff members. The different sections also have different reputations concerning how they treat employees.

“There should not be discretion among components in how each applies a directive,” said Cathy Harris, an employment lawyer at Kator, Parks, Weiser & Harris. “You could have one component say it will wait 30 days after a complaint before investigating it, whereas another could launch an investigation within a business day. What we need here is top-down leadership.”

Over the past five years, the inspector general has issued at least four reports detailing episodes of harassment, assault and sexual misconduct at the department, including the solicitation of prostitutes and employees asking colleagues to watch pornography.

In the most recent report, issued in May, Mr. Horowitz described instructors who had slept with trainees and an employee who had stalked a colleague. Managers were inconsistent in how they punished wrongdoers, he said, and in whether they enforced those penalties.



The deputy attorney general and his office have been slow to respond. Mr. Horowitz gave the department 60 days after that report was released to indicate how it would address his concerns. Mr. Rosenstein issued the policies eight months after that deadline.


Soon after the May report, a group of Justice Department employees asked to meet with the deputy attorney general’s office, according to employees briefed on those requests. In a letter written in August, they sought to be part of any next steps. Officials responded to that letter in December.

Over the past year, two women have come forward to publicly accuse colleagues of retaliation after they reported sexual harassment. A Times investigation in March found that officials had ignored years of complaints that supervisors in the death penalty unit had engaged in gender discrimination and sexual harassment. The department investigated some of the allegations, one of which was supported by texts and firsthand accounts, but the men are still department employees.

Three days after The Times published its article, Mr. Horowitz met with Justice Department employees to talk about sexual harassment. Hundreds packed the department’s Great Hall, filling seats and lining the perimeter of the room.

The moderator for the event told fellow employees that department officials had responded to the inspector general’s report last year by saying that the episodes he uncovered had all occurred under the Obama administration. Mr. Horowitz said that sexual harassment was a systemic issue and that he hoped it would be taken seriously “no matter who’s in charge.”

Employees told Mr. Horowitz that they were frustrated that people were rarely fired after being found guilty of harassment and assault. He replied that people in the department were taking “far more seriously” issues that in the past had not, and that his office had seen cases that resulted in terminations that “we’re not sure in the past would have been handled as terminations.”

Mr. Horowitz said that the department was likely to enforce more severe punishments as it took harassment more seriously.

The Justice Department’s new policies make explicit that substantiated sexual harassment cases should result in “a penalty ranging from a 15-day suspension to removal.”

But Mr. Horowitz warned at the meeting that the department could face other challenges as it became more wiling to issue harsher penalties. Individuals found guilty of wrongdoing “often challenge some of the harsher, you know stronger penalties.” He said that in the past, their punishments have been softened after they pushed back.


“If you have zero tolerance, how can you permit people found to have committed more egregious acts of harassment or assault to continue to work and walk the halls?” said Ms. Harris, the lawyer. “The Justice Department is a very prestigious place to work. They can enforce true zero tolerance and fire people, which is what is happening in corporate America right now.”

At the death penalty unit, the deputy supervisor there was accused of groping his administrative assistant at a restaurant, trying to persuade her to check into a hotel and sending her texts offering to give her money or take her on a trip. Colleagues who had witnessed the episode at the restaurant and read the texts told managers and the inspector general. That supervisor still works at the Justice Department and is appealing the department’s decision to move him to a different unit.

“The question this raises is who does the Department of Justice prioritize?” Ms. Harris said. “Right now, they’re worried about being sued by harassers. They should be worried about being sued by the victims whose claims are ignored. That will be much more damaging to the department’s reputation.”



Correction: May 4, 2018

An earlier version of this article misattributed a statement referring to how Justice Department officials responded to a sexual harassment report. It was a Justice Department employee, not Michael E. Horowitz, the department’s inspector general, who said that officials had responded by saying that those episodes had all occurred under the Obama administration.


An earlier version of this article also incorrectly stated how Mr. Horowitz believed the department would begin to respond to sexual harassment. He said that he believed the department would fire more people than it had in the past and that people who receive harsher punishments often push back, not that he believed the department would not fire more people and would be sued.




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Wednesday, 2 May 2018

Supreme Court Collegium Decision On Justice K.m. Joseph On Hold - जस्टिस जोसेफ के मामले पर सुप्रीम कोर्ट कॉलेजियम की बैठक बेनतीजा

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ब्यूरो, अमर उजाला, नई दिल्ली
Updated Thu, 03 May 2018 02:42 AM IST





Supreme Court collegium decision on Justice K.M. Joseph on hold






ख़बर सुनें






उत्तराखंड हाईकोर्ट के चीफ जस्टिस केएम जोसेफ को सुप्रीम कोर्ट का जज नियुक्त करने की फाइल सरकार के पास दोबारा भेजने को लेकर कॉलेजियम बुधवार को अंतिम निर्णय नहीं ले सका। 


हालांकि इस बैठक से लगभग साफ हो गया है कि अगली बार जब भी कॉलेजियम सुप्रीम कोर्ट के जजों की नियुक्ति की सिफारिश सरकार को भेजेगा, उसमें जस्टिस जोसेफ के नाम के साथ कुछ और जजों के नाम भी होंगे।

चीफ जस्टिस दीपक मिश्रा और सुप्रीम कोर्ट के चार वरिष्ठतम जजों की कॉलेजियम बैठक करीब 35 मिनट चली। चूंकि बुधवार को दूसरे वरिष्ठतम जज जस्टिस जे चेलमेश्वर छुट्टी पर थे, इसलिए कयास लगाया जा रहा था कि बैठक न हो। लेकिन करीब सवा चार बजे वह सुप्रीम कोर्ट पहुंचे और कॉलेजियम की बैठक में हिस्सा लिया।

कॉलेजियम के समक्ष दो मुद्दे थे। पहला, जस्टिस जोसेफ का नाम दोबारा भेजा जाए या नहीं और दूसरा, कलकत्ता, राजस्थान और तेलंगाना एवं आंध्र प्रदेश हाईकोर्ट के जजों को सुप्रीम कोर्ट भेजने के मसले पर विचार। फिलहाल, कॉलेजियम की अगली बैठक को लेकर कोई तारीख तय नहीं की गई है।





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Trump Assails Justice Dept., Siding With House Conservatives in Dispute

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But those efforts have not quieted two of Mr. Trump’s most loyal supporters on Capitol Hill, Representatives Mark Meadows of North Carolina and Jim Jordan of Ohio. In an unusual show of defiance of their committee chairman, they have insisted the agreement is not good enough and that they need access to an unredacted version of an August 2017 memo outlining the scope of Mr. Mueller’s investigation.

Democrats fear that the requests — many of which call on the department to ignore longstanding policy about what it shares with Congress — are merely meant to provide Mr. Trump with a reason to fire Mr. Mueller.

Representative Jerrold Nadler of New York, the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, said the latest Republican efforts were “clearly trying to sabotage” the Mueller investigation and court a confrontation with Mr. Rosenstein.

“All of this noise is aimed at undermining the special counsel’s work as the investigation closes in on the president,” Mr. Nadler said in a statement. “The president’s attacks on the Department of Justice grow more paranoid by the day. The case for obstruction of justice — and the complicity of these House Republicans — grows day by day as well.”



Mr. Rosenstein has made clear he does not intend to go further.

The Justice Department wrote to Mr. Meadows and Mr. Jordan on Monday to deny them access to the document about the scope of the Russia inquiry, citing department policy against sharing information on a continuing investigation.

And on Tuesday, reacting to reports that Mr. Meadows had drafted articles of impeachment to use against him if needed, Mr. Rosenstein declared that the Justice Department would not be extorted.

“There have been people who have been making threats, privately and publicly, against me for quite some time,” he said at an event in Washington. “And I think they should understand by now, the Department of Justice is not going to be extorted.”

Mr. Meadows fired back, saying that Mr. Rosenstein was stonewalling legitimate oversight requests and calling on him to resign.


Last month, Mr. Trump said Mr. Rosenstein faced conflicts of interest and criticized him for signing a search warrant application to permit federal agents to eavesdrop on one of the president’s former campaign aides. Mr. Rosenstein assumed oversight of the investigation and appointed Mr. Mueller as special counsel after the attorney general, Jeff Sessions, recused himself last year. Mr. Trump has repeatedly attacked Mr. Sessions for his recusal.

The president has previously said he is frustrated that he is not supposed to be involved with Justice Department matters.

“I am not supposed to be involved with the F.B.I. I’m not supposed to be doing the kind of things that I would love to be doing. And I’m very frustrated by it,” Mr. Trump said in an interview last November.

The president’s threats, though vague, come at a time when he has been on the defensive after the disclosure of more than 40 questions that the special counsel would like him to answer. The questions touch on a variety of topics, including coordination with the Russians during the presidential campaign and actions Mr. Trump has taken as president and whether they were intended to derail the inquiry, undercutting the president’s repeated claims that the investigation is a “hoax.”


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Justice Dept. Won’t Be Extorted, Rosenstein Warns Republicans

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“If we’re going to accuse somebody of wrongdoing, we have to have admissible evidence and credible witnesses,” Mr. Rosenstein said. “We need to prepare to prove our case in court. And we have to affix our signature to the charging document.”

Mr. Meadows fired back, accusing Mr. Rosenstein of stonewalling and calling on him to resign.

“If he believes being asked to do his job is ‘extortion,’ then Rod Rosenstein should step aside and allow us to find a new deputy attorney general — preferably one who is interested in transparency,” Mr. Meadows, the chairman of the conservative Freedom Caucus, said in a statement.

The draft impeachment articles are unlikely to advance through the House, where the Judiciary Committee and possibly the full chamber would have a say. But they represent the most explicit threat yet to Mr. Rosenstein by lawmakers with close ties to Mr. Trump.



The lawmakers have been threatening to impose sanctions on or even impeach Mr. Rosenstein, 53, on and off for months as they have tangled over access to sensitive documents related to some of the F.B.I.’s most politically charged cases. Democrats have feared that Republicans would use any failure to comply as a pretext to fire the deputy attorney general.

The rebuke from Mr. Rosenstein was at odds with his earlier actions. He has worked to meet the demands of lawmakers, recently letting them review an almost completely unredacted F.B.I. memo on the opening of a still-active investigation of the Trump campaign, a highly unusual step.

Mr. Rosenstein also personally signed off on an F.B.I. raid of the home, office and hotel room of Michael D. Cohen, the president’s personal lawyer. In the days that followed, the president and his allies in Congress escalated their criticisms of Mr. Rosenstein, whose oversight of the Russia investigation gives him power to narrow the scope of the inquiry. Democrats fear that a new deputy attorney general could hobble the investigation without ending it, a move that could create havoc ahead of the midterm elections.

While he was critical of Republican lawmakers, Mr. Rosenstein was more flattering of Mr. Trump during Tuesday’s event at the Newseum in Washington honoring the Constitution and the rule of law.


He said that there is no threat “to the rule of law in America today” because it is protected by the Constitution.

He also fought back against accusations that Mr. Trump’s continued assailing of law enforcement officials has undermined the Justice Department’s traditional independence from political interference. Noting that the department is “not independent of the executive branch,” he said its mission was to enforce the law as well as carry out the priorities of the administration, and that the two were not in conflict.

Mr. Rosenstein sometimes spoke with the emphasis of a prosecutor giving closing arguments before a jury. At times he drew a copy of the Constitution from his breast pocket and brandished it to make a point.

But he also held forth on less weighty matters, including pronunciation of his own last name, an occasional topic of lighthearted debate in Washington.

“So, there’s no right answer to that,” he said. “My father pronounces it ‘stine.’ That’s how I pronounce it. But I actually have relatives who pronounce it ‘steen,’ so I’ll answer to either one.”


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"Release Them": Relatives Of Gaza Hostages Break Into Israeli Parliament Panel

A group of relatives of Israelis held hostage by Palestinian gunmen in Gaza rushed into a parliamentary committee session in Jerusalem on Mo...