Posted by
Mike Bates on Saturday, March 28, 2009 12:00:57 PM
When a former Alabama judge is indicted on 57 felony counts,
including sodomy, kidnapping and paddling jail inmates, that's news.
If the judge is a Democrat once under consideration for the Federal
bench by Bill Clinton, that part isn't news.
MSNBC's Web site reports "Former Judge Herman Thomas Indicted on Sex, Ethics Charges." The piece begins:
Former Mobile County Circuit Judge Herman Thomas has
bonded out of the Mobile County Metro Jail after he was arrested Friday
afternoon. Before his arrest, Thomas was indicted by a grand jury on 57
felony counts, accusing him of, among other things, sexually abusing
Mobile County inmates in exchange for favors in his courtroom. Thomas
is charged with ethics violations, kidnapping, extortion, sexual abuse
and sodomy. The indictment against him includes graphic details of
alleged paddling and other sexual favors. Eight victims are named in
the indictment. All of the alleged victims are men.
Other news outlets covering the story included the Montgomery Advertiser, the Press-Register, SunHerald.com, and WKRG TV 5 in Mobile.
None identified the judge as a Democrat. The January 4, 2000 Mobile
Register did. In a story titled "Too late? Clinton may not get to fill
judgeship," the newspaper reported in a subtitle:
Senate may not allow Clinton pick: Herman Thomas has
been a leading candidate for federal berth, but his chances may be
dimmed by a GOP freeze
From the article:
It is "probably too late" for a Clinton nominee to
clear the Senate before his term ends early next year, Sen. Jeff
Sessions, R-Mobile, said in an interview last week. Sessions is a
member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which screens the judicial
nominees.
The delay could be bad news for Circuit Judge Herman Thomas of
Mobile, a Democrat who emerged as the leading candidate for the
position in 1997 after a state patronage committee recommended him for
the opening.
Thomas' chances seemed to fade in 1997 amid reports that the American Bar Association had questioned his fitness for the job.
But interest in Thomas appeared to surge again last summer, when
federal investigators and bar association officials resumed the
interviewing of his legal, political and social associates.
Herman Thomas: Yet another Democrat whose party affiliation isn't worth mentioning. At least not by the mainstream media.