In Re Manning

711 A.2d 1113, 1998 WL 216851
CourtCourt of Judicial Discipline of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 9, 1998
Docket1 JD 97
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 711 A.2d 1113 (In Re Manning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Judicial Discipline of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Manning, 711 A.2d 1113, 1998 WL 216851 (cjdpa 1998).

Opinion

MAGARO, Judge.

I.INTRODUCTORY SUMMARY

The Judicial Conduct Board (Board) filed a Complaint with this Court against Judge Jeffrey A Manning (Respondent). The Complaint consists of eight Counts which are based on the allegations of two African-American women, Carolyn Greene and Ursula Riggins, that the Respondent referred to Ms. Greene as a “nigger” on December 18, 1993 (paragraphs 4-15 of the Complaint and Counts 1-4) and referred to Ms. Riggins as a “nigger” on December 20, 1995 (paragraphs 17-26 of the Complaint and Counts 5-8). We find that the Board did not sustain its burden of establishing by clear and convincing evidence the allegations made by either complainant.

II. FINDINGS OF FACT

1. INTRODUCTORY

1. Respondent is a judge of the Court of Common Pleas for the Fifth Judicial District of Pennsylvania which encompasses Allegheny County.

2. Respondent has served as judge of that Court from June 10,1988 to the present.

3. The Board filed a Complaint against respondent with the Court on March 20, 1997.

4. The Board divided the Complaint into two parts:

Part A (paragraphs 4-15) contains the allegations of Carolyn Greene regarding events alleged to have occurred on December 18, 1993. Counts 1-4 are based on these allegations.

Part B (paragraphs 17-26) contains the allegations of Ursula Riggins regarding events alleged to have occurred on December 20, 1995. Counts 5-8 are based on these allegations.

*1114 2. PARTA

5. William H. Difenderfer is a lawyer who has practiced law in Allegheny County since 1983.

6. Carolyn Greene commenced employment as a legal secretary with the law firm of Laughlin and Difenderfer in 1989. During 1993 Ms. Greene was working directly for Mr. Difenderfer.

7. On Saturday, December 18, 1993, Difenderfer hosted a party at his home in Pittsburgh. Over the course of the evening some one hundred and fifty guests were in attendance. Among the guests were Carolyn Greene and respondent. Carolyn Greene is African-American; respondent is white. 1

8. Carolyn Greene was accompanied by an unidentified friend. Respondent was accompanied by Rebecca McHolmes. Greene arrived around 9 p.m. and left around 11 p.m. Respondent arrived around 9 p.m. and departed around 12:30 a.m.

9. At the trial Ms. Greene testified that: — When she arrived, respondent was
playing a guitar in the living room. — Sometime around 10:30 p.m. she was socializing with a group of people in the kitchen when the music stopped playing in the kitchen.
— The stereo system was capable of playing two CDs simultaneously, and at the time, the music in the kitchen was “like pop, rock and roll, jazz and mixture” and the music in the living room was “country-western.”
— She was asked to change the CD.
— Robert Quinn, Difenderfer’s brother-in-law, went with her to the sunroom where the CD player and stereo system were located.
— She placed a new CD in the player, closed the drawer and pressed the button to start play whereupon the country-western music in the living room was replaced by different music.
— Respondent, who had been in the living room, came up behind her in the doorway of the sunroom while she and Mr. Quinn were bent over the stereo trying to figure out what they did wrong and she heard him say ‘Why did you let that nigger change that music?”
— She did not see him say those words.

10. Respondent was not playing a guitar when Ms. Greene arrived or at any other time that evening.

11. The stereo system was capable of playing only one CD at a time which would be heard over all speakers.

12. At the time of the alleged incident, Ms. Greene was intoxicated and Mr. Quinn was extremely intoxicated.

13. At the time of the alleged incident, Donna Jo McDaniel, Rebecca McHolmes, and Anthony Mariani were close enough to hear what respondent said to Ms. Greene or Mr. Quinn.

14. McDaniel was six to eight feet from respondent when he spoke to Quinn. McHolmes was “close enough to touch him,” and Mariani was “within a foot or so.” None of the three heard respondent use the word “nigger.”

15. Carolyn Greene did not file her Complaint with the Board until twenty-nine months later, in May, 1996, after she had called on the “hotline” established by WPXI-TV, Pittsburgh, which importuned the public to furnish the station with information tending to show that respondent was a racist.

16. Respondent did not use the word “nigger” on the evening of December 18, 1993 at Mr. Difenderfer’s Christmas party.

*1115 3. PART B

17. On the afternoon of December 20, 1995, respondent and his fiancée, Kathleen Murphy, accompanied respondent’s sixteen year old son, Richard, to the Pittsburgh International Airport. Richard was travelling to some destination for the Christmas holidays on a flight scheduled to depart at 5:05 p.m. that day.

18. Respondent, his son and fiancée, arrived at a security checkpoint at approximately 4:30 p.m.

19. Ogden Aviation Co. provided the security at the airport and its employees were manning the checkpoint. Ursula Riggins was stationed at the x-ray machine and Bridget Eiselt and Michael Melnikof, Ogden supervisors, were stationed at a “podium” which was located approximately 25 feet from Riggins. A total of eighteen Ogden employees were working at the checkpoint at the time.

20. December 20 was the busiest day of 1995 at the airport and it was crowded and noisy at the checkpoint.

21. Respondent failed to clear the magnetometer which required that he be hand-scanned. He handed a garment bag to Rig-gins requesting that she hold it while he was being hand-scanned. Riggins is African-American; respondent is white. 2

22. Riggins took the bag from respondent but was reluctant to do so as it interfered with her job which was to closely observe the x-ray monitor.

23. After some short period of time Rig-gins decided she should not hold the bag any longer and placed it at the end of the convey- or belt. This required her to leave her position and to turn off the belt.

24. Shortly thereafter respondent retrieved the garment bag and approached Riggins complaining that the bag had been torn as a result of her failure to hold it as requested.

25. An altercation ensued between Rig-gins and respondent during which:

— Respondent continued to blame Rig-gins for the damage to the bag and asked her to give him her name;

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Bluebook (online)
711 A.2d 1113, 1998 WL 216851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-manning-cjdpa-1998.