Payola Justice: How Texas Supreme Court
Justices Raise Money from Court Litigants
home | table
of contents | previous | next
ENDNOTES
- Under the Republic of Texas' Constitution (still recognized
in secessionist pockets of West Texas), Congress picked supreme court justices.
Subsequent state Constitutions flip-flopped between gubernatorial appointments
and popular elections of justices. Popular elections have prevailed in
every Texas Constitution since 1876.
- The other states are Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Mississippi,
New Mexico, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. Thirteen states
rely on nonpartisan elections, while most others state supreme court justices
are appointed. See "State Court Organization,
1993," U.S. Department of Justice, 1995.
- Don Yarbrough, elected
to the court in 1976, was confused with perennial gubernatorial candidate
Don Yarbrough and former U.S. Senator Ralph Yarborough. Former Chief Justice
Robert Calvert said he had the Calvert Whiskey drinkers' vote bottled up.
- See "Blind Justice,"
Texas Monthly, May 1987.
- When a firm hits this
limit, its lawyers can keep making contributions of up to $50.
- See "Blind Justice,"
Texas Monthly, May 1987.
- See "The bar and
the bench: too close for comfort?" Fort Worth Star-Telegram,
August 26, 1983.
- See "Judge halts
order requiring justices to give testimony," Fort Worth Star-Telegram,
April 10, 1986.
- The other states are Alabama,
Arkansas, Illinois, Mississippi, New Mexico, N. Carolina, Pennsylvania
and W. Virginia. Thirteen states rely on nonpartisan elections, while most
other states appoint High Court Justices. See "State Court Organization,
1993," U.S. Department of Justice, 1995.
- The longest-sitting current
justice, Democrat Raul Gonzalez, took office in October 1984.
- If the court issued 280
opinions in 1992 and 1993, and the average case involved seven lawyer and
litigant parties, researchers would need to check for links between these
1,960 docket parties and the justices' campaign contributors. This is a
huge task when no employer information is provided.
- Docket-linked parties
almost certainly gave more money; employer data were not readily available
for individuals who gave eight percent of the $9.2 million that the seven
justices raised in the period studied.
- "A tale of high
life on the high court," San Antonio Light, April 20, 1986.
- See "Showdown at
the Supreme Court," Texas Insuror, Septmeber-October 1988.
- Justice Hecht concurred
with the majority's result, albeit with a different rationale.
- See "Justice appears
in fund-raising tape," Dallas Morning News, October 28, 1994;
"GOP
- Candidates Hand Foes
an Ethics Issue," Texas Lawyer, October 10, 1994.
- Arthur Andersen, Deloitte
& Touche and Coopers & Lybrand.
- This is almost certainly
an undercount. It is based just on information disclosed in contribution
reports. A more thorough accounting of this money would require that the
names of unidentified contributors be cross-listed with directories of
Texas physicians (as was done with attorney directories).
- Priscilla Owen had just
left Andrews & Kurth to run for the Supreme Court. She was backed by
almost $15,000 from her old firm, which represented Petrofina defendants.
- Bob Wortham of Petrofina
plaintiff firm Reaud, Morgan & Quinn gave $300 to Justice Owen.
- Again, the quality of
contributions reporting back when Justices Craig Enoch, R, and Rose Spector,
D, last ran in 1992 was so poor that they were excluded from this study.
- This is true even though
some of these contributors provided relatively useless employer data, such
as "investor," "retired" or "self."
home | table
of contents | previous | next