Should a judge care what happens, years down the road, to the defendants convicted in his courtroom?
In 2003, John Gleeson, a federal district judge in Brooklyn, presided over the trial of a woman charged for her role in faking a car accident for the insurance payments. After a jury found her guilty, Judge Gleeson sentenced the woman to 15 months in prison.
Many judges might leave it at that, but in an extraordinary 31-page opinionreleased on March 7, Judge Gleeson stepped back into the case. Finding that this one conviction continued to scare off employers and make it impossible for the woman, identified in court records only as Jane Doe, to get hired as a nurse, Judge Gleeson gave her what amounted to a voucher of good character — he called it a “federal certificate of rehabilitation.”
No such certificate exists under federal law, so the judge designed one himself and attached it to his opinion.
To read the entire article written by Jesse Wegman, please click here
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