Highlights: In 2015, upstate New York judge Robert J. Putorti was overseeing a court hearing involving a Black defendant. Nothing out of the ordinary for a judge to do right? Except, when a Black man approached the stand “too quickly,” Judge Putorti pulled a loaded gun on him in court.
Recently, this led to a review from the New York State Court of Appeals, where they discovered that Putorti would often brag about the incident and would recall the race and stature of the defendant when he would tell the story of the incident to others, according to the Associated Press.
Specifically, Putorti described the defendant to another judge as being a “big black man” who is the same height as LeBron James (6’9”). He also described him as being built “like a football player.” But in reality, the defendant was built more like Allen Iverson, coming in at six feet tall and only weighing 165 pounds.
Putorti’s termination was also made easier by the fact that he participated in fundraising events that were illegal for New York State judges to attend. This occurred while he was being investigated for the loaded gun incident.
Imagine being this deluded.
Do I think he pulled the gun because it was a black guy and he could get away with it? Absolutely.
But you have to look at it from an objective perspective. Judges get threatened and it’s reasonable for them to be armed. Now you have to prove this is racism, and not standard self defense. The incident alone makes that difficult. The bragging makes that much easier.
Why do they need to be armed when there are actual cops, the bailiff, and other people who actually have the job of protecting people in the public building? You are delusional. Judges don’t get assaulted on the reg in court. How can he be seen as impartial after showing this kind of behavior?
Well, whether you think they need to or not, they are.
https://apnews.com/c1cae0bad3ff4f6483af354380e840ef/‘We-carry-guns’:-Armed-judges-in-spotlight-after-Ohio-attack
https://www.judges.org/news-and-info/1-in-4/
https://www.americanbar.org/groups/public_interest/gun_violence/policy/19A105/