Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Hot mic catches county judge ridiculing attorney

Complaint lodged over conduct seen on video call

- By Megan Crepeau mcrepeau@chicagotri­bune. com

A Cook County judge this week was caught on a YouTube livestream mocking an attorney who had appeared before him for arguments earlier in the day.

“Can you imagine waking up next to her every day? Oh, my God,” Judge William Raines said of attorney Jennifer Bonjean. “... I couldn’t have a visual on that if you paid me.”

A link to the livestream of Tuesday’s video-conference­d court call was available for viewing as recently as Thursday morning. After Raines had finished hearing cases, he began to chat with two Cook County prosecutor­s and a Cook County assistant public defender about the legal argument Bonjean had participat­ed in earlier that day. He apparently did not realize the conversati­on was still being broadcast live on YouTube.

“I’m reliving (Assistant State’s Attorney) Todd Dombrowski’s conversati­on with Miss Bonjean,” he said, apparently unprompted. “... Did you see her going nuts? Glasses off, fingers through her hair, the phone’s going all over the place, it’s insane.”

In court before Criminal Division Acting Presiding Judge Erica Reddick on Thursday, Bonjean asked that the video be officially preserved, in part so she could use it in a complaint to the Judicial Inquiry Board.

“To the extent that there is a forum here to lodge a complaint, we obviously do that as well,” Bonjean told Reddick.

“It’s our position that Judge Raines did not conduct himself in a manner that promoted public confidence … there was an incredible casual nature of these conversati­ons that certainly suggests this is not the first time this kind of banter went on.”

Reddick granted Bonjean’s request to preserve the video, and said she would “reserve comment” on the matter of Bonjean’s complaint.

“Clearly all judges who serve are under our ethical rules … (and should) conduct themselves in a matter that promotes confidence in the judiciary,” she said. “I did receive the initial complaint. Please know it will be addressed as well.”

A spokeswoma­n for Chief Judge Timothy Evans’ office said Raines could not comment on the matter, since it involves a pending case. She directed questions to the state Judicial Inquiry Board, which handles allegation­s of wrongdoing by Illinois judges.

Raines’ comments were made Tuesday after a hearing in the case of Bonjean’s client Roosevelt Myles, who is trying to get his decades-old murder conviction thrown out.

Raines recused himself from the case Wednesday, records show. Reddick on Thursday reassigned Myles’ case to Judge Carol Howard.

Earlier that day, Bonjean and Dombrowski had concluded testy arguments in Myles’ case involving a request by prosecutor­s for raw footage of an interview Myles granted a documentar­y team.

Over the course of the hearing, Raines grew frustrated with Bonjean, who occasional­ly interrupte­d or shook her head in displeasur­e. Bonjean repeatedly alleged that prosecutor­s were lying about the history of the case.

“Stop shaking your head, just be profession­al, would you please?” Raines asked.

“You know what’s profession­al? Telling the truth and understand­ing the law. That’s profession­al. Telling the truth and understand­ing the law is more profession­al than me shaking my head. I would ask that people state the law and the record correctly,” she said.

“I don’t need you yelling at me, Ms. Bonjean,” Raines said.

“I’m passionate,” Bonjean said. “I’m not yelling.”

After the day’s hearings had concluded, Raines brought up the argument with the female prosecutor­s and an assistant public defender who remained on the Zoom call, who laughed along in a way that Bonjean’s filing compared to the movie “Mean Girls.”

“That was so entertaini­ng,” Assistant State’s Attorney Susie Bucaro said.

“It was entertaini­ng for me!” Raines said.

Bucaro later noted the youthful appearance of one of Bonjean’s colleagues, saying he looked like a “13-year-old boy.”

“That’s her man-child,” Raines said.

After some unrelated chatting, Raines apparently noticed that the conversati­on was still being broadcast in real time.

“Ooh, wait,” he said. “Meeting is streaming live on YouTube? What’s up with this?”

After that, the video cuts off.

A spokeswoma­n for the office of Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx said in a statement that Foxx had spoken directly to both prosecutor­s who participat­ed in the conversati­on, and “as a personnel matter, this will be addressed appropriat­ely.”

Their behavior “is unacceptab­le and runs counter to the values of this administra­tion. Their actions reflect poorly on the work of our office and the entire criminal justice system,” the statement reads.

Bonjean confirmed that both assistant state’s attorneys as well as Foxx herself have reached out to apologize, and she accepted their apologies.

Bonjean is a high-profile New York-based attorney who has made her name, in part, doing work to overturn alleged wrongful conviction­s.

She also represente­d actor Bill Cosby in a successful appeal that overturned his conviction for a sex-crimes case. Recently, she signed on to represent R&B singer R. Kelly, who was convicted last year on federal racketeeri­ng and sex abuse charges.

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