Boston Herald

BAD JUDGES OF CHARACTER

Release of violent criminals by bench hacks an epidemic

- Buy Howie’s books at howiecarrs­how.com.

It’s an epidemic — clueless hack state judges cutting loose career criminals who then commit horrible crimes against the citizenry, sometimes only hours after these idiots in black robes got all teary-eyed about them and freed them over the desperate pleas of the cops.

Just ask Springfiel­d District Court Judge John Payne. Last week he had in front of him a nice young man named Donte King, who had been picked up by local cops and charged with carrying a loaded firearm without a license. The gun had been reported stolen in South Carolina. He was also charged with a firearm violation with three prior violent drug crimes.

The Hampden County district attorney asked that bail be set at $25,000. Judge Payne said $10,000.

Can you guess what happened next?

About 24 hours later, a guy was shot to death in a parked car. As he lay dying, cops asked him who’d plugged him. “Donte,” he croaked out. It’s called a dying declaratio­n.

Now Donte King is back in custody, with a $250,000 bond. Let’s let the mayor of Springfiel­d, Domenic Sarno, pick up the narrative from here:

“What the hell does it take to hold and keep these repeat violent offenders off our streets and out of our neighborho­ods!”

For the record, Sarno is a Democrat.

“We’re doing our job,” he continued, in a press release, “I ask the courts to do theirs. I wonder at times if some judges are more prone to protecting and coddling violent repeat offenders than protecting our law-abiding citizens.”

We’re all wondering the same thing, your honor, and it’s not just about this latest bleeding heart Judge Payne. It’s his fellow state hacks like Timothy Feeley and David Ricciardon­e and Mark Coven and — the list, sadly, is too long to even complete here.

Like most these $184,694-a-year bums, Payne has a record of coddling fiends and monsters. Here’s a story from last year: “A judge has refused to revoke the bail of a Springfiel­d man charged with whipping a teenage of relative with an electrical cord despite his last arrest for allegedly stealing a 50inch TV set from his cousin’s apartment.”

One guess on the judge’s name. Payne cut this perp’s bail from $10,000 to $2,500.

What happens when it becomes obvious that the hack, part-time judiciary of Massachuse­tts cares not a whit about public safety? Can anyone explain the consequenc­es?

“When a judge disregards the concern of public safety or fails to keep it in the forefront of his or her thought process, I think there develops a potential for distrust or cynicism by the community for the criminal justice system. This potential loss by the citizens in my opinion poses a serious potential detriment to our society.”

Do you know who wrote those wise words? Judge Payne, back in 2001, when he was nominated for the bench by the late Gov. Paul Cellucci. Obviously, this was before he lost his mind.

Payne did not respond to a call seeking comment on his coddling of Donte last week.

And he wasn’t the only bust-out hack making terrible decisions from the bench this month. How about U.S. District Court Judge George O’Toole tossing a lawsuit filed by two honest state troopers against the corrupt Massachuse­tts State Police, who tried to fix a drunkendri­ving case for a hack state judge?

I mention O’Toole because before he was appointed to the federal bench he was, yes, a state judge, just like … Payne and Feeley and the drunk driver’s hack father Timothy Bibaud and a host of other overpaid, underworke­d reprobates.

In his brooming of the honest troopers’ lawsuit, the former Mike Dukakis appointee said the allegation­s of the earlier brooming of a state OUI case did not “shock the conscience.”

Of course it didn’t shock O’Toole’s conscience. A good hack Democrat, he used to give money to Barney Frank. He ponied up for Felon Finneran, the convicted felon House speaker. He dug deep for John Kerry, Eddie Markey, Joe Kennedy … I could go on but … my conscience is shocked.

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