Chicago Sun-Times

JUDGE CAN DIDATE WHO DONNED ROBES BARRED FROM TAKING OFFICE

State Supreme Court suspends license of judicial candidate who allegedly heard cases

- BY ANDY GRIMM Staff Reporter Email: agrimm@suntimes.com Twitter: @agrimm34

The state Supreme Court has suspended the law license of Rhonda Crawford, a candidate for Cook County judge who faces criminal charges for donning judicial robes and allegedly presiding over cases earlier this year.

The ruling by the court also bars Crawford from taking her oath of office if she should win a seat on the bench in next week’s election.

Crawford, who is running for a seat in the 1st Judicial Subcircuit, has continued her campaign despite the fallout from her decision to put on judge robes in August and allegedly hear three cases in Judge Valerie Turner’s court at the Markham courthouse.

With no opponent on the ballot next Tuesday, Crawford is a virtual lock to win, but the order issued Monday by the Supreme Court spells out that she is not to be sworn in.

“[ Crawford] is suspended from the practice of law effective immediatel­y and until further order of the court,” the order reads. “And in the event of [ Crawford’s] election at the November 8, 2016 general election as a Circuit Judge of Cook County … [ she] is enjoined and restrained from taking the judicial oath of office or assuming the office of judge until further order of the court.”

Crawford’s attorney did not return calls from the Chicago SunTimes.

Crawford has admitted to “shadowing” Turner at the judge’s suggestion and has said she sat in Turner’s chair as the veteran judge decided the last three cases on her call on Aug. 11, play- acting that prompted investigat­ions by both the state Attorney Registrati­on and Disciplina­ry Commission and the Cook County state’s attorney. In October, the ARDC filed a 191- page complaint against Crawford, and prosecutor­s filed criminal charges of officialmi­sconduct, a felony, and false impersonat­ion, a misdemeano­r. Turner has been assigned to administra­tive duties.

Crawford has pleaded not guilty to the charges and held a news conference at which she stated her intention to stay in the race. She has insisted she never claimed to be a judge:

“I did not decide any cases. I did not pronounce any judgments. I did not hand any court papers to the courtroom clerk. I did not sign my name on any judicial orders. I did not tell anyone that I was the judge,” Crawford said in a statement issued in September.

Her opponent in the primary, Maryam Ahmad, is waging a writein campaign for the general election.

Attorney disciplina­ry matters often move slowly, but the ARDC in September filed a complaint calling for Crawford’s immediate suspension ahead of the election.

“Obviously, this is a unique situation with the election coming up,” said ARDC spokesman Jim Grogan, who noted that if Crawford continues to fight the suspension, the case might drag on for years. Disgraced former Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h, who has already spent more than four years in federal prison on corruption charges, still is fighting an “interim” suspension that was filed in 2011, Grogan said.

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 ?? | MAX HERMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? Attorney Rhonda Crawford admits to “shadowing” a judge but insists, “I did not decide any cases.”
| MAX HERMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES Attorney Rhonda Crawford admits to “shadowing” a judge but insists, “I did not decide any cases.”

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