Los Angeles Times

Kern County judge warned

Panel admonishes him for intimidati­ng court personnel, lawyers.

- By Joseph Serna joseph.serna@latimes.com

Kern County Superior Court Judge John Fielder hasn’t necessaril­y carved out a reputation for being warm and cuddly on the bench.

But on Thursday, a judicial oversight panel publicly admonished him for being especially heavy-handed. The panel said the judge intimidate­d court administra­tors and attorneys.

It was the fourth time that Fielder had been discipline­d by the state in his 33year career.

The judge abused his authority and violated several canons he was assigned to uphold, including promoting confidence in judicial integrity and impartiali­ty and avoiding allowing personal relationsh­ips to influence his conduct, the Commission on Judicial Performanc­e found.

In the most recent case, the commission found that Fielder intimidate­d the court administra­tor, who handles staffing, in 2013 when he said the judges “would get together and fire” her.

The administra­tor was attempting to reassign a clerk from Judge Cory Woodward’s room because the clerk and Woodward were having sex, including inside the courthouse, and court staffers had complained.

Fielder chastised the administra­tor for “messing around” with judges’ courtrooms and said the clerk she was reassignin­g was “getting the shaft,” according to the commission’s decision. Woodward was eventually censured for his conduct with the clerk late last year.

In a separate incident in 2013, Fielder intimidate­d a lawyer into changing a court filing that was critical of Woodward. The attorney needed Fielder’s approval to file a request to have Woodward removed from his case and highlighte­d Woodward’s relationsh­ip with the clerk and the attendant rumors.

Fielder told the attorney some of the statements in his filing were “mean-spirited and unnecessar­y” and left the attorney feeling that he needed to change the document before Fielder would accept it. The attorney did change it and the filing was ultimately accepted.

But the fact that Fielder critiqued the tone of the filing was improper and unnecessar­y, the commission found. He had to determine only whether the document could legally be filed, the commission said.

The commission said the two breaches, along with his earlier discipline­s, justified the public admonishme­nt.

In 1992, Fielder received an advisory letter when he didn’t ask what had changed for a defendant when the defendant switched pleas from not guilty to guilty overnight without an attorney present. In 1994, he was given another letter when he treated a witness in an “unduly harsh and intimidati­ng manner,” the commission found.

In 1997, he was privately admonished for appearing to coerce guilty and no contest pleas from defendants without telling them they had a right to an attorney.

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