New York Post

‘Judge and fury’ fallout

Demoted for temper

- By REBECCA ROSENBERG and BRUCE GOLDING

A second-generation Manhattan judge whose dad was infamous for springing criminal defendants on low bail was demoted after repeatedly clashing with Manhattan prosecutor­s, even cursing one out in open court, The Post has learned.

Supreme Court Justice Geoffrey Wright was shipped off to Queens — and banished to Family Court, one of the lowest rungs of the judiciary — following a testy run in Manhattan Criminal Court.

The humiliatin­g move was the result of an official complaint from Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr., sources said.

Wright — son of the late “Cut ’Em Loose Bruce” Wright — faces a significan­tly more challengin­g commute from his co-op in Harlem to the nondescrip­t Family Court in Jamaica than to the iconic lower Manhattan courthouse at 60 Centre St.

That’s especially bad news for Wright (inset), who has also already proven he has trouble behind the wheel — by twice suing the city after getting slapped with separate tickets for driving in a bus lane and illegal parking.

Court transcript­s obtained by The Post show that during a series of Nov. 11 arraignmen­ts, Wright repeatedly refused requests by prosecutor­s to have defendants detail their crimes by making a formal admission of guilt known as an “allocution.”

At one point, Wright engaged in a foul-mouthed exchange over a petit-larceny case.

“Before we complete this, can we have this defendant legally and fac- tually allocuted?” Assistant District Attorney David O’Keefe asked.

“Who is the a--hole that came up with this idea?” Wright then fumed.

“Your Honor, I believe it was the Constituti­on,” O’Keefe answered.

“No, it was not. Trust me, it was not. Some pettifoggi­ng academic wanted to waste people’s time,” Wright said.

At the time of his pottymouth­ed rant, Wright was assigned to handle civil cases but was working a Veterans Day shift handling criminal arraignmen­ts.

All Supreme Court justices are required to work two or three such shifts a year, while Family Court judges are not.

Wright openly grumbled about performing the duty, a colleague said, and sources said he was demoted shortly after the New Year for causing disorder in the court.

The Manhattan DA’s Office wouldn’t comment. A spokesman for the state Unified Court System insisted Wright’s reassignme­nt was routine.

“Judicial personnel are frequently moved around to meet court staffing needs,” spokesman Lucian Chalfen said.

Wright didn’t return a message seeking comment, but his brother, Manhattan Democratic chairman and ex-Assemblyma­n Keith Wright told The Post: “If there’s one thing my brother knows, it’s the law.”

Keith Wright, who didn’t seek re-election last year, recently came under fire for joining a highpowere­d lobbying firm, with one government watchdog calling it “the worst of Albany culture.” Additional reporting by Carl Campanile

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