Current:Home > ContactWisconsin judicial commission rejects complaints filed over court director firing -WorldMoney
Wisconsin judicial commission rejects complaints filed over court director firing
View
Date:2025-04-12 23:10:18
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — The Wisconsin Judicial Commission this week dismissed complaints filed by the former state courts director after he was fired by four liberal justices of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, documents released to The Associated Press on Thursday show.
Three of the four targeted justices fired back Thursday, accusing the former court director who filed the complaints of breaking the law by making them public. By law, complaints before the commission must remain confidential unless the target of the investigation makes it public.
Randy Koschnick filed the complaints against each of the justices who fired him in August. He also filed a complaint against the person who replaced him, former Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Audrey Skwierawski. Koschnick talked about the complaints publicly at the time.
The commission should have admonished Koschnick or taken other disciplinary action against him, liberal justices Rebecca Dallet, Jill Karofsky and Janet Protasiewicz wrote in a letter they provided to the AP.
Koschnick said Thursday that he thinks he had a First Amendment right to talk about his complaint before he filed it.
“There is no basis for discipline,” Koschnick told the AP. “I did nothing wrong.”
Koschnick alleged in his complaint that Skwierawski cannot legally take office until July 2025 because the state constitution prohibits judges from holding nonjudicial offices until their terms end.
But the commission’s executive director, Jeremiah Van Hecke, said in a letter to each of the four justices that the commission determined there was no misconduct in hiring Skwierawski. In a letter to Skwierawski’s attorney, Van Hecke said the commission was dismissing the complaint, as she resigned her position as judge on Dec. 31 and is no longer subject to the commission’s jurisdiction.
Skwierawski’s attorney, Matthew O’Neill, said in a Thursday letter back to the judicial commission that Skwierawski was waiving confidentiality of the complaint to clear her name.
“She is gratified and vindicated by the Commission’s confirmation that her decision to serve the people of Wisconsin as interim Director of State Courts was legally, constitutionally and ethically sound,” O’Neill wrote.
The justices, in their letter to the commission, accused Koschnick of engaging in a publicity stunt by making his complaints public. Justice Ann Walsh Bradley, who was the subject of a complaint that was dismissed, did not join her three colleagues in the letter back.
“Judge Koschnick’s antics were nothing more than a partisan attempt to undermine the court’s authority to hire his successor,” Justices Dallet, Protasiewicz and Karofsky wrote.
By not taking action against Koschnick, the commission “will allow itself to continue to be an arrow in the quiver of partisan activists, reducing the public’s confidence in the judiciary.,” the three justices wrote.
The director of state courts is Wisconsin’s top nonjudicial court official and advises the Supreme Court on improving court processes while also overseeing court budgets and operations.
Koschnick, a former judge, was appointed to the role in 2017 by a conservative majority of the court.
The justices voted in December to make Skwierawski, who was initially named as the interim court director, the permanent director.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court flipped to liberal control in August after Protasiewicz’s victory in the April election.
The new liberal majority immediately set to work making sweeping changes, including voting to vastly reduce the powers of the conservative chief justice and last month tossing Republican-drawn legislative maps.
veryGood! (6553)
Related
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- The Georgia House has approved a $5 billion boost to the state budget
- Alyssa Milano's GoFundMe post made people furious. Was the anger misplaced?
- Self-proclaimed pastor accused of leading starvation cult in Kenya pleads not guilty to 191 child murders
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Taylor Swift's Tortured Poets Department Confession Proves She's a True Mastermind
- Pod of orcas seen trapped by thick sea ice off northern Japan believed to be free
- Judge criticizes Trump’s midtrial mistrial request in E. Jean Carroll defamation case
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Georgia family plagued by bat infestation at Savannah home: 'They were everywhere'
Ranking
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- As long school funding lawsuit ends in Kansas, some fear lawmakers will backslide on education goals
- Tax season creep up on you? Here's our list of the top 100 accounting, tax firms in the US
- RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel told Trump she'd resign as chair
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Sébastien Haller fires Ivory Coast into Africa Cup final against Nigeria. Hosts beat Congo 1-0
- Satellite images show scale of Chile deadly wildfires, destroyed neighborhoods
- Lionel Messi plays in Tokyo, ending Inter Miami's worldwide tour on high note
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Robert De Niro Details Heartbreaking Moment He Learned of Grandson Leandro's Death
Death of Georgia baby decapitated during delivery ruled a homicide: Officials
Erika Jayne Can't Escape Ex Tom Girardi's Mess in Tense Bet It All on Blonde Trailer
New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
Did 'The Simpsons' predict Apple's Vision Pro? Product is eerily similar to fictional device
First Asian American to lead Los Angeles Police Department is appointed interim chief
Yes, nearsightedness is common, but can it be prevented?