Montana
judge censured over rape comments
Sun Herald July 22, 2014 http://www.sunherald.com/2014/07/22/5708571/montana-judge-to-be-censured-over.html
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Judge G. Todd Baugh, right,
listens as Montana Chief Justice Mike McGrath, left,
reprimands him in Helena, Mont., Tuesday, July 22, 2014. The
state Supreme Court issued the public censure for
inappropriate comments Baugh made about a 14-year-old girl
when he sentenced her rapist to 30 days in jail. |
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Judge G. Todd Baugh, right,
listens as Montana Chief Justice Mike McGrath, left,
reprimands him in Helena, Mont., Tuesday, July 22, 2014. The
state Supreme Court issued the public censure for
inappropriate comments Baugh made about a 14-year-old girl
when he sentenced her rapist to 30 days in jail. |
HELENA, Mont. — The Montana
Supreme Court on Tuesday publicly reprimanded a judge who gave a
lenient sentence to a rapist after suggesting the 14-year-old
victim shared some of the responsibility for the crime.
District Judge G. Todd Baugh, of Billings, appeared before
the court in Helena, where Chief Justice Mike McGrath read the
prepared censure statement. A censure is a rarely used public
declaration by the high court that a judge is guilty of
misconduct.
"We have determined that, through your inappropriate
comments, you have eroded public confidence in the judiciary and
created an appearance of impropriety in violation of the Montana
Code of Judicial Conduct," McGrath said. The Supreme Court
also suspended him for 31 days, effective in December.
Baugh stood at the podium to receive the reprimand, but he
did not speak. McGrath did not read a sentence in the transcript
of the censure that asked if Baugh had anything he wanted to
say.
Baugh left immediately afterward and did not answer any
questions from reporters.
Baugh sent Stacey Dean Rambold to prison for 30 days last
year after he pleaded guilty to sexual intercourse without
consent.
Rambold was a 47-year-old business teacher at Billings
Senior High School at the time of the 2007 rape. The victim was
one of his students. She committed suicide while the case was
pending trial.
Baugh said during Rambold's sentencing in August that
the teenager was "probably as much in control of the
situation as the defendant" and that she "appeared
older than her chronological age."
Under state law, children younger than 16 cannot consent
to sexual intercourse.
After public outcry, Baugh apologized for the comments and
acknowledged the short prison sentence violated state law. He
attempted to revise it retroactively but was blocked when
prosecutors appealed.
Rambold completed the original sentence last fall,
registered as a sex offender and was to remain on probation
through 2028. But the Supreme Court in April ordered a new
sentencing by a different judge. District Judge Randal
Spaulding, of Roundup, is scheduled to resentence Rambold on
Sept. 26.
Baugh's punishment was recommended by the state's
Judicial Standards Commission, which investigated complaints
into the comments he made at Rambold's sentencing.
The standards commission can impose or recommend to the
Supreme Court disciplinary action if it finds merit in a
misconduct complaint filed against a judge. The punishments
range from a private letter of admonishment to removal from
office.
The Supreme Court accepted the commission's
recommendation for Baugh's censure but also added a 31-day
suspension that is effective in December. Baugh, who is the son
of former Washington Redskins quarterback
"Slingin'" Sammy Baugh, previously said he plans
to retire when his term expires at the end of that month.
Marian Bradley, president of the Montana chapter of the
National Organization for Women, said she would like to see
Baugh resign immediately but was pleased with the justices'
decision to suspend the judge.
"We believe their actions protect the women, children
and families who live in the state and visit the state,"
she said.
The last Montana judge censured by the state Supreme Court
was District Judge Jeffrey Langton, of Hamilton, in 2005.
Langton had pleaded guilty to a drunken driving charge, then was
placed on probation for violating the terms of his sentence.
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