Motion for Recusal of Judge Edward Chen - American
Transcription
Motion for Recusal of Judge Edward Chen - American
• • • Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page1 of 67 1 2 3 4 5 CHRISTINE CHANG and ERIC SUN, PRO SE and DISABLED 341 Tideway Drive #214 Alameda, CA 94501 Tel: (510) 523-4730 6 7 8 9 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA CHRISTINE CHANG and ) ERIC SUN, PRO SE and ) ) 12 DISABLED ) Plaintiffs, 13 ) Case No. C07-4005 EMC ) v. 14 ) MOTION FOR RECUSAL ) OF JUDGE CllEN 15 ROCKRIDGEMANOR ) FOR BIAS AND CONDOMINIUM et al. ) PREJUDICE AND 16 ) EXTRAPREJUDICIAL ) Defendants. ) 17 ) Date: ) Time: 18 ) Courtroom: C 19 _ _ _~_ _ _ _---') Judge: Magistrate Judge Edward M. Chen 20 MOTION FOR RECUSAL OF JUOOE CHEN FOR BIAS AND PREJUDICE AND EXTRAPREJUDICIAL PAGE l Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 1 Filed08/06/10 Page2 of 67 Plaintiffs Christine Chang and Eric Sun filed this complaint at the 2 U.S. District Court sterned from two state court actions "Chang v. 3 Rockridge", which owed fiduciary duties to Plaintiffs, and "assault and 4 battery", against University of California Berkeley Police Department 5 (U.C. Berkeley) assailant Constance Celaya. This complaint was filed on 6 August 3, 2007 within three years statute of limitation for cause of 7 actions of "Constitional Rights Violation" and "Fraud and 8 Misrepresentation". The defendants in both state actions perjured in their 9 depositions. 10 Magistrate Judge Edward M. Chen took the case without disc10se 11 his financial and non-financial ties with the Defendant U.C. Berkeley, he 12 also did not recuse himself. The issue of extraprejudicial surfaced after 13 Plaintiffs appealed at the 9th Circuit Appeals Court, and the issue was not 14 raised in the appeal. The subsequent request for a "Certiorari" at the U.S. 15 Supreme Court was denied for rehearing or an argument in front of the 16 panel judges. 17 Recently Plaintiffs filed: (1) motion 60(b) & (d) to set aside 18 judgment for fraud upon the court; and, (2) reply to opposition of 19 defendants in support to set aside judgment for fraud upon the court. 20 Judge Chen has had enormous latitude injudging Plaintiffs motion 21 to set aside judgment after his failures of disc10sure and recusal. 22 This current motion requests Judge Chen's recusal, a hearing to 23 disc10se his financial and non-financial ties with Defendant U.C. Berkeley, 24 and appointment of a judge who would uphold laws and U.S. Constitution 25 in judging Plaintiffs' case. 26 MOTION FOR RECUSAL OF JUDGE CHEN FOR BIAS AND PREJUDICE AND EXTRAPREJUDICIAL PAGE 2 I I l Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 1 2 Filed08/06/10 Page3 of 67 FACTUALBACKGROUND In the initial case management conference on November 14, 2007, 3 Judge Chen ordered, "No formal discovery and no initial disc10sures until 4 further order by this Court." Without notice Judge Chen granted all 5 defendants dismissai or more definite statement and summary judgment on 6 February 13,2008. Judge Chen knowingly and purposefully deprived 7 Plaintiffs' Constitutional Rights of receiving disclosures and conducting 8 discovery pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(a)(1). A jury trial 9 has been demanded starting with Plaintiffs original complaint, but Judge 10 Chen rendered his decision that Plaintiffs complaint have been tried or 11 heard and decision by Court. Judge Chen knowingly and purposefully 12 deprived Plaintiffs' Constitutional Rights ofhaving a jury trial pursuant to 13 FRCV 38 of the Seventh Amendment preserved to Plaintiffs. Plaintiffs 14 received Judge Chen's decision by mail. See Exhibits: 15 EXHIBIT A-No formal discovery and no initial disclosures until order. 16 EXHIBIT B-Order granting dismissai and summary judgment to all 17 defendants. 18 EXHlBIT C-Plaintiffs' original complaint demanded a jury trial. 19 EXHIBIT D-Decision by Court. The issue have been tried or heard and a 20 decision has been rendered. 21 Plaintiffs filed motions, oppositions, and appealed, but received no 22 response from Judge Chen except for denial. There were only initial case 23 management conference and one hearing on January 16,2008. No ADR 24 or meeting scheduled because they were cancelled by Judge Chen who 25 granted all defendants motions to dismiss and summary judgment. 26 MOTION FOR RECUSAL OF JUDGE CHEN FOR BIAS AND PREJUDICE AND EXTRAPREJUDICIAL PAGE 3 !~ Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 it Filed08/06/10 Page4 of 67 J i I 1 DISCUSSION 2 Title 28 U.S.C.S. Section 144 provides in pertinent part that ~ ~ 3 whenever a party to any proceeding in a district court makes and files a j 4 time ly and sufficient affidavit that the judge before whom the matter is 5 pending has a personal bias or prejudice either against him or in favor of any 6 adverse party, suchjudge shall proceed no further therein, but another judge 7 shall be assigned to hear such proceeding. Plaintiffs filed recusal request 8 back on March 24, 2008 attached affidavit in support of recusal motion. 9 Judge Chen's financial and non-financial ties with U.C. Berkeley defendant I ~ II I II I I I 10 were unknown to Plaintiffs at the time of the filing, therefore, there was 11 no extrajudicial issues included in the recusal. Judge Chen knowingly 12 concealed his long-term associations with U.C. Berkeley but decided not to ~ I I ii 13 disclose or recuse, in order to exonerate the defendant school. See 14 Liljeberg v. Health Services Acquisition Corp., 486 U.S. 847865 (U.S. 15 1988); where in the judge was a board member of a university who gave 16 testimony under oath after the case was reassigned to another judge. 17 Plaintiffs Chang and Sun respectfully request Judge Chen to disclose his 18 financial and non-financial ties with U.C. Berkeley defendant school, and 19 reassign our case to another judge pursuant to Title 28 Section 144 and cited 20 case. 21 Title 28 U.S.C.S. Section 455 is to promote public confidence in the 22 judicial system by avoiding even the appearance ofpartiality. Section 455 23 requires the judge to disquali(y himself for personal bias even in the absence 24 of a party complaint. See Trotter v. International Longshoremen, 704 F.2d 25 1141, 1144 (9th Cir. 1983), and Accord In Re City of Detroit, 828 F .2d 1167. I I i I i I il :1 ; ~ 26 MOTION FOR RECUSAL OF JUOOE CHEN FOR BIAS AND PREJUDICE AND EXTRAJUDICIAL PAGE 4 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page5 of 67 1 Statute pertaining to disqualification of a biased or prejudiced judge 2 requires that the bias or prejudice be twofold: (1) personal directed 3 against the party; and, (2) extrajudicial. See United States v. Carignan, 4 600 F.2d 762, (9th Cir. 1979); wherein the alleged prejudice was not 5 extrajudicial therefore did not require disqualification. Comparing with 6 Judge Chen who has been a faculty member of the defendant school 7 teaching classes, giving speech and seminar, writing the law journal 8 review, providing and supervising externalship to the law school 9 students while serving as a staff attorney at the ACLU and Magistrate 10 Judge in the U.S. District Court, attending annual alumnus and fund 11 raising activities, being a consistent significant donor since 1970 to 12 present. See Exhibits: 13 EXInBIT E-A simple search at the internet site of 14 www.law.berkeley.edu by Edward M. Chen, reveals 15 Judge Chen's associations in the defendant school's 16 law journal review, faculty profiles, fund raising 17 activities, significant donor, annual reunions, on 18 honor roll of donors who has consistently donated 19 including 2007 and 2008 while judging on this case, 20 also has been a faculty member teaching and speaking 21 presumably receiving compensations from U.C. Berkeley 22 defendant school. 23 These are evidence of Judge Chen's extrajudicial conducts. Although 24 Judge Chen should have disqualified himselfbefore he took our case 25 in July 2007, as of now, he is still judging our case without recusal. 26 MOTION FOR RECUSAL OF JUOOE CHEN FOR BIAS AND PREJUDlCE AND EXTRAJUDICIAL PAGE S Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page6 of 67 1 See Brody v. President & Fellows of Harvard College, 664 F.2d 10,27 2 (1 st Cir. 1981). The applicant employeed at university library brought 3 age discrimination suit against university. The District Court Judge 4 rendered judgment for the university and applicant appealed. The Court 5 of Appeals hel d that the judge's having attended or graduated from the 6 defendant university, without more, was not a reasonable basis for 7 questioning his impartiality and did not require his recusal. Comparing 8 with Judge Chen who is deeply involved with U.C. Berkeley defendant 9 school including financial and non-financial ties, but never disclose 10 nor recuse himself, and is currently judging Plaintiffs motions to set 11 aside judgment and recusal. Judge Chen's associations with U.C. 12 Berkeley is a lot more than earning his undergraduate and law school 13 degrees. 14 Plaintiffs Chang and Sun bring this recusal motion because 15 Judge Chen failed to recuse himself under Title 28 U.S.C. Section 14416 Whenever a party to any proceeding in a district court makes and files a 17 timely and sufficient affidavit that the judge before whom the matter is 18 pending has a personal bias or prejudice either against him or in favor of 19 any adverse party, suchjudge shall proceed no further therein, but 20 another judge shall be assigned to hear such proceeding. See US v. 21 Hernandez, 109 F.3d 1450 (9th Cir. 1997) and US v. Manning, 56 F.3d 22 1188, 1196 (9th Cir. 1995). Title 28 U.S.C. Section 455 - He shall also 23 disqualify himself in the following circumstances: where he has a 24 personal bias or prejudice concerning a party or personal knowledge of 25 disputed evidentiary facts concerning the proceeding. II I ,l ;t 'j " 'l ,1 <{1 l <i .! 26 MOTION FOR RECUSAL OF JUOOE CHEN FOR BIAS AND PREJUDICE AND EXTRAJUDICIAL PAGE 6 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page7 of 67 1 Whether a reasonable person with knowledge of all the facts would 2 conc1ude that the judge's impartiality might reasonably be questioned. 3 See US v. Studley, 783 F.2d 934, 939 (9th Cir. 1986). Judge Chen's 4 associations with U.C. Berkeley defendant school since 1970s to present 5 certainly would cause a reasonable person to have doubt of Judge Chen's 6 impartiality. Plaintiffs Chang and Sun have tremendously prejudiced 7 by Judge Chen's extrajudicial conducts whose disclosure and recusal 8 should have occurred berore any case proceedings. See US v. Gordon, 9 974 F.2d 1110, 1114 (9 th Cir. 1992) and US v. StudIey, 783 F.2d 934 (9th 10 Cir. 1986). 11 In the Senator Judiciary Committee Hearing on the 12 Nomination of Edward M. Chen, Senator Sessions quoted Judge Chen 13 wrote in the California Law Review: These determinations require a 14 judge to draw upon something that is not found in the case, reports that 15 line the walls of our chambers. Rather, judges draw upon the breadth 16 and depth of their own life experiences upon the knowledge and 17 understanding ofpeople and ofhuman nature and inevitably one's ethnic 18 and racial background contribute to those life experiences. 19 Senator Sessions: Did that statement accurately reflect your 20 judicial philosophy? Judge Chen: And I try to give some illustrations in 21 that piece about how the collegiality amongstjudges whether its formal 22 exchange amongst the members of the Supreme Court or the Court of 23 Appeal, or the informal exchange that often happens in the District 24 Court, in the hallways, in the dining rooms that we leam from each other 25 about varlous perspective, different perspectives in life experiences. 26 MOTION FOR RECUSAL OF JUOOE CHEN FOR SIAS AND PRFJUDICE AND EXTRAJUDICIAL PAGE 7 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page8 of 67 1 Senator Sessions: WeIl, you know~ the average litigant would be nervous 2 if he thought decisions are being made on what you judges talked about 3 in the dining hall or in the hallways. I mean the case should be decided, 4 should it not, on the evidence introduced and the law properly applied to 5 that evidence. Senator Sessions: I was a little concerned that you say 6 you might understand the human impact of legal rules upon which a 7 judge must decide. You know the oath says that a judge should do equal 8 justice to the poor and the rich. See Exhibit: 9 EXHIBIT F-Transcript of Senator Judiciary Committee Hearing 10 In the Senator Judiciary Committee Hearing Senator Kyl: 11 There was one case in Arizona that I was a little bit familiar with. We 12 had a provision in our constitution it was referred to the people of the 13 State of Arizona who overwhelming said that at least state business in 14 Arizona had to be conducted in English. And Judge Chen challenged 15 that on behalf of ACLU who lost. As the top ACLU lawyer he has a 16 pretty strong record of a lot of very out of the mainstream positions 17 which - many of which have even been rejected by the ninth circuit and 18 even the California Supreme Court. Senator Kyl: So one of the things 19 that he find most rewarding, contributing to the development of law by a 20 published opinion especially if it comports with my own view of justice. 21 And throughout his writings and advocacy, you do see a sense of - that 22 he has his own view of what justice is. That's not what ajudge should 23 bring to the court. We can't deny our life experiences and our own 24 attitudes, but one of the filters that the Judiciary Committee provides for 25 our coIleagues, we have to vote on these nominees is to determine 26 MOTION FOR RECUSAL OF JUOOE CHEN FOR BIAS AND PREruDICE AND EXTRAJUDICIAL PAGE 8 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page9 of 67 1 Whether a judge has been willing to leave his own peculiar, private 2 views aside when judging cases. Senator Kyl: Unconvinced that he 3 is necessarily been willing to do that. And it just seems to me that 4 this is the kind of nominee that I have very bard time supporting 5 as a fair and balanced and objective judge. Senator Sessions: As 6 magistrate, during that time, in remarks before a law school he said 7 he found it "most rewarding contributing to the development of the 8 law via published opinion especially if it comports with my view of 9 justice." Senator Sessions: I think that justice is done when judges 10 equally and fairly apply the law to the facts without consulting their 11 own backgrounds, prejudices and biases and without respect to the 12 persons or backgrounds of the parties before them. CaU the ball and 13 strike. Which I think again suggest that he believes that a judge is 14 justified in allowing his life experiences, which I think akin to 15 biases to influence his decision. And I don't think that's a healthy 16 philosophy. Senator Sessions: With regarding the English only 17 laws that Senator Kyl mentioned. He not only said that but he wrote 18 a letter to the New York Times saying that English only laws are, 19 "based on false, xenophobic assurnptions," which I assume my 20 constituency will not be pleased with that. On balance based on his 21 background and record and statements, I have conc1uded that I do 22 not have the requisite degree of confidence to provide hirn with a 23 lifetime appointment where he might decide that he could use 24 decisions to promote beliefs that he feels strongly about. See 25 EXHIBIT G-Transcript of Senator Judiciary Cornmittee Hearing 26 MOTION FOR RECUSAL OF JUDGE CHEN FOR BIAS AND PREJUDICE AND EXTRAJUDICIAL PAGE 9 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 l Filed08/06/10 Page10 of 67 Senator Sessions states that case should be decided on the 2 evidence introduced and the law properly applied to that evidence. He 3 also concerns that Judge Chen would not do equaljustice to the poor 4 and the rich. See Exhibit F. 5 Senator Kyl states that Judge Chen as the top ACLU lawyer who 6 has a pretty strong record of a lot of very out of the mainstream 7 positions, and that Judge Chen finds most rewarding is contributing to 8 the development of law by a published opinion especially if it comports 9 with his own view of justice. Senator Kyl commented on Judge Chen 10 who has his own view of what justice is, which is not what a judge Il should bring to the court. Senator Kyl is unconvinced that Judge Chen is 12 willing to leave his own peculiar, private views aside whenjudging 13 cases. Senator Kyl has had hard time supporting Judge Chen as a fair 14 and balanced and objective judge. See Exhibit G. 15 Senator Sessions suggests that Judge chen believes that a judge 16 is justified in allowing his life experiences, akin to biases, to influence 17 his decision. Senator Sessions thinks that is not a healthy philosophy. 18 See Exhibit G. 19 Supplemental evidence in support of Judge Chen's financial 20 and non-financial ties with U.C. Berkeley defendant school in this case: 21 EXffiBIT H-U.C. Berkeley Boalt Hall, Class of 1979 22 EXffiBIT I-Judicial Externships of the District Court 23 EXffiBIT J-Berkeley Boalt Hall donor list between 1970-1979 24 EXffiBIT K-Students are advised to read pp. 1102-09 ofCounsel Chen 25 EXffiBIT L-Speech in 2003 "The Judiciary, Diversity and Justice 26 MOTION FOR RECUSAL OF JUDGE CHEN FOR DIAS AND PREJUDICE AND EXTRAJUDICIAL PAGE 10 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page11 of 67 1 EXlllBIT M-U.C. Berkeley Boalt Hall 2004 reunion and donor list 2 EXIDBIT N-Dean and Professor ofLaw "Fall 2006 Letter" featuring 3 presentations from Edward Chen, U.S. Magistrate for the 4 Northern District of California 5 6 EXIDBIT O-Jennifer Lynch, graduate of Boalt Hall, externed for ACLU and the Honorable Edward M. Chen in the District Court 7 EXIDBIT P-Boalt Hall reunion and donor photographs in 2007 8 EXIDBIT Q-Sponsorship in the Henderson Center in 2008 9 EXIDBIT R-2009 individual contributors list to the Boalt Hall 10 EXIDBIT S-U.C. Berkeley Boalt Hall 2009 Archive of Judge Chen's 11 12 nomination to the District Court on August 26, 2009 Plaintiff Chang filed "Complaint of Judicial Misconduct" 13 against Judge Chen who failed to recuse himself, and concealed his 14 financial and non..financial ties with the U.C. Berkeley defendant school 15 in the Judicial Nominee Questionnaire. It is fraud. See Easley v. 16 University of Michigan Board of Regents, 853 F.2d 1351 (6th Cir. 1988), 17 which the Court of Appealordered evidentiary hearings to ascertain the 18 judge's associations and affiliations with the law school. See also, 19 Liljeberg v. Health Svcs. Acquisition Corp., 486 U.S. 847 (1988), which 20 vacating judgment where trial judge had ties to defendant school. 21 Plaintiffs Chang and Sun respectfully request Judge Chen to recuse and 22 disc10se his associations and affiliations with the U .C. Berkeley 23 defendant school. See Exhibit: 24 EXIDBIT T-Complaint of Judicial Misconduct Against Judge Chen 25 26 MOTION FOR RECUSAL OF JUDGE CHEN FOR BIAS AND PREJUDICE AND EXTRAJUDIClAL PAGE Il Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 1 Filed08/06/10 Page12 of 67 The evidence gathered of Judge Chen' s associations with the 2 U.C. Berkeley defendant school are in the mid-2000's and recent years. 3 Plaintiff Chang has merely scratched the surface by typing the U.C. 4 Berkeley Boalt Hall internet address ofwww.law.berkeley.edu and 5 searching for Edward Chen. There are California Law Review and 6 Journals Judge Chen wrote and other information which are not posted 7 because Privacy Act, or, excluded to save database space. CONCLUSION 8 9 Based upon above cited precedents and evidence submitted 10 Plaintiffs Chang and Sun respectfully request Judge Chen to 11 recuse and disclose his associations and affiliations with the U.C. 12 Berkeley defendant school, and to set aside judgment of this case for 13 "fraud upon the court". 14 Dated: August 6, 2010 15 16 17 18 ~~ ...tp:....~.x&. , Christine Chang and for Eric Sun 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 MOTION FOR RECUSAL OF ruOOE CHEN FOR BIAS AND PREJUDICE AND EXTRAlUDICIAL PAGE 12 '. . Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 EXHIBIT A Filed08/06/10 Page13 of 67 ~ tt ,+ 't., Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page14 of 67 Case 3:07 Filed '~ ,; ~ ~ -CV-040~-EMC Document 81 11/1~07 Page 1 of 2 ~ ! J~ J 1 2 :~ ~ a J 3 ,f i 4 UNITED STATE S DISTRICT COURT 5 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 6 7 8 CHRISTINE CHANG, et al., Plaintiffs, 9 v. 10 CASE MANAGEMENT AND PRETRIAL CONFERENCE ORDER 11 12 Case No. C07-4005 EMC ROCKRIDGE MANOR CONDOMINIUM, ET AL., 13 14 Defendants. -------------_/ 15 16 17 Following the Case Management Conference held on 11/14/07, and pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 16, IT IS ORDERED THAT the following case management and pretriaI order is entered: 18 l. A trial date has not been set. A date will be set at the next status conference. 19 2. There shall be no fonnal discovery and no initial disclosures until further order by this 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Court. 3. No defaults will be taken at this juncture as all named defendants have appeared either generally or specially. 4. Plaintiff's motion to be appointed Guardian Ad Litern will be deferred since she current is appearing pro se and is not represented by counsel as required by law. Plaintiff shall be given leave 27 to file an Application to Appoint Counsel for Guardian Ad Litem by 11/26/07. That application 28 shall address why Plaintiff is not able to afford representation by counsel, all efforts made to obtain counsel in this case, and why Plaintiff deserves appointed counsel. Plaintiff is advised that she I JI • /I Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 EXHIBITB Filed08/06/10 Page15 of 67 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Case 3:07-CV-0400WMC Document 110 Filed08/06/10 Page16 of 67 Filed 02/13~08 Page 1 of 26 , CIRIGINAL 1 FILED 2 FEB 1 3 ZOOB 3 RICHARD W. WIEKING 4 CLERK. U.S. DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALiFORNIA 5 UNITED STA TES DISTRICT COURT 6 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 7 8 CHRISTINE CHANG, et al., 9 No. C-07-4005 EMC Plaintiffs, 12 ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS' MOTIONS TO DISMISS OR, IN THE ALTERNATIVE, FOR A MORE DEFINITE STATEMENT; AND GRANTING DEFENDANT'S MOTION FORSUMMARYJUDGMENT '::;'0 Defendants. 13 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _/ (Doeket Nos. 17, 28, 59, 63, 67, 88) .i C ._ 14 10 ~ 11 ::s <3 .~ ... ~ (,) 'iii .- (J U) tl U) el) v. ROCKRIDGE MANOR CONDOMINIUM, et al., c E 15 Plaintiffs are Christine Chang and her son Eric Sun. They have sued various entities and "'z (J)~ "C ~ 16 individuals affiliated with the Rockridge Manor Condorninium and the University of California, 17 Berkeley ("University"). Currently pending are multiple motions to dismiss or, in the alternative, 18 for a more definite statement and one motion for summary judgment. Having considered the parties' 19 briefs and accompanying submissions, as weIl as the oral argument of counsel and Ms. Chang, the 20 Court hereby GRANTS Defendants' motions. 21 I. ...ca €o el) o ~u. c ::l FACTUAL & PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 22 In their complaint, Plaintiffs allege as follows. 23 From 1991 to 2003, Plaintiffs lived in the Rockridge Manor Condominium. See Compl. ~ 24 24. At the time that Plaintiffs moved into the Condominium, Mr. Sun was only eleven years old. 25 See Compl. ~ 24. 26 During the relevant period, Eva Ammann was the manager ofthe Rockridge Manor 27 Homeowners Association and Charles Blakeney was the president of the Board of Directors of the 28 Homeowners Association. See Compl. ~~ ~-9. In 1997, Ms. Ammann and several Board members , . ~ , Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 EXHIBITC Filed08/06/10 Page17 of 67 . . ~ Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 , Filed08/06/10 Page18 of 67 Christine Chang Pro Per. individually and as Guardian ad Litern for 2 Eric Sun, disabled 341 Tideway Drive #214 3 AJameda. CA 94501 Tel: (510) 769-8232 4 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 5 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 6 , i . /, CHRISTINE CHANG, individually and as Guardian ad Litem for ERIC SUN, disabled 7 Plaintiffs, 8 vs. 9 ROCKRIDGE MANOR CONOOMlNIUM; 10 ROCKRIDGE MANOR HOMBOWNERS ASSO; ROCKRIDGE MANOR BOARD OF DIRECTORS; 11 ROCKRIDGE MANOR PRESIDENT OF BOARD OF DIRECTORS CHARLES BLAKENBY; 12 ROCKRJOOE MANOR MANAGER EVAAMMANN; 13 TRUCK INSURANCE EXCHANGE; and OOES 1-30, inclusive, 14 JOINDER UNIVERSnY OF CALIFORNIA BERKELEY; IS UC BERKELEY CHANCELLOR ROBERT BIRGENEAU; 16 UC BERKELEY PUBLIC RECORDS COORDINATOR ALAN KOLLING; 17 UC BERKELEY GENERAL COUNSEL SUSAN VON SEEBURG; 18 UC BERKELEY POLICE DEPARTMENT CHIEF VICTORIA HARRJSON; 19 UC BERKELEY POLICE DEPARTMENT LIEUTENANT ADAN TEJADA; 20 UC BERKELEY POLICE DEPARTMENT MANAGER TOM KLATT; 21 UC BERKELEY POLICE DEPARTMENT DISPATCHER CONSTANCE PEPPERS 22 CELAYA; and OOES 31-60, inclusive, JOINDER 23 PAMELA 21MBA, ATTORNEY AT LAW; ALBERT COOMBES, ATTORNEY AT LAW; 24 and OOES 61-90, inclusive, 25 26 defendants. JURY TRIAL DEMANDED . '. '{ .: ,"'".' I I . .. Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page19 of 67 EXHIBITD , . Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Case 3:07-CV-040WEMC Document 117 Filed08/06/10 Page20 of 67 ~ Filed 02/21/2008 Page 1 of 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 7 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 8 9 CHRISTINE CHANG, et al., 10 ~ o o~ _.e u 'få .- u 13 tf) t) tf) o E -€ 15 ns o -z UJ 41 "C~ 16 c~ (I,) o ~u.. C ::J AMENDED JUDGMENT IN A CIVIL CASE v. 12 ';0 CJ) Plaintiffs, 11 :::::J Case No. CO? -4005 EMC ROCKRIDGE MANOR CONDOMINIUM, ET AL., 14 (As to Defendants Rockridge Manor Homeowners' Association, et al.) Defendants. ____________________________1 () Jury Verdiet. This action came before the Court for a trial by jury. The issues 17 18 have been tried and the jury has rendered its verdict. 19 (X) Decision by Court. This action came to trial or hearing before the Court. The 20 21 issued have been tried or heard and a decision has been rendered. IT IS SO ORDERED AND ADJUDGED pursuant to the Order Granting 22 23 24 25 Defendants' Motions to Dismiss or, in the alternative, for a more definite Statement; and Granting Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment dated February 13,2008, 26 Judgment is hereby entered only in favor of only Defendants Rockridge Manor 27 1/1 28 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Case 3:07 -CV-040~EMC Document 117 Filed08/06/10 Page21 of 67 Filed 02/2~008 Page 2 of 2 1 Homeowners' Association, Rockridge Manor Condominium, Rockridge Manor Board of 2 Directors, Rockridge Manor President of Board of Directors Charles Blakeney, and Charles 3 4 Blakeney. 5 6 7 8 9 Dated: February 21, 2008 Richard W. Wieking, Clerk ?-+r By: Betty FongDeputy Clerk 10 1: :::s O 11 !Il (J 'I': ...,g 12 u .- u 13 b ~ ö III ts Q ,!ii III Cl , - 'c 14 ...,.! E 15 fJ)z 16 :t:: u- 17 Q) Ss .! "C:: Q) o c ::l 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 . . . . 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DIWItIty,IIId JuIIIcIt For Al, 111 CAUF. L. REV. 1109 {2003}. """'" ldwenI M. CfIIn. REVIEW ESSAYS. AfIInnatIve AcIIon In PertpedIve••_ _ 01.. Af' Jaw.berkeley.edu/jounlaIaIdrllibraly19104.hlml ~~Acrobat ALUMNI GIVING SEARCHING OUR SITE SEARCHING DUR SITE II SeardI I '" IEcIwIInI M. Ollen JI.. STUDENT LIFE eARfER '. ldwenI M. (lhen. Ben I. ttemburV. Stecey J. Hendlicbion D. Denf8n:I W. Henke. ElItIn Ray Hodge D. John T. Hood. Fnm M. Layk:Jn D. SenII:lrd H. MafgcIIn D _ _ .Iaw. ,edulllleelBoaItHsllAnnualReport2004-05.pdf i" 1Wk...' Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC ...W ..........." .... Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page24 of 67 FOR STUDENTS BgrJ:eJgyL8'1Y FOR FACUlTY & STAFF CAlENDAR P".'''. DIRECTORY Boatt I-lalJ Urll'IEitlHTI 011 CALI FOi\lll,\ A80UT US ADMISSIONS OUR FACULTY CENTERS STUDENT LIFE ALUMN' ACADEMICS LAW LI8RARY NEWSROOM CLlNJCS CAREER GIVING Home » Searching our slte SEARCHINC OUR SITE SEARCHING DUR SITE 4W' ledwIId chen !IMlIot'I I " ] 8eIIrch I --- R"" 1·10 b' iICIWwd cheIIl'IUIIIon. (0.12 seconds) ~" -~ _,. •• ~ "*'. - - ~ .. - - _ •. - " ~ -- -" -~ -" ,. ~ - ' " - - _ •. - - -,-~ -'. - - -", - - - ' -~ _'o ~. _ _ ', __ o _'o __ "", .... __ '. Berkeley Law - 1970=79 EdwiIHI M. ce. ~ Cl'Iiii'l EIIil6W J. HfIi·IiIk:ktOn. MIdIiiI S. Hii'Imi1 Jo AtrtII..ach Randy P. 0rIk6 DavId L. 0IIaI6.IbIItAdWCltll. Up""._ Honor Rollof Donors Nov 24. 2008 _ A ~ Honor ROll or J:)onoq is PAIMI1tId durtng the NUnIon on ~:::w.=rt:U,=~ttQII!mMltINMM. WWN.law.beIteIey.edUlalumnilnMJl'llonsldonochonouoll.html VVho', Coming l.tIt* iIItiIn i.:I:IirinO Ii . . . 1tUiWIi IM:1IoaItI1t ~ 1iIWirI' alrlNidLllet '* lcrtOW ~ 818 Jt*q UI.... 1!dMrd S. LIbowIIz Alan S. l.ANInI Jahn G. MacIde Terry Mayo H' Eric Oben La... CohIn Am DInb1h ReynaIdo EIpIneII R. Am FtIIon 'M WWN. ulalumnllreunlonllwhoscoming.html _~ _"_" Co-4t. J Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 I Filed08/06/10 Page25 of 67 ~ ! ! 1 ;, J ~ I l I I I I i In 0ItIer to show you the moat I81evant tNUIt3. IImIIsrto the 30 alrMtIy dlsplayed. 1f)'DU like, you can repest the we"'1I9 om/tted some entrleB va/Y Hm with the omIIted "sults lnc/udeci. fr:IrIuI 1 a a Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page26 of 67 EXHIBITF . of Senator Judiciary CommitteeDocument211 Hearing on the Nomination of Edward M. Chen . Transcript Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Filed08/06/10 Page27 of 67 Page 2 of 5 . . . ~ ~ Transcrlpt of Senator ludiclary Committee Hearing on the Nomination of Edward M. Chen SENATOR SESSIONS: You, In the CalIfomia Law Review wrote this, quote "DIversity enhances the quallty of decislon making. In addition to analyzlng and applylng the law, Judges have to make determination that draw not so much upon legal acumen but on understanding of people and human experlences. Such experlences then form assumptlons that affect legal dedslons. At trial and evldentlary hearings, Judges have access to have to assess credlblllty of wltnesses and wltnesses' testlmony may seem mora credlble If It Is conslstent with the Judge's knowledge or experlence and conversely less credlble If he remalns outslde the Judge's experlence. Slmply put, a Judge's I1fetIme experlences affect the wlllJnoness to credlt testlmony or understand the human Impatt of legal rules upon whlch the Judge must dedde. These determinations requlre a Judge to draw upon somethlng that Is not found In the case, reports that line the walJs of our chambers. Rather, Judges draw upon the breadth and depth of thelr own llfe expertences upon the knowledge and understanding of people and of human nature and lnevltably one's ettlnlc and raclal background conb1bute to those lite experlences." Old that statement accuratety renect your Judldal phIloSOphy? eDWARD M. CHEN: Weil, let me put that In context If I can, Senator. The point I was trylng to make In that Law Review plece was that there was a beneflt to havlng a diverse Judldary Ölat the Judgments we make, some of those are based on deductlve reasonlng and analysls of law and sometlmes they're based on more Intuitive .nalysls, Judgtng the wttness aedlblllty, making a dedsIon with respect to ball or sentendng. That requlres an understanding of human 'attors and dlfferent...and varlous contexts. And the point I was tryIng to make Is that the broader the breadth the experlence both for an Indlvldual JUdge and colJectlvely as a court, I thlnk the bettet' the ablllty of jUdges to make those assessments. Md I trY to JIID.~ In that plece about how the coI!eglallty amonast Judges whether It's formal exchange amongst the members of the Suprame eaurt or the Court of AJjpiif, or theJnfgrmal Q~nge tbat . ,9ften happens In the District Court, In the hallwQS, Jo the dIAlAg rooms that we leam from each other about prlous j)efSpedJves, dIfferent perspectlves In ilie experlences. _ SENATOR. SESSIONS: Weil, you know, the everage IItJgant would be nervous If he thought ~stons are belng made QIL what V!HLJydges talkad about In the dlnlng hallor In the ballwavs .. I mean the case should be declded, should It not, on the ~!!~nce Introd~ and the law pr~y applled ..to that evldence. http://www.american-justice.orglindex.cgiIPagelI30rrranscript-of-Senator-Judiciary-Co... 10123/2009 Transcript ofCase3:07-cv-04005-EMC Senator Judiciary CommitteeDocument211 Hearing on the Nomination of Edward M. Chen Filed08/06/10 Page28 of 67 Page 3 of S · ." ' " W EDWARD M. CHEN: No, and I agree with that fully and I dldn't mean to sug gest that cases are dedded on the hallways but-- SENATOR SESSIONS: No, I'm Just ralslng this point because It's somethJng weve talkad about before. I suppose your experlence mlght help you have Inslght Into a wltness's credlblllty. Everybody has different experlences and It mlght but I was a.llttkt~rned..that you sav you.mJgbt.undersl:80d the häman ~mp~ct of J!HUIl.!:J,de$ upon whlch a Judge must dedde. You know the oeth saVs thaI a ju ge s oul do equal J!L~ to the paor and the D,-h. Soon, you would take that oath and Intend to foll~ EDWARD M. CHEN: Absolutely and I dld take that oath when I swom In as a maglstrate judge. SENATOR SESSIONS: And If you would be Impartlal-- EDWARD M. CHEN: Absolutely. SENATOR SESSIONS: I know you served, what, 18 years as counset for the American Civil Uberty Union. EDWARD M. CHEN: Slxteen years, actually. SENATOR SESSIONS: Slxteen, and...now you were on thelr payroll as a... EDWARD M. CHEN: As a staff attomey. SENATOR SESSIONS: Staff attomey. Weil, you know, the ACLU has filed some excellent cases. They filad some I'm not comfortable with. My time uP? I'm sorry. SENATOR FRANKEN: You're right but I was glvlng you as- SENATOR SESSIONS: A wamlng. SENATOR FRANKEN: I was glvlng you, In my role as chalrman, I was glvlng you leeway because you're the http://www.american-justice.orgfmdex.cgi/Page/130ITranscript-of-Senator-Judiciary-Co... 10123/2009 • j ' " Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page29 of 67 EXHIBITG , " Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 ~enate leahy felstelnkyl\l..ions on chen Filed08/06/10 Page30 of 67 Senator Kyl: Thank you. Mr. Chairman, I take very l1)uch to heed Senator Feinstein's supporters as weil as the support of those through letters that she has supplied to me. Nonetheiess, there are a lot of statements that this nominee has made that are very, very troubling. And they ran a rather large gamut and spanned a large part of his career. I think we are familiar with some of them. And maybe there are explanations to these. in which case, it would be useful to hear them, but to comment for example that the singing of America the Beautlful at a tunerai was inappropriate. And the comment attributed to him was because of his and I am quoting , feelings of ambivalence and cynicism when confronted by appeals to patriotism. For a judge, that's little odd to say the least. His first comment after September 11, 2001, at least quoting to an editorial in the Washington Times was to worry that Americans would succumb to the seemingly irresistible forces of racism, natMsm. and scapegoatlng. He has been as an advocate at the ACLU unable to succeed in challenges even in the ninth circuit, which is not exactly a conservative court. There was one case in Arizona that I was a little bit famlliar with, but I did not recognlze that he had been the lawyer in the case. We had a provision in our constitution it was referred to the people of the State of ArIzona who overwhelming said that at least state business in Arizona had to be conducted in English. And he challenged that on behalf of ACLU. He lost. and lunderstand that everybody is entitled to a lawyer, but as the top ACLU lawyer he has a pretty strong record of a lot of very out of the mainstream positions which - many of which have even been rejected by the ninth circuit and even the California Supreme Court. There are a lot of staternents about the way that background should inform decisions, we went through some of them with Judge Sotomayor and I would want to know a little bit more in explanation. And I regret that I wasn't available for his hearing to ask him why he made some of the statements that he did, but there are just a variety of statements, sorne of which just be a lack of care. 8ut when you are a judge, you neec! to be careful. He was federal magistrate judge when he made this speech or made this statement. So one of the things that he find most rewarding, contributing to the development of law by apublished opinion especially if it comports with my own view of justice. And throughout his writings and advocacy, you do see a sense of - that he has his own view of what justice is. That's not what a judge should bring to the court. We can't denyour life experiences and our own attitudes, but one of the filters that the judiciary committee provides for our colleagues, we have to vote on these nominees is to determine whether a judge has been willing to leave his own peculiar, private views aside when judging cases. , 11 •• Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page31 of 67 Senate leahy felat8lnkyl "alona on chen I am not withstanding what some fine people have sa id about him, unconvinced that he is necessarily been willing to do that. And it just seems to me that this is the kind of nominee that I have very hard time supporting as a fair and balanced and objective judge. Senator Sessions: I think I would sav that Senator Feinstein does really care about getting quality judges and she has always worked hard on this. And the fact that she feels strongly in favor of this nominee has caused me to think carefully about it. And I have not come to the conclusion that she has reached, but I respad her work on it. As magistrate, during that time, in remarks before a law school he sald he found it "most rewarding contributing to the development of the law via pUblished opinion especially if it comports with my view of justice." Weil, we asked him about that in written questions and he claimed that this reference was directed primarily at matters which improved the administration of justice." But I think that's not clear to me that that's what this statement means if fairly read. But I am pleased to see that he said that. I think that justice is done when judges equally and fairly apply the law to the facts with out consultlng their own their backgrounds, prejudices and biases and without respad to the persons or backgrounds of the parties before them. Call the ball and strike. SimUar to judge Sotomayor, Judge Chen made the following remarks on more than one occasions, "Diversity enhances the quaiity of decision making, judges have to make determination that draw not so much upon the legal acumen but on an understanding of people and human experiences, such experiences, inform assumptiona that affect legal deciaiona", which I think again sug gest that he believes that a judge is juatified in allowing his life experiences, which are I think akin to biasea to influence hia deciaion. And I don 't think that'a a healthy phllosophy. There are aome other examples of that. He indicated in a follow-up question, I give hlm credit for thia, that "he dld not believe that race or gender should affect a judge'a interpretation of the law." And he doas not "believe that the quaiity of the declalon making ia affected by one'a gender or race. n So I would juat sav it'a odd if he believes that that he would make the original atatement. And he waa 16 years as a statt attomey with the ACLU and took quite a number of controversial poaitiona that are out of the mainatream. And certainly, the ACLU is an aggreasive institution entitled to fully advocate aa they choose in America. But they ataunchly oppoaed the death penaIty and assert problematically for me and that imposition of the death penaIty violatea United Statea conatitution when there are a hatf a dozen references to capital crimes and taking life with due proceas in the conatitution. So loppose. They sav the constitution for him is Congress from passing a bill that would ban partial birth abortion, which to me bolla down to opposing a lawful impoaition of a death penaIty on criminala but saying the conatitutlon prohibits state protecting a lite of an innocent partially bomchild. . .. Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 ~ . ~enate leahy felsteinkyl "sians on chen Filed08/06/10 Page32 of 67 With regarding the English on ly laws that Senator Kyl mentioned, it affected my state of Alabama. He not on ly said that but he wrote a letter to the New York Times saying that English only laws are, "based on false, xenophobie assumptions," which I assume my constituency supported that will not be pleased with that. In 1997, he co-authored an article stating English only is "anti-immigrant and xenophobic in charaeter. I don't believe that's true. I think that's an unfair statement. So Mr. Chairman, I won't go on I lat further this morning. I would just SlY that I do think that this nominee has had as a day-to..<Jay work apparently been effective as United States Magistrate Judge which has fewar opportunities to be involved in the more senous constitutional questions, but he apparently has dona a good job with that. And I think he should be given eredit for that. eut on balance based on his background and record and statements, I have concluded that I do not have the requisite degree of confidence to provide him with a lifetime appointment where he might decide that he could use decisions to promote beliefs that he feels strongly about. Thank you. Chairman: Okay. Anybodyelse? If not, then the clerk will caU the roll? Clerk: Mr. Paul-* [0:17:38]? Clerk: Ms. Feinstein? Feinstein: Aye. Clerk: Mr. Feingoid? Feingoid: Aye. Clerk: Mr. Schumer? Schumer: Aye, by proxy. Clerk: Mr. *- [O: 17:49]? Mr. Cardin? Cardin: Aye, by proxy. Clerk: Mr. Whitehouse? Whitehouse: Aye. Clerk: Mr. K1obuchar? , • ' . I Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page33 of 67 EXHIBITH , • *. Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page34 of 67 Boalt Hall, Class of 1979 Paula L. Abrams Eugenia L. Aidukas David W. Anderson David W. Anderson Michele C. Anderson Donald C. Arbitblit Howard W. Ashcraft Bennett H. Ashley Marianne Austin Susan P. Avitzour Della Bahan Lynne Bantle Agnes T. Barling Lawrence D. Bames David W. Barron Ronald B. Bass John G. Bauer Gary B. Beeler Renee C. Benjamin Gary O. Bennett Michael Bergeisen Michael S. Bernick Richard S. Birken Michiel C. Brandjes Janice M. Brickley Frank M. Brown Mark K. Brown William A. Browner Desiree A. Bruce-Lyle Daniel P. Brz.ovic Michael A. Buxbaum Genevieve Franchesca C. Callejo-Brighton Paul W. Cane Michael M. Carlson Mark A. Cassanego Paul M. Caulfield James C. Chalfant Susan K. Chandler . Edward M. Chen Maurice P. Choquard James Chrisinger Madeline Chun Kenneth E. Chyten Robert D. Ciandella Michael J. Coffino Moms V. Coleman Richard J. Collier Constance L. Couts Portland, OR Oakland, CA Orinda, CA Lake Oswego, OR San Francisco, CA Berkeley, CA San Francisco, CA New York, NY Atherton, CA Jerusalem, Israel Berkeley, CA Berkeley, CA Santa Ana, CA Incline Village, NV Oakland, CA Walnut Creek, CA Seattle, WA San Ramon, CA Chicago, IL Tenafly, NJ Oakland, CA San Francisco, CA Arlington, VA The Hague, The Netherlands Piedmont, CA Richmond, CA Los Angeles, CA Tucson, AZ San Diego, CA Walnut Creek, CA New York, NY Berkeley, CA Orinda, CA San Francisco, CA San Carlos, CA Deptford, NJ Los Angeles, CA Pacific Palisades, CA San Francisco, CA Zurich, Switzerland Cottage Grove, MN San Francisco, CA Oxnard, CA New Castle, NR San Francisco, CA San Francisco, CA Moraga, CA , • ' . I Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page35 of 67 EXHIBIT I ·. Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page36 of 67 Judicial Externships U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California www.cand.uscourts.gov U.S. Courthouse 450 Golden Gate Avenue P.O. Box 36060 San Francisco, CA 94102-3483 Gen mfo: 415-522-2000 Judges: Vaughn R. Walker Chief Judge 415-522-3620 William Alsup 415-522-3684 Saundra Brown Annstrong 510-637-3562 Wayne Brazil Magistrate 510-637-3324 Federal Building 280 South First Street, #2112 San Jose, CA 95113-3008 Gen info: 408-535-5364 Edward A. Infante Magistrate 408-535-5340 Joseph C. Spero Magistrate 415-522-3692 Maria-Elena James Magistrate 415-522-4698 Patricia V. Trwnbull Magistrate 408-535-5434 Martin Jenkins 415-522-4141 James Ware 408-408-535·5454 D. Lowell Jensen Senior Judge 510-637·3540 Jeffrey White 415-522-4160 Charles Breyer 415-522-2062 Elizabeth Laporte Magistrate 415-522-3694 EdwardChen Magistraie ... 415-522-4050 James Larson Magistrate 415-522-2112 Maxine Chesney 415-522-2041 Howard R. Lloyd Magistrate -Kate Nance (law clerk) 415-535-5411 Samuel Conti No Externs Jeremy Fogel Senior Judge 408-535-5426 408-535-5163 fax Phyllis J. Hamilton 415-522-4100 Thelton Henderson Senior Judge 415-522-3630 Susan Dlston 415-522-4070 Federal Building 130 l Clay Street, #400 Oakland, CA 94612-5212 Gen mfo: 510-637-3530 Marilyn Hall Patel 415-522-3140 William W. Schwarzer Senior Judge No Externs Richard Seeborg Magistrate -Bemie Kunkel (law clerk) 408-535-5357 Fern Smith No Externs Ronald M. Whyte 408-535-5331 Claudia Wilken 510-637-3588 Bernard Zimmennan Magistrate 415-522-4093 U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9tf1 Circult John Noonan Senior Judge U.S. Court of Appeals for the Nmth Circuit P.O. Box 193939 San Francisco, CA 94119-3939 415-556-9636 Extern Recruitment Coordinator Office of Staff Attorneys Vicky Crivello P.O. Box 193939 San Francisco, CA 94119-3939 415-556-9842 '.. " ' Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page37 of 67 EXHIBIT J « Berkeley Law - ,1970-79 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 ~. Filed08/06/10 Page38 of 67 Page lof8 t FOR STUDENTS FOR FACUL TY & STAFF CAlENDAR DIRECTORY BerJ~eJeyL!l\/Y Boalt t-I all !J/II"EiCllrf OF ~,\LlFOalll,\ ABOUT US ADMISSIONS OUR FACULTY CENTERS STUDENT LIFE ALUMNI ACADEMICS LAW LIBRARY NEWSROOM CLlNICS CAREER GIVINC Search Berkeley Law Home » Giving » Annual Report of Philanthropy » 1970-79 1970-79 GIVING Campaign for Boalt Hall Reunion Givlng 1970 1976 Graduating Class GlI/lng 2n; Participation Total Glving = $294.515.00 2 n; ParticIpatlon Make a Gift Total Giving = $111,536.00 Ways to Give Contact Us Dean's Society Leadership Circle Dean's Society Partner $ 100,000 AND ABOVE $25,000-$49,999 Douglas H. " Jane Wolf. Alexander" Evelyn Wiles Glvlng Profiles Partners In leadershlp Annual Report of Philanthropy Dean's Society Member 1930s Dean's Society Member 1940-49 $ I 0,000-$24.999 $ 10,000-$ 24,999 1950-59 Leonard" Catherine Unger. David Carlyon • 1960-69 1970-79 William Carey Jones Associates Elizabeth Josselyn Boalt Associates 1980-89 $2.500-$4.999 $ 5.000-$9.999 2000-10 Dale" Danielle Power • Vincent L. Rlcci • Thomas S. Salinger • lawrence A. Hobel " Diana H. Staring • Michael C. PhIlIips • Charles Y. Tanabe • Douglas R. Young. Law School Sproul Associates $ 1.000- $2,499 Walter L. Carpeneti • Kenneth E. Falstrom Ned " Sharon Fine. Dean L. Flint. Ralph A. Lombardi. Thomas J. Nolan Bill " Sue Rochester • Gall MIgdal Tltle • Timothy W. Tower • Lee Van Boven. Robert P. vom Eigen • Society of 1912 5500-$999 Howard D. " Rhoda B. Coleman. Wayne B. Cooper. Stephen H. Cornet • Mary Lu Everett • Jeffrey R. Freund Kathryn Gabler. Donald Grainek. Paul R. Hoeber • LesIle S. Klinger • Malcolm A. Mackenzie • Hans W. Niederer. William E. Prachar • Jonathan D. Rapore http://www.law.berkeley.edu/6530.htm 1990-99 Faculty Matching Gifts Friends The Benjamin Ide Wheeler Society William Carey Jones Associates Corporatlons, Foundations and Organizations $2,500-$4.999 law Firms Sue Ann levin Schiff • In Honor Law School Sproul Associates The Dean's Society $ 1,000-$2,499 Major Gifts In Memory Anne Beron. John R. Bonn. Steven P. Burke • Daniel A. Case • Karen Studley Cottle • Robert E. Darby • Elizabeth" E. Roy Elsenhardt • Sarah G. Flanagan • Charles N. Freiberg • Wayne S. GraJewski • Roger L. Hudson • R. Bradford Huss Wlnlfred I. U • Unda B. Uchter • Klt Choy Loke • Daniel B. Magraw. Jr•• Steven A. Nissen &. lynn M. Alvarez • Jonathan R. Paret. Alan D. Pedlar • Fred L. Pillon. lesIle J. Tchalkovsky • Tom &. Amy Worth • 8/5/2010 • Berkeley Law ~ 1970·79 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 ' . • I Christopher Campbell (Faragher) &. Clyn Smith III'" Francis F. Chin ... Roger A. Clav. jr. Raul R. Contreras Robert R. Cross Steven R. Feldsteln ... Cralg E. Fenech Fernando Garcia Stephen G. Gould ... Steven Courlev Les A. Hausrath ... Frederick j. james ... LesIle A. johnson Kevln F. Kellv ... Susan C. Miller Vernon K. Nakahara Michael j. Narvid Peter E. Pollaczek Ronald E. Quldachav ... William K. Rentz Donald M. Roberts Michael E. Shaplro Tower C. Snow, Jr.... Clare H. Springs ... Philip S. Welsmehl Filed08/06/10 Page39 of 67 Page6of8 Society of 1912 $500-$999 William A. Browner ... Mark A. Cassanego ... . Egwarsl M. CheD-Madeline Chun Stacey j. Hendrickson ... Michael S. Himmel Jo Ann Lach Randv P. Orllk ... David L OSias ... 1974 19\16 Particlpation Total Giving : 598.363.00 Dean's Society Partner 125,000-149,999 Rick & Heidi Sherman ... Dean's Society Member $ l 0,000-$24,999 Robert E. WIllett Shlrlev Woo & David Rosenfeld ... Boalt Advocates UP TO $499 David W. & Sandra S. Anderson Michele C. Anderson Rebecca S. Elsenberg ... Karen A. Fischer ... Randolph B. Godshall Hugh Lawrence Michael A. Lee ... The Honorable PatrIcia M. Lucas ... Sanford H. MargolIn James W. Morando ... WIlliam T. Payne ... Larry Pizarro & Cheryl Lutz Unda Martin Purkiss ... James G. Roberts Bari S. Robinson Roderick A. Rodewald ... Jeffrev L. Schaffer Peter A. Sklarew ... Christopher J. Walt D. Kellv Welsberg ... Christine Windbichler & Paul Baftes Erlka Wodlnskv ... Gregory R. Zaragoza ... t'" Deceased ... = 3+ Consecutive year indlvldual donor Elizabeth Josselyn Boalt Associates $5,000-$9,999 Peter j. Benvenutti. jr. & Use A. Pearlman ... Robert S. Stein & jesslca S. Pers ... William Carey Jones Associates $2,500-$4.999 William T. Barker ... Eliot S. & Phillppa L JubelIrer ... Lynne Drohlich Kaufman & Ron Kaufman Michael R. Levlne ... Richard G. McCracken Lawrence & Beverlv Peitzman ... Thomas S. WIllIamson. Jr.... Law School Sproul Associates $ 1,000-$2,499 Robert L. Lawrence ... Peter G. Lomhoff Martin A. Mattes & Catherine E. Garzlo ... Christopher H. Schroeder ... John H. Seesel & Joanne B. Grossman ... Anne Trebllcock ... Ulrich Wagner Society of 1912 ISOO-I999 Hal Kruth Garrlck S. Lew http://www.law.berkeley.edu/6530.htm 8/5/2010 • il • I Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 ' Filed08/06/10 Page40 of 67 EXHIBITK Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page41 of 67 Page 1 14 CaI. 4th 1090, .; 929 P.2d 596, u; 60 CaI. Rptr. 2d 277, .U; 1997 CaI. LEXIS 33 Note to Affirmative Litigation students: The entire opinion is contained below. However, for class you only need to read the case summary, headnotes 1-3, and pp. 1102-09 . • Questioned As of: Jan 24, 2007 THE PEOPLE ex rel. JOAN R. GALW, as City Attomey, etc., Plaintift' and Respondent, v. CARLOS ACUNA et al., Defendants and AppeUants. No. S046980. SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA 14 CaJ. 4th 1090; 929 P.2d 596; 60 CaJ. Rptr. 2d 277; 1997 CaJ. LEX/S 33; 97 CaJ. Daily Op. Service 724; 97 Daily Journal DAR 1023 January 30,1997, Decided SUBSEQUENT HISTORY: Certiorari Denied June 27, 1997, Reported at: 1997 U.S. LEXlS 4093. PRIOR HISTORY: Superior Court Santa Clara County, No. 729322, Robert Michael Foley, Judge. DISPOSITION: Thejudgment ofthe Court of Appeal is reversed insofar as it invalidated paragraphs (a) and (k) of the preliminary injunction and concluded that defendant Blanca Gonzalez was not subject to its tenns. Because our grant of review encompassed only those two of the fifteen provisions invalidated by the Court of Appeal, we do not address any other aspect of the preliminary injunction entered by the superior court. SUMMARY: CALIFORNIA OFFICIAL REPORTS SUMMARY The trial court, on petition by a city attorney, issued a preliminary injunction directed against designated street gang members and specified activities in a foursquare-block neighborhood. It enjoined defendants from, among other things, "standing, sitting, walking, driving, gathering or appearing anywhere in public view with any other defendant . . . or with any other known [gang] member," and from confronting, intimidating or similarly challenging--including assaulting and batteringresidents, "or any other persons" known to gang members to have complained about their conduct within the neighborhood. (Superior Court of Santa Clara County, No. 729322, Robert Michael Foley, Judge.) The Court of Appeal, Sixth Dist., No. HOI 1802, modified the preliminary injunction, upholding only those provisions enjoining acts or conduct defined as crimes under specific provisions of the Penal Code, and, as modified, affirmed. The Supreme Court reversed the judgment of the Court of Appeal insofar as it invalidated two paragraphs of the preliminary injunction and concluded that one defendant was not subject to its tenns. The court held that the acts complained of constituted a public nuisance. The evidence showed, among other things, that gang members, all of whom lived elsewhere, congregated on lawns, on sidewalks, and in front of apartment complexes at all hours of the day and night, openly drinking, smoking marijuana, snifling toluene, and even snorting cocaine. Residents were subjected to loud talking, loud music, vulgarity, profanity , brutality , fistfights, and the sound of gunfire echoing in the streets. Gang members took over sidewalks, driveways, carports, and apartment parking areas, and impeded trafiic on the public thoroughfares to conduct their drive-up drug bazaar. Murder, attempted murder, drive-by shootings, assault and battery, vandalism, arson, and theft were commonplace, and residents had their garages used as urinais, their homes commandeered as escape routes, and their walls, fences, garage doors, sidewalks, and even their vehicles turned into a sullen canvas of gang graffiti. It is the community aspect of a public nuisance, reflected in the civil and criminal counterparts of the California code, the court held, that distinguishes it from a private nuisance, and makes possible its use, by means of the equitable injunc- Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page42 of 67 Page 5 14 Cal. 4th 1090, *; 929 P.2d 596, **; 60 Cal. Rptr. 2d 271, ***; 1997 Cal. LEXIS 33 liminary injunction directed against designated street gang members and specified activities in a four-squareblock neighborhood met the statutory defmition of a puhlic nuisance. To constitute a public nuisance, conduct must be "injurious to health, ... indecent or offensive to the senses, ... an obstruction to the free use ofproperty, so as to interfere with the comfortable enjoyment of life or property, or unlawfully obstructD free passage or use, in the customary manner, of any ... public park, square, street or highway" (Civ. Code, § 3479). The evidence showed, arnong other things, that gang members, all of whom lived elsewhere, congregated on lawns, on sidewalks, and in front of apartment complexes at all hours of the day and night, openly drinking, smoking marijuana, snitling toluene, and even snorting cocaine. Residents were subjected to loud talking, loud music, vulgarity, profanity, brutality, fistflghts, and the sound of gunfire echoing in the streets. Gang members took over sidewalks, driveways, carports, and apartment parking areas, and impeded trafik on the public thoroughfares to conduct their drive-up drug bazaar. Murder, attempted murder, drive-by shootings, assault and battery, vandalism, arson, and theft were commonplace, and residents bad their garages used as urinals, their homes commandeered as escape routes, and their walls, fences, garage doors, sidewalks, and even their vehicles tumed into a sullen canvas of gang graffiti. (16) Constitutional Law § 66-First Amendment Rigbts-Association and Speecb--Balanclng of Interests--Injunction Against Street Gang Activity. --A preliminary injunction directed against designated street gang members and specified activities in a four-squareblock neighborhood did not burden speech more than necessary to serve an important govemmentaI interest by effectively forbidding gang members from engaging in any form of social intercourse with anyone known to them to be a gang member, even a single member, "anywhere in public view" within the four-block area. The provision sought to ensure that. within the circumscribed area, gang members had no opportun ity to combine. It was the threat of collective conduct by gang members loitering in a specific and narrowly described neighborhood that the provision was sensibly intended to forestall. Given that overriding purpose, the prohibitions enumerated were not easily divisible. Given the factuaI showing made by the city in support of preliminary relief, the camival-like atmosphere of collective mayhem, it could not be said that the ban on any association between gang members within the neighborhood went beyond what was required to abate the nuisance, and the effect on defendants' protected speech was minimal. (17) Constitutional Law § 66-First Amendment Rigbts-Assoclation and Speecb-Balancing of Interests-Injuaction Apinst Street Gang ActivJty. --A preliminary injunction directed against designated street gang members and specified activities in a four-squareblock neighborhood did not burden speech more than necessary to serve an important govemmental interest by effectively forbidding gang members from confronting, intimidating, or similarly challenging--including assauIting and battering--residents, "or any other persons" known to gang members to have complained about their conduct within the neighborhood. Because the conduct proscribed consisted of threats of violenee and violent acts themselves, it fell outside the protection of U.S. Const., 1st Amend.--such acts coerce by unlawful conduct, rather than persuade by expression, and thus play no part in the "marketplace of ideas." As such, they were punishable because of the state's interest in protecting individuals from the fear of violence, the disruption fear engenders, and the possibility the threatened violence will occur. A physical assault is not by anY stretch of the imagination expressive conduct protected by the First Amendment. (18) Nuisances § 16-Remedies-PubHc Nuisances--Equltable Relief-By Public OmcialsInjunction Against Street Gaag Activity--Individual Intent. -A preliminary injunction directed against designated street gang members and specified activities in a four-square-block neighborhood was binding on each defendant without the necessity of proof that each possessed a specific intent to further an unlawfuI aim embraced by tbe gang. There was sufficient evidence before the trial court to support the conclusions that the gang and its members present in the neighborhood were responsible for the public nuisance, that each of the individual defendants either admitted gang membership or was identified as a gang member, and that each was ohserved by police officials in the neighborhood. Although all but three of the eleven defendants who chose to contest entry of the preliminary injunction were shown to have committed acts, primarily drug-related, comprising specific elements of the public nuisance, such individualized proof was not a condition to the entry of preliminary relief based on a showing that it was the gang, acting tbrough its individual members, that was responsible for the conditions prevailing in the area. Additional proceedings would be required to enforce the specific terms of the preliminary injunction. Should contempt proceedings ensure, each individual defendant would have an opportunity to contest any claim by the city that he or she had violated specific terms of the preliminary injunction. ---COUNSEL: Amitai Schwartz, Antonio Ponvert III, Sara T. Carnpos, Edward M Chen... Alan L. Schlosser, Daniel M. Mayfield, Patricia Price, Amanda Wilson. Siner, Stein- Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page43 of 67 EXHIBITL . July, 200,3, Vol., 91 No. 4 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page44 of 67 Page l of 1 Previous Issue I Library I Next Issue Vol. 91 July, 2003 No. 4 ARTICLES The Norm of Prior Judicial Experience and Its Consequences for Career Diversity on the U.S. Supreme Court, 91 CALIF. L. REv. 903 (2003). Lee Epstein Jack Knight Andrew D. Martin Law, Culturai Conflict, and the Socialization of Children, 91 CALIF. L. REv. 967 (2003). Kenneth L. Karst Love's Lahor's Lost? Judicial Tenure Among Federal Court Judges, 91 CALIF. L. REv. 1029 (2003). COMMENT Pawns of the State or Priests of Democracy? Analyzing Professors' Academic Freedom Rights Within the State's Managerial Realm, 91 CALIF. L. REv. 1061 (2003). SPEECH The Judiciary, Diversity, and Justice For All, 91 CALIF. L. REv. 1109....;...._ (2003). ..... ~ Albert Yoon Rebecca Gose Lynch Edward M Chen REVIEW ESSAYS Affirmative Action in Perspective, 91 CALIF. L. REv. 1125 (2003). Bob Berring Traditional Affirmative Action, 91 CALIF. L. REv. 1139 (2003). Ian F. Haney Lopez What Exactly Is Racial Diversity?, 91 CALIF. L. REv. 1149 Devon W Carbado Mitu Gulati (2003). Silence, Segregation, and Student Activism at Boalt Hall, 91 CALIF. L. REv. 1167 (2003). William C. Kidder Silence at the California Law Review, 91CALIF. L. REv. 1183 (2003). Amy DeVaudreuil Copyright o 2003 by California Law Review, Inc, Califurnia Law Review, Inc, (CLR) is a California non profit corporation. CLR and the authors are sole1y responsible for tbe COIllent of their pubJications. http://www.law.berkeley.edu/journals/clr/library/9104.html 8/5/2010 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page45 of 67 EXHIBITM Honor Roll Donors . of . Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page46 of 67Page l of 12 BerkeIeyLaw UNIVERSITY Search About Us Academlcs Admisslons Ubrary Faculty Newsroom • AWHN' <0.,,_ OF Boalt Hall CALIFORNiA > """"" e Honor Roll of Donors Each year, alumni return to Berkeley to celebrate with classmates and to renew thelr ties to the 80alt communlty. As part of the reunion, each class presents 21 gift to the school. Find out more about how your donation makes 21 dlfference at Boalt. Make your gift or pledge today! The followlng lnellvlduals generously donllted to the campalgn In honor of thelr cI.ss reunion. TNnk youl Centers Donor Recognition Categories Cllnlcs Students careers Alumnl Glvlng Dean's Soclety* Elizabeth Josselyn Boalt Assoclates Law SChool Sproul Associates Society of 1912 B08lt Advocates $10,000 and above $5,000 - $9,999 $1,000 - $2,499 $500 - $999 up to $499 Dlrectory ·The Dean's Society honors donors who contrlbuted $10,000 durlng the fiscal year. (Gradutes of the past five years and those working In pub/le interest/service included with a gift of $1,000.) Make a Gift Home UC Berkeley Dean'. Society $500,000 and above Theodore Lee $50,000 - $74,999 Paula Beggs Frederick & Lynn Hart Muto Mark Ptkheck $25,000 - $49,999 Richard Sherman, Jr. Robert Goodln Lise Pearlman & Peter Benvenutti Henry Shields Lawrence Peitzman $10,000 - $24,999 William Barker Roy Gelger James GIlliland, Jr. Cassius Kirk Sherwln Samuels Robert Steln Jon Hartung Patrlcla Herron Scott Edelman Richard Selden Robert Jenkins Elizabeth Allor Donald Arbltbllt Randy Barkan Robert Bell Gene Garflnkle Marvln Grove Mark LeHocky William Loveless L J. Chrls Martlnlak Paul Melodla Terry O'Rellly William Rauth III Guy Sapersteln http://www.law.berkeley.edulalumnilreunionsl2004/donor_honorJolll.html 8/6/2010 Honor R,?ll of Oonors Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page47 of 67Page 4 of12 William Hill Dina Hoffman Yujl Iwanaga Mlcah Jacobs Jamle Jacobs-May Charles Jaeger Michael Jaurigue Jeffrey Jensen Karen Kennard Jan Kerr Bill KImball Edward Klein Steve Knaster Cralg KObayashl Thomas Kostic Jane Kumln Brian lamb Arnold t.andau Wilbur layman Edward Lebb Richard Leher Michael R. I.evlne Francis Uoyd John Magel Paul Major James Marchiano John McGulnn Mary McNamara Mark MeNa Kent Mltchell Ingrid Mlttermaler Eric Multhaup John O'Toole Jullan Orton III David Oslas Guyla Ponomareff Matthew Powell Unda PurklS$ Marco Quazzo Paul Reed Michael Rlney Robert Roos George Rutherglen James Ryan Jane Saltsman Kan Schmidt David Schurlcht element Shute Dan Sokolov Frank Solomon Randall Stoke Ted Storey Wilma Sur Jon TIga r &. carrie Avery Anne TreblIcock Michael Tubach Rita Tuzon catalina Valencia Kal Walthers Julle Ward James Watson Martin Wolman Susan von Herrmann SocIety of 1912 $500- $999 Eileen Shlbata John weldman Mary Foster DavldWoo Robert lawrence Thomas Parrington D/ane Doolltt/e http://www.law.berkeley.edU/alumnilreunions/2004/donor...honorJolll.html 8/6/2010 Honor , R911 of ponors Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page48 of 67 Page 5 of12 Philip Champlln Max Graham Mary Jane Large Henry Ullerich Rebecca Kurland Douglas Perkins Glenn Woods Demetrios Agretells Lynn Alvarez Nancy Asblll Roxana Bacon Robert Balnes Byron Beam Ellen Bellock Sarah Benator Peter Berger Ellen Berman Victor BInsaca Steve Black Clyde Blackmon GIllIan Brown Kathleen Brown WIlliam Browner Mike Buckley Christopher Campbell Shereen Charlick , Edprrl Chen Robin Chesler Thomas Clery Ann Cook C. Michael Cooney Marshall Comblum Gerald Crump John Demergassa Jayne Donegan Robert Erlckson Miles Feldman Arthur Ferguson, Jr. Domlnlc Flamlano Graham Fleming Joseph Friedman Raymond Fuentes Jay Fujltani J. J. Gass James Given Johnny Graves Tom Haas Ben Hamburg Christian Hammerl Tom Harriman Donald Haslam Stacey Hendrlckson Danferd Henke Brian Hodge Robert Holmen Allsan Howard Sonja Inglln Frank Jones John Kagel Arnle Kahn John Kao Dennls Klnnalrd Richard Klntz Susan Klein Geoffrey Knudsen Thomas Kranz Dennls Krieger Harold Kruth Fran Layton Ellyn Undsay Paul Lufkln Beverly Lyon Socrates Mamakos http://www.law.berkeley.edulalumniJreunions/2004/donor_honor_rolll.html 8/6/2010 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page49 of 67 EXHIBITN Berkeley.Law - fall 2006 Letter Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 . tw FOR STUDENTS ~)I ::,J[' JI/::,JJ ::,Jy--' I -;.-,,;I'/'/ _.J.J .;..., . J Filed08/06/10 Page50 of 67 Page 1 of4 # FOR FACUL TY & STAFF CALENDAR DIRECTORY PrJ ,11' 1.11 •• •r r 1,_ !..) I U f II'H iC' I'r ( 'J 'f t; rH I i' 'J a Il l ,\ ABOUT US ADMISSIONS OUR FACULTY CENTERS STUDENT LIFE ALUMNI ACADEMICS LAW LIBRARY NEWSROOM CLlNICS CAREER GIVING Home " Newsroom l> Publications ,. Letters from the Dean l> Fall 2006 Letter FALL 2006 LETTER Dear Alumnl and Friends: A new semester has begun, bringing a fresh 1 L dass whose enthuslasrn and smarts brlng so much energv to the hallwavs around here that summer seems a dlstant memory at best. Same faculty members invariablv flnd the arrival each fall of new students (bor n in the middle of Reagan's flrst term?) makes them feelolder, whlle others flnd the open and eager minds reJuvenatlng. This Is one of the deflnlng forces In academlc life. along with the joy of teaching versus the agonv of gradlng. For me, with the arrival of the students. I mostlv kick mvselffor failing to take a vacatlon. For this academic vear. mV personal plan has three Important dimensions. The flrst is to redouble mv efforts at worklng with alumni and moving our capital campalgn ahead. We have almost completed fullV staffing our Alumni Center operation under the remarkable veteran leadership of louise Epsteln, and this past vear set records for both alumni gatherlngs and for contrlbutions, with still more success to come. If we can build critical mass with care campalgn funding over the next 18 months. we can stav on schedule with our plans to construct a new building and expand the faeulty bv 40 percent. MV second priority is to continue nurturlng the evolution of our multldisclpllnary research centers. Take a look at the news in the followlng pages to see but a sample of the remarkable growth and output to date of these excitlng ventures. FInalIv, mv third priority Is to have more interactlon with students. Because of mv deanship and fundraising dutles. I have not vet had a ehanee to teach. This vear. however, 1'11 plav a supporting role In a new course on the law and policy of K-12 educatlon reform. Along with other participating Boalt faculty, we have enlisted California's secretary of edueatlon, Alan Bersin, as a lecturer. We expect to tackle some of the toughest Issues faclng educators, polIcymakers and advocates In this era of standards-based accountablllty and increaslng bi partisan commitment to hlgher achievement and broader equity. NEWSROOM News Archive Press Releases and Media Advisories Berkelev law Multimedia Publications Transcript letters from the Dean In The News !!il Op-Eds Blogs Communications Boalt Bulletin Board (BBB) !!il Student Journals Faculty Experts As we head into this new academlc vear, there Is a sense of exhilaratlon throughout the law school. White that Is usuallv the case with beginnings, It seems particulariv true this fall. Our faculty is fuUv engaged on the front lines of Issues that matter, our students are pierclnglv bright and more focused than ever, and your sustained support for our critlcal public mission means we can contlnue to bulld on the excellence that deflnes Boalt. There are more detalls In the update below-take a moment to read about our latest news. I look forward to keeplng you posted on the exclting developments at Boalt throughout the vear. SJncerelv vours, Christopher Edley, Jr. Dean and Professor of law Fall 2006 tJpdate Incomlng aass of 2009 If you take a close look at the new Class of 2009 (2009!), here's what vou'lI flnd: physicians, journalists, entrepreneurs, artists and athletes, an ostrlch and emu earetaker, an artlsan baker, a competltive break dancer, a foreign service officer speclallzlng In Chlnese and Mongolian affal rs. the volce of Wlnnie the Pooh at Disnevland, and the youngest woman to backpack the Paclfie Crest Trall from Mexico to Canada. And that's just the flrst mod. The newest Ils reported for orientation on August 17. and thevare all dazzling. Of the 7,1 59 applicants for this vear's dass, Boalt admitted 11 percent for a 1L dass of 266. Thev brlng dlstjngulshed academlc credentials Including a median GPA of 3.78 and lSAT score of 166. Thev come from 38 states and 108 undergraduate schoois. with Berkelev, UCLA. Stanford. Harvard. Yale and Brown leading the pack. Thev range In age from 20 to 42. Same 55 percent are women and 34 percent are people of color. (20 percent Aslan, flve percent African American, elght percent Hlspanlc/latino and one percent Native American). We also have 73 new LLM. students from elght countrles. 17 percent of whom already have graduate degrees. Fawlty Developments: Achlevements and Honors http://www.law.berkeley.edul614.htm 8/612010 Berkeley,Law - fall 2006 Letter Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 W Filed08/06/10 Page51 of 67 Page 2 of4 Boalt faculty members contlnue to stretch the boundarles of scholarship and achievement as they engage the most challenglng Issues of this young century. Dan Farber, Sho Sato Professor of law and director of Boalt's environmentallaw program, Is leading the charge In the field of disaster planning and prevention. Farber pioneered an Innovative course last spring, Disasters and the Law: The Legallmplicatlons of Hurrlcane Katrina, in which students had an opportunity to think through the Issues that emerged from the legal system's response to large-scale catastrophes. In addition, Farber's new book Dlsasters and the Law: Katrlna and Beyond with University of Minnesota Law Professor Jim Ch en, was published on September Il, 2006,In what the authors describe as an effort to convert a once 'shared sense of helplessness in the wake of Katrlna Into a modest contributlon toward Improving the law's approach to hurrlcanes, earthquakes, and other disasters." The book Incorporates knowledge and experlence from the flelds of urban planning, bankruptcy law, and wetlands law, and examines the role of the legal process In disaster response and reconstructlon. Frank Zimrlng , William G. Simon Professor of Law and Wolfen Dlstinguished Scholar, and renowned crlmlnal justlee and family law expert, is the author of The Great American Crlme DeclIne ( Studies in Crlme and Public Policy) due out In November, whlch examlnes the crlme decline of the 1990 and crlme rate expectations for the future. Kristln Luker, Elizabeth Josselyn Boalt Professor of Law and Professor of 5OCiology, is celebrating the publIcatlon ofWhen Sex Goes to School: Warring Vlews on Sex-and Sex Educatlon-Slnce the Slxties, a probing look at the competlng ideas and values underlylng the debate over sex education through the lives of parents. Leti Volpp, Professor of Law, Is co-editor of Legal Borderlands: Law and the Constructlon of American lorders. a collection ofwritlngs exploring the role of law In settlng American legal and territorial boundaries. David Caron 'S3. C. William Maxelner Distingulshed Professor of Law, is co-author of The UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules: A Commentary, focuslng on the U.N. Commission on International Trade Law and Its role In International arbltratlons, Includlng the Iran-U.S. Clalms Tribunal and NAFTA dlsputes. Also marking publicatlon of new and updated casebooks and treatises are Alan Auerbach, Jesse Choper, Philip Frlckey, James Gordley, Herma Hill Kay, Peter Menell. Robert Merges. Pam Samuelson, Paul Schwartz and Eleanor Swlft. Meanwhile. Boalt is celebrating three of its most distlnguished scholars at conferences honoring their IIfe's work. In September, the Center for the Study of Law &. Society recognized the contributlons of Harry Scheiber, the Stefan A. Riesenfeld Professor of Law and History. who dlrects the Institute for Legal Research and the Sho Sato Program In Japanese and U.S. Law. Scheiber is one of Boalt's most esteemed professors. An international group of his students and collaborators spent the day at sessions on law, economics and natural resources, civil rights and constltutional law, legal history and law, and Society studies and comparative legal history-all dlsclplines that have beneflted from Schelber's inslght and achlevements. On October 21, legal information scholars willgather for a symposium honoring Bob Berring '74, the Walter Perry Johnson Professor of Law and former interim dean. The event will focus on Berrlng's work on the historical role of legal information and the impact of digital technology on the legal Information envlronment. The conference-Legallnformatlon and the Development of American Law: Further Thinklng about the Thoughts of Bob Berring-Is sponsored by Boalt. the Robbins Collection and Thomson West legal publishers. The followlng week, the Boalt communlty will pay trlbute to constitutional and federal courts scholar Paul Mishkln, the Emanuel S. Heller Professor of Law, emeritus, at a conference on federal courts Jurlsdiction. Mishkin Jolned the Boalt faculty in l 973 and Is the co-author of On Law in Courts and The Federal Courts and the Federal System. Research Centers: Engaged on Multiple Fronts The drive to make a difference in meeting today's most urgent challenges is stronger than ever this year throughout Boalt's multidlsciplinary research centers. From land use and cllmate change to conversations with attorneys for the world's most successful corporation s to voting rlghts, K-S education and affirmative action, Boalt's research centers contlnue to lead the way. Here is a sampling of the latest activity. The Berkeley Center for law, Business and the Economy (BCLlE) has begun Its second year under the guldance of executive DIrector Dana Welch 'S7 and Faculty Dlrectors Jesse Fried and Eric Talley. High on its fall agenda is a speaker series that will run through November. Toplcs Indude white collar crime In the current regulatory environment, how to tap capltal markets, and dlalogues with the general counsels of Volkswagen of America and Safeway corporations. A roundtable on executive compensatlon Is scheduled for October 3. with Alan Murray, asslstant managing edltor of The Wall Street Journal. moderatlng. The Berkeley Center for law and Technology (BCln has recelved a S700,000 grant over two years from the Ewlng Marlon Kauffman Foundatlon. The center, under the leadershlp of Executive Director Robert Barr. will use the funds to support a comprehenslve program of research, policy analysis and dlssemlnation explorlng the relatlonshlp between patent policy and entrepreneurship. In addition, a fall speaker series Is underway featurlng attorneys from more than 30 of the leading national and globallntellectual property and technology flrms speaking on toplcs ranging from open source licenslng to patent exhaustlon. The center Is also plannlng a major symposium on copyright, digital rlghts management technology and consumer protection for next March. At the California Center for Envtronmentallaw" Policy (CCELP), Rick Frank has assumed the hel m as the center's flrst executive dl rector, followlng a 29-year career as attorney and chief deputy with the california Attorney General's office. Frank joln5 Assoclate Dlrector Cymle Payne '97 and Faculty Dlrector Dan Farber as asecond year of programming gets underway. On October 26 and 27, CCELP will co-host LItigatIng Taklngs and Other legal Challenges to Land Use and Envlronmental Regulatlon, a major conference featuring the country's leading experts in the field of environmental and land-use law. The program will devote special attention to the controverslal 200S U.S. Supreme Court eminent domain decislon In Kelo v, New London. http://www.law.berkeley.edu/614.htm 8/6/2010 BerkeleY,Law - fall 2006 Letter Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 . W Filed08/06/10 Page52 of 67 Page 3 of4 On February 22 and 23, CCElP's Global Commons Project will host Cap and Trade as a Tool for Climate Change Policy: Design and Implementation, an international conference for law, business and policy practitioners. Panelists will explore the legal and economlc Issues assoclated with the development of pollcies for controlling greenhouse gas emissions and slowlng climate change. Cymie Payne Is leading the effort In partnershlp with the American Society for International Law, the Goldman School of Public Policy, the Energyand Resources Group, the Berkeley Institute of the Environment, and the California Cllmate Change Center. The ChlefJustlce Earl Warren Institute on Rate, Ethnlclty and Dlvers/ty contlnues to brlng Its considerable energy to bear on some of today's most pressing socletal challenges. The institute will host a research conference on October 27 and 28, marking the 10th anniversary of the California proposition that eliminated affirmative action from the state's public education system. Equal Opportunity In Higher Education: Proposition 209, Past and Future will feature a presidents' roundtable discusslon among Robert Oynes, president of the University of California, and the chancellors of three UC campuses: France Cordova from UC RIverside, Michael Drake from UC Irvine and Robert BIrgeneau from UC Berkeley. These leaders will examine how Proposition 209 has affected student and faculty diverslty In Callfornla's higher education system. The Warren Instltute's fall schedule also calls for issulng a repart on votlng rights and hosting a November conference examlning reform measures propased for the No ChUd left Behind law. The Theiton E. Henderson Center for Social Justk:e As Boalt works to build bridges to the future, it is also grateful to those who have paved the road behind it. With appreciatlon In mind, a capacity crowd of more than 600 friends and supporters, Including San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom.fiUed the Siln Francisco City Hall Rotunda on September 15 to celebrare the oaming of the Center.1or Social justIce at 80alt Hall in nonor of Judge Theiton E. Henders~and to salute one of 8oalt's most esteemed graduates.Guests attendlng the gala din ner pald tribute to Henderson's legendary career as a distlngulshed Jurist, humanitarian and ploneer in the advancement of civil rights. Henderson, appointed to the federal bench In 1980, serves as chief judge emeritus of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of california. Eva Paterson '75, president of the Equal justice Society, hosted the evening, whlch featured presentations from Dean Christopher Edley; Mary louise Frampton, dl rector of the Henderson Center; and Ed Chen '75, U.S. Maglstrate for the Northern District of California. Stephen Reinhardt, Justice of the U.S. Court of , Appeals for the 9tt! CiftUlf, Intröduced Judge Henderson who spake movingly about many of the people and moments that have shaped his career. 'We must never forget: he observed, "that while battles are still being won, the struggle is not over." To mark the Inauguration of the Theiton E. Henderson Center for Social Justice, the center awarded the flrst annual judge Theiton E. Henderson Social Justice Prize to TIrlen Stelnbach '99, dlrector of the Decrlmlnalizatlon of Poverty PractJce at the East Ray Communlty Law Center, the community-based component of 8oalt's clinlcal program and one of the foremost poverty law clinlcs In the country. Connectlng on Illues of the Day 80alt has created a new online forum, 80alt Speaks About...designed to bring together the many voices of the 80alt communlty around crltlcal topics. The effort, led by David Caron, began with a look at terrorism and its Impact on lawand governance. Alumnl and faculty are Invlted to share knowledge and opinions on a range oftimely toplcs. The webslte Is located at www.law.berkeley.edutnews/boalt soeaks. Take a look. A specialln-house discussion on terrorism took center stage on september 8 and 9 when Boalt presented Governlng and living In a Time of Terror: Law Beyond 9111, a conference for faculty, alumnl, staff and students, together with UC Berkeley faculty. The event, organlzed by Caron and David Kaye '95, launched a long-term research initlatlve examinlng the legal and public policy effects of the September 11 attacks. The program featured provocatlve dlscusslons on the landscape of law and terrorism and the role of the academy in developlng terrorism policy. Partlcipants Included leading policy makers-Includlng former congressmen Mellevlne and Haas Business School Dean Tom Campbell-and som e 20 80alt faculty members. A comprehensive conference report settlng forth research priorities Is expected In December. Plannlng the New, Relrwigorating the Old Ambitlous plans are proceeding for the new building 80alt will share with the Haas School of Business. The architecturai flrm Moore Ruble Yudell has finished the schematic design phase for the project and a model of the building Is due later this fall. Meanwhile, contractors created four new seminar room s this summer by transforming the former Moot Court room and the old mail room. The new spaces feature enhanced audlo and video capability, and newly Installed cameras to tape moot court and evidence advocacy sessions. Remodeling also transformed the former faculty library on the thlrd floor of the North Addition Into new visltor and staff offlces. Next up: Instatllng electrical outlets for laptops In Booth Auditorium. Alumnl Partlcipatlon: Robust and Record-Breaking 80alt begins this new academlc year Insplred by alumnl and friends who are responslble for the best fundralslng year on record. More than 4,300 donors-includlng 670 contrlbutlng for the first time-pledged an unprecedented $12.1 million to the Campaign for 80alt Hall to Inltlate the most ambitlous fundralslng effort in the law school's history. Boalt's Partners In leadershlp program reglstered Its most successful year ever, ralslng almost $1.6 million from 58 participating law flrms, home to 933 alumnl. http://www.law.berkeley.edu/614.htm 8/6/2010 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page53 of 67 EXHIBITO Berkeley, Law -,Jennifer Lynch Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 . W FOR STUDENTS Filed08/06/10 Page54 of 67 Page 1 of 1 mR FACULTY & STAFF CALENDAR DIRECTORY BfjrJ~fjJ fjJL~l\J'/ IJ III ',:: a :ilr ( o il C ,u J HJ ii 111,\ ABOUT US AD MISSIONS OUR FACULTY CENTERS STUDENT LIFE ALUMNI ACADEMJCS LAW LIBRARY NEWSROOM CLlNJCS CAREER CiIVINCi Home " Clinies " Samuelson Law, Technology & Public Policy Clinic " About the Clinie " Faculty & Staff " jennifer Lyneh CLlNICS Apply to the Clinies JENNIFER LYNCH Death Penaity Clinie Clinic Fellow jlynch [at]law.berkeley.edu j.D., University of California, Berkeley B.A., Art Practice and Legal Studies, University of California, Berkeley East Bay Community Law Center International Human Rights Law Clinie Jennifer Lyneh Is the Clinle Fellow at the Samuelson Law. Technology, & Public Policy Clinle at U.c. Berkeley. Boa!t Hall School of Law. jennifer comes to the Oinle from the law f1rm of B!ngham MeCutchen in San Francisco where she represented clients In dlsputes Involving antitrust, telecomm, trade secret. workers eompensatlon and contracts Issues. WhUe at the f1rm. jennlfer also did slgnlflcant pro bona federal civil rlghts litigation work on behalf of women subjected to improper medical care whlle Incarcerated In the California prison system. Prior to working at Blngham McCutchen, jennlfer clerked for the Honorable A. Howard Matz in the United States District Court for the Central District of California In Los Angeles. Jennlfer received her undergraduate degree in Art Practice and Legal Studies with high honors from the University of California. Berkeley and received her law degree from Boalt. where she graduated Order of the Coif. While at Boa!t, Jennlfer was an edltor on the Berkeley Technology Law Journal. and externed for the j\merlcan CMI Ubertles Union of Northern California In San Francisco and the .Honorable Edward M. CIw!.!!!. the Northern District of CahTornla. Jennlfer's research Interests fall Into two areas. Flrst, she Is writlng on ffie eonstraints state soverelgn Immunity places on discovery practlces In federal cMI rights litigation. She Is also expJorlng how to map tradltlonal legal norms onto new teehnology and the Internet and has wrltten on defamatlon on the Internet and on crime controi methods and their effectiveness In combatlng Identlty theft In cyberspace (see 20 Berkeley Tech. LJ. 2Sg~) (cited In State v. Leyda, 138 P.3d 610,621 (Wash. 2006». Jennlfer Is admitted to practice law In all state courts In California and in federal eourt In the Central. Eastern and Northern Dlstrlcts of California. Samuelson Law, Technology & Public Policy Chnie About the eli nie Clinie News Projects and Cases Resourees and Publications Information for Students Donate to the Clinie The Brian M. Sax Prize for Excellence in Clinical Advoeacy UC Berkeley School of Law 215 Boalt Hall Berkeley, CA 94720-7200 510-642-1741 Directions Feedback ue Berkeley http://www.law.berkeley.edu/4471.htm For Students For Faeulty & Staff For Employers Job Openings RSS Feeds About This Site 8/512010 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page55 of 67 EXHIBITP Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page56 of 67 WWW.LAW.BERKELEY.EDU/CENTERS/CSJ PageS jI 9dessaae ojl"f1ianRäfromjl{{of Vs Dear Friends, As the year draws to a close and the holiday season is upon us I want you to know how profoundJy gratefuJ I am for your support in ).00..7... In this year our society has allowed the chasm between the rich and poor to further erode our democracy and has too often been unwilling to confront, much less correct, the racial disparities that threaten the heaJth of our nation. Faced with these challenges, it is easy to view the law as too blunt and cumbersome an instrument to be useful in the battle for equal opportunity and to become discouraged about our capacity to create a more just society. At such times it is crucial that our law school s provide the fertile ground for new theories and approaches, imaginative collaborative efforts that work across disciplines and engage commllnities, and cutting-edge research that helps to provide solutions to problems of inequity. Training that prov ides the next generation of lawyers with the skilIs, the knowledge, the optimism, and the desire to tackle these challenges is equally important. At the Henderson Center for Social Justice we know that you are Jooking to us for these critical pieces of the larger social justice effort to which we are all dedicated. We realize that your commitment to us carries with it a responsibility that we take seriousJy. Your support this year has enabled Diane Chin to enrich our public interest program and Monique Morris to expand and diversity our research portfolio. Their expertise and vision have been critical in building a social justice center that is worthy of Judge Henderson. Jessica Borja, Sarah Cuellar, Mary ElIiott, Kathleen Natividad, Jennifer Navarro, and Michael Sumner have all made significant contriblltions to our success this year as weIL May you all find joy in this season and remain confident that together we can continue to make a difference to our students, our clients, and our communities . Judge Kathryn Werdegar and Judge Henderson Judge Ed Chen JetT Selbin and Bemida Reagan Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page57 of 67 EXHIBITQ Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 i t 11 Filed08/06/10 Page58 of 67 The Henderson Center is grateful to our generous sponsors for making].OOa a successful year for social justice. j I":1 ~ ~ ~ 'j A ~ ~ ii ~ i i'1 l f ! ,~ l 1 .~ ~ )'{ t lil ,J I ~ " ~ I I ~ :~ ~ ~ I ~ ! i II , I, II I I ! i I Abby Ginzberg Gunnar Wolf Akonadi Foundation Guy & Jeanine Saperstein Alexander, Berkey, Williams & H. Lee Halterman Weathers LLP HadiRazzaq Altshuler Berzon LLP Harold Evans Anna Wang Heller Ehrman LLP Henry Hecht Arcelia Hurtado Hillary Ronen Armen Zohrabian Barbara Bryant Hon. Edward Chen . Hon. JOM M. True III Barry Krisberg Bay Area Legal Aid Hon. Leo Dorado Bernida Reagan Hon. Maria Rivera Betty Medsger Hon. Steven Brick Bingham McCutchen LLP Hon. Stuart & Rhoda Hing Brad Seligman Hon. Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers Brian Moskal ImpactFund California Rural Legal AssisIrma Herrera J. Gary GwiIliam tance, Inc. JeffSelbin Carlos Munoz JennieKim Carolyn Yee Carroll, Burdick & McDonough JeromeFalk Jewish Community Endowment LLP Centro Legal de la Raza Fund Christopher Daley Joel & Judy Garcia Cotchett, Pitre & McCarthy John & Cheryl Burris John Doar Craig Gertsch Curtis Berkey John Kelly Dale Minami John Londen DanielOlmos & Erika Strand Jon Streeter DaraSchur Jon Sylvester David Coleman Josh & Maggie Floum David Oppenheimer Joshua Daniels David Rosenfeld Joyce Hicks Davis Wright Trernaine LLP Judith Kleinberg Deanna Kwong Katherine Gordon Eleanor Swift & Robert H. Cole Katherine Stein Kazan, McClain, Abrams, Eleazar Aramburo Femandez, Lyons, Farrise & Elisabeth Semel Greenwood Foundation Elizabeth Cabraser Elizabeth Eng Laura Zuckerman Elizabeth Hendrickson Laurel Fletcher Lee Awbrey Ellen Widess Levi Strauss Foundation Equal Justice Society Farella Braun & Martel LLP Liam Garland Franchesca Herrera Luke Cole Luz Henriquez Fred Altshuler M. Quinn Delaney Gary Garfinkle Marc-Tizoc GonzaIez George Acero GeraldStern Marcy Kates GreggAdarn Margalynne Armstrong Greta Hansen Margaret A. Frampton Marstel-Day LLC Marvin Dunson III MeganDixon Melonie McCall Michael Bien Minami Tamaki LLP Mohammad Walizadeh Nicole Ozer Orrlck, Herrlngton & Sutcliffe LLP Penny Edgert Peter Carson Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw & Pittman LLP QuyenTa Ramon Romero Remcho, Johansen & Purcell Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors Roderic Duncan Rodrigo & Reina Mayorga Rosen Bien & Galvan LLP RoyCombs Saneta deVuono-Powell Scott Williams Sheldon Greene Simona Farrlse Stephen Berzon Steven Rosenbaum Steven Zieff Stoller Design Group Taylor & Co. Law Offices Terence Hawley Theresalee Thomas & Susan Nolan ThomasKua Thomas Worth ThuyLe Tiburcio Vasquez Health Center, Inc. Vicki DeGoff & Dick Sherman Vida Holguin William Banks William Lowe William McNeill III William Tamayo Williams & Anderson PLC And thank you to our countless volunteers. Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page59 of 67 EXHIBITR 2009 Individual Contributors 2009 Individual Contributors (cont' d) Under $250 Adeolo Adeseun-WiUlams '09 Aslan Paclflc American Legal Center lee Awbrey '07 and Jeb Oblak Starr Babcock and Margot Leahy Dela Bahan Bamelt '79 Jeff Bomsteln '81 & Veronlca Sanchez '84 Hon, Steven Blick '72 & Ann Brlck '75 Barbara Bryont RIchard Buxbaum '.53 Cenlrallegal de la ROla 26 Professor Angelo Harris Honorable Theiton E. Henderson '62 Professor Herma Hill Kay Professor Rachel Moran Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton Stoller Design Group Professor Eleanor Swift Professor Stephanie Wildman Donna Brorby '77 Melssa Brown MIgueiCeja Shaana Rahman Judith Rosenberg '79 Qutnton Cullp Paltl Dacey '83 Duane Dejole 'SO Adrianne De Castro '05 Cynthia Dortman '79 Russ Elis Jacquellne Elvln Marrllt D. Farren 'SS Rebecca famngton '97 Daniel Felnberg '88 Elen Garber '87 Stephen Gimber '75 Marc-Tizoc Gonzalez '05 Thomas Grey Tlmathy Griffiths '04 VemonGrjgg Amy Hague A ngala HanIs Robert Harris '72 Henry Hechl Council Frederick Hertz '81 Joan Holnger Donald R. Hopklns '65 Sarah Hosldnson '07 Carol Kennerley A.J. I(ltchlns Albert Kulchlns '81 Joel Perlsleln 'SO Publc Advocales David Rosenfeld '73 MorIln Sabel! Thomas Saeoz GaH Sallerman '78 Dara Sch ur '79 c Jeff Salbln Anne Shaver '07 Jule Shearar Cassle Sprlnger-Sullvan frien Stelnbach '99 Karen Stevenson 'SO James C. Sturdevant Stephen Sugarman Michael Traynor Walker, Hamilton 8. Koenlg C.,Iord Weingus 'SO Dana Welch '87 Filed08/06/10 Page60 of 67 $25Q - $5()() Randy Milden Heather Minner '07 Phllp C. Monrad '90 8. Molly Sullvan Eva Paterson '75 Al and Kathieen Colton Ertca Craven '98 SPECIAL THANKS Steve Mayer' 74 Mark Alexander Amy BOBky Karen Beausev '91 Andrea Biren '75 Janlce Brlckley '79 E. Teague Brlscoe Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 David Coleman In francas Davis '.53 Hon. Nancy Davis '72 8. Hon. Donna Hltchens '77 Richard Drury Alison Ehlert '03 & Chrls Alberding $5.000 - $!Q,OOQ Farela, Braun & Mortel Blngham McCutchen llP Bruce Golden and MIchele Mercer Cotchelt. Pilre 8. McCarthy Rebecca Grey & Chris luomanen Marcus Cordova '04 H. Lee Halterman '79 DavIdMIlls Hon. Everelt A. Hewlelt Jr. 8. Clothllde Hewtelt '79 Joyce M. Hlcks '77 Eleanor Swtft & Robert Cola VISA USA Carolne Kahn &. Jim Willclns NaomiKelt)! $1.000 - $5000 Jennle Klm '05 GreggAdam Anthony label Peter Carson '85 Fran Layton '79 Clapper, PaItI. SchwelZer & Mason Barbara Lawless '72 EquaI Just1ce Society Elzabeth letcher '89 8. Steve Dobersteln Mark levlne 8. Irma Herrera Fanlse Law Arm Daniel Felnberg '88 Christopher Mandlnl &. MorIln Skea MellssaMurray Hon, Brenda F, Harbln-Forte '79 KOlan, McClaln. Abrams, Femandel. Lyons, Green- DanlelOlmos '04 wood. Harley, Oberman Foundat1on Inc. Monique Olvier law Students lor Reproduct1ve Justice (National Becky & MichaelO'Malley David Oppenheimer 8. Marcy Kates Officel le'<NIs, Feinberg, Lee, Renaker 8. Jackson P.C. Yungsuhn Park '05 Margaret Frampton Perl Perlmulter '94 & Meghan Starkey Hon, Henry Ramsey Jr. (re!.1 '63 Verdlca Puli 8. Kevln Kaul Rosen, Bien 8. Galllan Bernlda Reagan & James Head Hon. Cruz '58 ond Ms. Elaine Reynoso Therese Steworl '81 Paul' 68 & Brenda Reln Jon Streeter '81 Wllda L. White '83 Sandro Sanlos '01 Steven G. Zleff '78 & flalne Lellner Elsabeth Semel 8. James Thomson Elen Wldess '748. Richard Warren S5OO-$1 QQQ Barry Wlnograd '7l Bahan 8. Assoclofas Gunnar Wolt '01 Katharlne A, Bostick '84 Hon. Edward Chen '79 consumer AffOmeys Publc interas! Foundat1on DoJan Law finn Elzabeth Eng 'OS Gregory M. Fox Hon. Thellon E. Henderson' 62 Henderson Center for Social Justice AdVisory Kalhryn Hoover - Alexander '88 Professor Barbara BabcocK James Keenley '07 John Burris '73 Deanna Kwong '04 Sonlord & Cathy Rosen Dean Christopher Edley, Jr. $10.000 - $25,000 DeGoff '72 8. Sherman Foundatton Bob & Coleen Hoas Guy '69 & Jeanine Sapenteln linda WlIIams ShIrIey Woo '74 Laura Zuckerman '92 " Byoung-Rae lee '09 Theresa lee Stephen Lee 'OS Nancy leman 'SO Ronnie Un '07 Frank Martin '04 Aracel Marfinez-Qlguln '04 27 Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page61 of 67 · Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC . EXHIBIT S Berkeley, Law - '2009 Archive Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 · W FOR STUDENTS ~)l:::,l f' JI/:::,l j :::,ly I -;.1 \IJ' / ~ .....,J Filed08/06/10 Page62 of 67 Page l of2 _.....,J IJJII '/:i\:irr ( .....,J ---l _ .. Boalt FOR FACUlTY & STAFF CAlENDAR OlRECTORY ~Iall 'Jr ':'\1.1 r<:Jltlll'\ Searcfl Berkeley law ABOUT US ADMISSIONS OUR FACULTY CENTERS STUDENT LIFE ALUMN' ACADEMICS LAW LIBRARY NEWSROOM CLlNICS CAREER CIVINC Home » Newsroom » News Archive " 2009 Archive NEWSROOM 2009 ARCHIVE News Archive Two Second-Year Students Tout Human Rights In Copenhagen (12/22/2009) Berkeley law Foundation Auction Funds Two Minority Fellowships (12/16/2009) Samuelson Clinie Sues Agencies to Reveal Social Networklng Policies (121l4/2009) 2009 Archlve 2008 Archive 2007 Archive 2006 Archive Ethan Elkind Outlines California's Options to Tap Renewable Energy (12/9/2009) 2005 Archive Obama Taps jared Blumenfeld '92 for High-Profile EPA Position (11/24/2009) News Brrefs An Additional Comment on Campus Protests and Academic Freedom (11/20/2009) Samuelson Clinlc Outlines Smart Grid Concerns In FCC Comment (11/17/2009) Press Releases and Media Advlsories Chris Bebenek 'Il Wins Berkeley law Research and Wrltlng Award (11/1 0/2009) Berkeley law Multimedia Professor Franklin Zimring Takes Aim at Florida's Attorney General (11/6/2009) Health Care Study: Public Option Would Generate Savlngs, Benefits (11/4/2009) ABA Halls MarJorle Shultz '76 As One of America's 50 'legal Rebels' (10/22/2009) Publications In The News Ii' Berkeley law Center Plays Key Role In Produclng Shrlver Report (l 0/19/2009) Op-Eds Professor Emeritus and Renowned Scholar Stephen Barnett Dies at 73 (10/16/2009) Blogs UC Berkeley's Oliver Williamson Shares Nobel Prize in Economics (l 0/12/2009) Communications Aarti KohU Warns That Immigration Enforcement Efforts Are Misgulded (l 0/9/2009) Boalt Bulletin Board (BBB) I§l Professors Erie Talley, jonathan Simon '87 Awarded Faculty Chairs (10/7/2009) New Report Shows Most Americans Dislike Tailored Online Ads (9/30/2009) Berkeley Empiricai legal Studies to launch New Graduate Fellowship (9/29/2009) Student Journals Faculty Experts jesse Ferrantella 'Il Wins National Writlng Competitlon (9/23/2009) Samuelson's jason Schultz Helps launch Cyberlaw Cases Blog (9/21/2009) Warren Institute Report Exposes Racial Proflling in Texas (9/16/2009) Obama Taps jeff Bleich '89 to Be Top Envoy to Australia (9/15/2009) The Koret Interactive leamlng Center Brings the World to Boalt Hall and Boalt Hall to the World (9/10/2009) jennifer Urban and jason Schultz to Co-Direct Samuelson Clinie (9/1 0/2009) Career Development Office Hlres New Attorney Counselors (9/10/2009) Another Positive Step for Berkeley law's loan Forgiveness Plan (9/4/2009) Professionai Skills Program to Become larger Part of Curriculum (9/2/2009) New Report Halls Berkeley's Public School Dlversity Plan (9/2/2009) CLEE Targets Increase in Cllmate-Friendly Development (8/28/2009) Edward Chen '79 Nominated to U.S. District Court in San Francisco (8/26/2009) The Torture Memos, Professor Yoo, and Aeademic Freedom (8/20/2009) 'legal Planet' Successfully Orblting the Blogosphere (8/19/2009) Edley Interview Addresses Demands for Yoo's Ouster (8/19/2009) Cheryl Hicks '83. lowell Carruth '62 Elected to california State Bar Board of Governors (8/1 2/2009) David Kappos '90 Confirmed as New Director of U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (81l 0/2009) Flrst Summer lLM. Session Draws Rave ReViews (8/6/2009) San Francisco Bestows High Honor on Author Doug Oorst '95 (8/6/2009) Stephen Sugarman Unvells New Tactie to Improve Industry Accountabillty (7/29/2009) Dean Christopher Edley Tapped to Serve on a University-wide Effort to Secure UC's Future (7/21/2009) Cynthia Glles '78 Taekles Busy Agenda In High-Ranking EPA Post (7/15/2009) Paul Mishkin, Longtime Berkeley law Professor and Courts Expert, Dies at 82 (7/ 13/2009) Mlshkln was an expert on the role of the federal courts and contlnued to teach a federal courts course at Berkeley law long after his retlrement Ann O'leary '05 to Play Key Role in Maria Shriver's Women's Project (7/7/2009) http://www.1aw.berkeley.edu/7327.htm 8/6/2010 , . Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page63 of 67 EXHIBITT Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page64 of 67 OFFICE OF THE CIRCUIT EXECUTIVE UNITED STATES COURTS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT JAMI:S R. BROWNING UNITED STArES COURTHOUSE CATHY A. CATrERSON, CIRClIlT & COURT OF ApPEAI.S EXECUTIVE 95 SEVENTIl STREET POST OrFICT: Box 193939 PHONE: (415) 355-8000 SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94119-3939 October 5, 2009 Christine Chang 341 Tideway Dr. #214 Alameda, CA 9450 l Re: Complaint of Judicial Misconduct No. 09-90222 Dear Ms. Chang: We have received the complaint of judiciaI misconduct flled pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 351(a) against Magistrate Judge Chen. Docket Number 09-90222 has been assigned to this matter. Pursuant to the Rules for Judicial-Conduct and Judicial-Disability Proceedings, a copy of the complaint has been forwarded to Chief Judge Kozinski, Chief Judge Walker, Chief Magistrate Judge Larson and Magistrate Judge Chen. Very truly yours, ~{A~ Cathy A. Catterson CAC/gb Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 ... .., Filed08/06/10 Page65 of 67 Com~int of Judicial Misconduct Agaiost Magistrate Judge Edward M. Chen STATEMENT OF FACTS I, Christine Chang ("Complainant"), file this complaint of judicial misconduct against Edward M. Chen ("Chen") under the Judicial Conduct and Disability Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 351-364 (the Act) and the RULES FOR JUDICIAL-CONDUCT AND JUDICIAL DISABILITY PROCEEDINGS Adopted by the Judicial Conference on March 11,2008 (the Rules). The complaint is supported by the following facts. A. Judge Cken's Committed Unethieal Conduct in FaDing to Reeuse Himself from a Case Where Be had FiaaDeialand Non-fmaneial Ties to tke Defendants In August 2007, Complainant and her son filed a civil rights lawsuit against U.C. Berkeley, several U.C. Berkeley officials and other defendants. The case was assigned to Chen, with case number C07-4005 BMC (N.D. Cal). See tqe Docket Sheet on PACER to confirm the list of defendants. Unknown to Complainant, Chen taught classes in U.C. Berkeley in 2007-2008 for which he received monetary and/or non-monetary compensation, Chen donated money to U. C. Berkeley School ofLaw in 2007..2008, and bad other associations with defendants. Chen should have recused himself from the case. Instead, Chen concealed his associations with defendants and insisted on presiding over the case, despite Plaintiffs' request for recusal. B. Judge Cken Dismissed CODlplainant's Case by a Cateh-ll Sekeme and Demonstrated Blatant Bias against ComplaiDant and UDabashed Favoritism towards DefendaDts Concealing his ties with U.C. Berkeley Defendants, Chen played the Catch..22 trick with Plaintiff-Complainant, depriving Complainant's fair access to the judicial process and the due process oflaw. After denying Complainant's motion for default judgment, on November 14, 2007, in the Initial Case Management Scheduling Conference, Chen ordered: "A trial date has not been set. No forIDal diseovery and DO laitial disclosuns uatil further order by this eourt." See Docket Entry No. 80 for Chen's order. Federal Rules of Civil Procedure require that Initial disclosures to be made befon the Initial Case Management Conference. See FRCP 26(a) (1) (C) and 26(f). Page l of3 Complaint of Judicial Misconduct Against Magistrate Judge Edward M. Chen Chen not only exonerated Defendants' failure to produce initial disclosure, but also ordered Defendants not to produce it. Chen al80 prohibited Plaintiff-Complainant to conduct discovery for the prosecution of her claims. Three months later, on February 13,2008, Judge Chen granted defendant's motion for summary judgment, without pennitting plaintitfto conduct discovery. Chen'sjudgment Order ridiculed plaintiff's claims as "patently faneiful and insubstantial", as well as ''fantastie or delusional", based on his allegation of lack of evidence. See Docket No. 110 for Chen's order dismissing Complainant's claims. Forbidding Complainant to conduct discovery, then dismissing CompJainant's case for lack ofevidence, sueh was Chen's naked Catch-22 scheme. But Chen went further in defending defendant U.C. Berkeley-with which he had financial ties, he added insult to injury by ridiculing the Complainant - who was disabled due to the physical assault by Defendants. c. Edward M. CheD Committed Fraud before the U.S. CODgress On page 41 of Judge Edward Milton Chen's Answer to the Questionnaire For Judicial Nominees regarding his recusal practice, he submitted to the U.S. Senate about the Chang case: 3/31/08; C07-4005 EMC; Chang v. Rockridge Manor Condo. The pro se plaintiff filed a motion for recusal after I issued a substantive ruling against her. I denied the request because the plaintiff was claiming bias based solely on an adverse ruling I had issued. She did not substantiate any elaim of extrajudieial bias. As shown on the Chang ease Docket Sheet (Please see it on PACER), University ofCalifomia at Berkeley, U. C. Berkeley Chancellor Robert Birgeneau, U. C. Berkeley General Counsel Susan Von Seeburg were named defendants in the Chang v. Rockridge case, represented by U. C. Berkeley graduate Gaylynn Kim Conant. Judge Chen is alumnus ofU. C. Berkeley and U. C. Berkeley School ofLaw. He lectured at defendant school in 2007-2008, donated money to the defendant in 20072008 and had other ties to the defendant. In a similar case, when a Judge was alumnus of defendant school, the Court of Appeal ordered evidentiary hearings to ascertain the judge's "associations and affiliations with the Law School". Easley v. University ofMichigan Board ofRegents, 853 F.2d 1351 (6th Cir. 1988); see al8O, Liljebergv. Health Svea. Aequisition Corp., 486 US. 847 (1988) (vacatingjudgment where trialjudge had ties to defendant school). Page2of3 Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 ,.. " Filed08/06/10 Page66 of 67 '" .~ . Case3:07-cv-04005-EMC Document211 Filed08/06/10 Page67 of 67 com:t.mt of Judicial MiscOnd:!t Against Magistrate Judge Edward M. Chen Chen concealed from the U.S. Congress the fact that the case ineluded the U. C. Berkeley Defendants with which he bad elose associations. Chen knew the relevant facts, yet he concealed the relevant facts. This concealment is intended to induce the U.S. Congress to believe that he is an impartial judge worthy of lifetime appointment. This is fraud by definition. CONCLUSION Based on the undisputable facts above, Edward M. Chen was biased, dishonest, scheming and lack the sense of justice required for a judge, his conduct damages the reputation of the courts and is prejudiciai to the effective and expeditious administration of the business of the courts. Complainant requests that the Judicial Council investigate Chen's misconduct and discipline him in accordance of the Act and the Rules. Dated: September 25,2009 Respectfully Submitted, Christine Chang Page 3 of3