Contempt of Court Bill Proposal

New Edit:

Section 1.9. Contempt of Court


25. Contempt of Court shall be defined as:


Intentional actions on the part of a participant in Court Proceedings which are intended to disrupt, interrupt or impair proceedings, or to disparage or show disrespect to the authority of the Court.

Intentionally failing to to comply with proceedings schedules and rules of the court.

Attempting to influence Justices in their deliberations in an unlawful manner.

26. Presiding Justices or the Greater Court may act appropriately and proportionately to remedy issues of Contempt..

All the principles of Contempt are covered in new, simplified wording.

[edited for silly typos and spelling errors. :P ]
 
Romanoffia:
New Edit:

Section 1.9. Contempt of Court


25. Contempt of Court shall be defined as:


Intentional actions on the part of a participant in Court Proceedings which are intended to disrupt, interrupt or impair proceedings, or to disparage or show disrespect to the authority of the Court.

Intentionally failing to to comply with prodeding schedules and rules of the court.

Attempting to influence Justices in their deliberations in an unlawful manner.

26. Presiding Justices or the Greater Court may act appropriately and proportionatly to remedy issues of Contempt.

All the principles of Contempt are covered in new, simplified wording.
I like it, short and to the point. Just a question though, we we're discussing this yesterday on the IRC. What would constitute as intentional disruptions/impairments/interruptions? Who decided what is legal ground for disruptions/impairments/interruptions? Would legal objecting over and over be considered disruptions?

Just a couple things to clear up for me, otherwise I like it.
 
Egalotir:
Romanoffia:
New Edit:

Section 1.9. Contempt of Court


25. Contempt of Court shall be defined as:


Intentional actions on the part of a participant in Court Proceedings which are intended to disrupt, interrupt or impair proceedings, or to disparage or show disrespect to the authority of the Court.

Intentionally failing to to comply with proceedings schedules and rules of the court.

Attempting to influence Justices in their deliberations in an unlawful manner.

26. Presiding Justices or the Greater Court may act appropriately and proportionately to remedy issues of Contempt.

All the principles of Contempt are covered in new, simplified wording.
I like it, short and to the point. Just a question though, we we're discussing this yesterday on the IRC. What would constitute as intentional disruptions/impairments/interruptions? Who decided what is legal ground for disruptions/impairments/interruptions? Would legal objecting over and over be considered disruptions?

Just a couple things to clear up for me, otherwise I like it.
Good question.

Given that a more detailed list of exact items that constitute Contempt seemed to be distasteful to some people for some odd reason. So, a broader definition in terms of a specific Law empowers Justices to have a good amount of leeway in determining what is Contempt, but a Law that prevents the Justices from going too far (such as declaring not pleading guilty as 'Contempt').

An intentional/impairments/interruptions disruption would loosely mean any acts that obviously tries to disrupt a trial or screw up the proceedings in general. This could cover anything from showing outright contempt for the Court's authority, profanity, obscenity, trolling, refusing to comply with court schedules, or repeatedly making inane motions (which might include asking for the same motion repeatedly on the same grounds repeatedly with the intent of annoying the Court after the Court has denied the motion). This would not include motions to reconsider a decision on a previous motion, if it doesn't become perfunctory.

The one thing that I thought was important but which I have edited out was a provision that not obeying the orders of a Court Decision is an element of Contempt. It is, however, implied by the pure meaning of Contempt.

Again, the idea is to give Court Justices a means of squelching overt and deliberate attempts at disrupting a trial but without giving the Court the ability to get more arbitrary than it already is. Also, the wording of the Law does not deny the larger Court the opportunity of finding a sitting Justice in Contempt should the Justice try to silence a defendant or prosecutor by arbitrary determinations of Contempt.

Unfortunately, there are some who do not think that RL logic and reason apply to TNP Court Proceedings or Laws in general. It is unfortunate because currently one cannot argue anything with anything resembling real legal logic or rational jurisprudence, even in the most simplified of terms.
 
Romanoffia:
Egalotir:
Romanoffia:
New Edit:

Section 1.9. Contempt of Court


25. Contempt of Court shall be defined as:


Intentional actions on the part of a participant in Court Proceedings which are intended to disrupt, interrupt or impair proceedings, or to disparage or show disrespect to the authority of the Court.

Intentionally failing to to comply with proceedings schedules and rules of the court.

Attempting to influence Justices in their deliberations in an unlawful manner.

26. Presiding Justices or the Greater Court may act appropriately and proportionately to remedy issues of Contempt.

All the principles of Contempt are covered in new, simplified wording.
I like it, short and to the point. Just a question though, we we're discussing this yesterday on the IRC. What would constitute as intentional disruptions/impairments/interruptions? Who decided what is legal ground for disruptions/impairments/interruptions? Would legal objecting over and over be considered disruptions?

Just a couple things to clear up for me, otherwise I like it.
Good question.

Given that a more detailed list of exact items that constitute Contempt seemed to be distasteful to some people for some odd reason. So, a broader definition in terms of a specific Law empowers Justices to have a good amount of leeway in determining what is Contempt, but a Law that prevents the Justices from going too far (such as declaring not pleading guilty as 'Contempt').

An intentional/impairments/interruptions disruption would loosely mean any acts that obviously tries to disrupt a trial or screw up the proceedings in general. This could cover anything from showing outright contempt for the Court's authority, profanity, obscenity, trolling, refusing to comply with court schedules, or repeatedly making inane motions (which might include asking for the same motion repeatedly on the same grounds repeatedly with the intent of annoying the Court after the Court has denied the motion). This would not include motions to reconsider a decision on a previous motion, if it doesn't become perfunctory.

The one thing that I thought was important but which I have edited out was a provision that not obeying the orders of a Court Decision is an element of Contempt. It is, however, implied by the pure meaning of Contempt.

Again, the idea is to give Court Justices a means of squelching overt and deliberate attempts at disrupting a trial but without giving the Court the ability to get more arbitrary than it already is. Also, the wording of the Law does not deny the larger Court the opportunity of finding a sitting Justice in Contempt should the Justice try to silence a defendant or prosecutor by arbitrary determinations of Contempt.

Unfortunately, there are some who do not think that RL logic and reason apply to TNP Court Proceedings or Laws in general. It is unfortunate because currently one cannot argue anything with anything resembling real legal logic or rational jurisprudence, even in the most simplified of terms.
Thanks for answering my questions and clearing it all up. At this point I think it would be ok to leave it how it is and let the language and the presiding justices look over what they consider contempt in the courtroom during trails. Like you mentioned if it becomes to arbitrary, or too long it loses the votes needed to pass essentially.

If this were to go to vote now you have my yes.
 
A question to the speaker.

We now have, essentially, a brand new bill introduced during the formal debate period. Is it reasonable to leave the regional assembly so little time to discuss it?
 
I agree.


We need to extend the debate, but it takes at least three people to request such an extension.

I request the formal debate be extended at least another week.
 
The whole structure of this proposal is problematic.

It is blatantly unbillofrightsical to allow the Court to impose punishments for a criminal code violation without first holding a trial about that violation, and this proposal makes contempt of court a criminal code violation. If the desire is for the court to easily be able to govern itself, this is entirely the wrong way to go about it.
 
Since this is not really an edit or revision it is more appropriate for this bill to be withdrawn and a new bill to be introduced from scratch.

Edit: typo.
 
flemingovia:
Since this is not really an edit or revision it is more appropriate for this bill to be withdrawn and a new bill to be introduced from scratch.

Edit: typo.
No, we need a third to extend, that is, unless you think this bill won't will pass as edited.
 
You don't actually need a that. As the proposer of the bill, you can request that FD be lengthened - or that we exit formal debate entirely - at your discretion. :P
 
OK,

I think this needs to be debated a bit longer. I mean, formal debate is also about tweaking a bill before it goes to the actual vote (the rules don't really specify it in enough detail).

I mean, the way it is right now, someone could be found in Contempt if they weren't f the right religion and all. :P
 
I still believe that until the Court had tested a court rule on the subject and see how it works, even an amendment to the Legal Code is premature.
 
I can see Grosse's point about implenting this within the Court Rules instead of the legal code, but I'm not sure that would be right, because I think what we need is analagous to English Law, somebody in contempt can have sanctions imposed by the judge, without any additional trial, they can be sentenced in the court. In TNP, that could mean a sentence for contempt being delivered in the same trial thread that they were behaving contemptuously.

If you're not familiar with the concept, I would illustrate it by saying you can go into a trial not accused of anything, merely making a case, and suddenly receive a punishment such as a ban on yourself. Your rights are affected to protect the integrity of the court. That can be worth it, even if the one in contempt does not see it that way.

I don't mind if we introduce contempt or not, whatever people want, but if you want to facilitate the court keeping order then Roman's bill is a good shot at doing that, and you should consider it. On the other hand, if you believe the court can effectively impose such sanctions just by modifying the rules of its own body, then that serves the same purpose.
 
Theres been a motion to extend debate, since the language has changed. So I don't think its going to vote right now. We'll have to wait and see what Zyvet says.

Also technically the original FD period hasnt expired yet. It went in FD on the 18th five days from then is the 23rd. So no vote has been scheduled yet.
 
PaulWallLibertarian42:
Theres been a motion to extend debate, since the language has changed. So I don't think its going to vote right now. We'll have to wait and see what Zyvet says.

Also technically the original FD period hasnt expired yet. It went in FD on the 18th five days from then is the 23rd. So no vote has been scheduled yet.
Eh. I can wait. ;)
 
Grosseschnauzer:
I still believe that until the Court had tested a court rule on the subject and see how it works, even an amendment to the Legal Code is premature.

And I still believe the Court will do nothing to address this issue. And that's just the first problem.

The second problem is that there is no means by which the Court can maintain order in the face of acts of Contempt without the imposing Justice, or the Court as a whole, can be exempt from being mob-lynched for imposing even a reasonable amount of order in the court in the face of acts of Contempt.

The third problem is that without an actual law, the authority of the Court to impose sanctions for Contempt will always be challenged, and probably via recall and other forms of public lynchings.

The fourth problem is that the authority of the Court or the CJ to create rules on the fly, even when a CJ has the authority to do so where no specific rules exist involving Contempt (or other matters for that issue) will always be challenged, resulting in a recall or mob-lynching.

The fifth problem with your contention is that passing Contempt Legislation is in all reality a means to exert 'checks and balances' between the branches of government by extending in Law form a very specific tool for the Court to use to enforce order in legal proceedings (or should the RA or Executive Branch refuse to comply with a legal decision of the Court).

I have no faith in the Court's desire to deal with this matter and therefore no faith in the ability of the Court to maintain order as a matter of functionality of the Court.

Such a Contempt law is actually doing a really big favour for the Court - and it is up to the Court as to whether or not to enforce sanctions for Contempt - in which situation, the Court will be at absolute fault in any matters of order they voluntarily choose not to remedy (in which case a recall or public mob-lynching would be justified).

Finally, if the Court refuses to maintain order in the Court, and the Court in fact has a specific Law to use as tool to accomplish that end, then the Court gets blamed as a whole for not using a specific tool handed to them on a silver platter.


Chasmanthe:
I can see Grosse's point about implenting this within the Court Rules instead of the legal code, but I'm not sure that would be right, because I think what we need is analagous to English Law, somebody in contempt can have sanctions imposed by the judge, without any additional trial, they can be sentenced in the court. In TNP, that could mean a sentence for contempt being delivered in the same trial thread that they were behaving contemptuously.

If you're not familiar with the concept, I would illustrate it by saying you can go into a trial not accused of anything, merely making a case, and suddenly receive a punishment such as a ban on yourself. Your rights are affected to protect the integrity of the court. That can be worth it, even if the one in contempt does not see it that way.

I don't mind if we introduce contempt or not, whatever people want, but if you want to facilitate the court keeping order then Roman's bill is a good shot at doing that, and you should consider it. On the other hand, if you believe the court can effectively impose such sanctions just by modifying the rules of its own body, then that serves the same purpose.

I agree, with the exception of the last sentence - I tried to create and apply a rule to deal with Contempt, on the fly as previous CJs have done, and look what happened. Ergo, no matter what the Court Rules say, there will always be blood if the Court ever attempts enforce even a modicum of order on unruly participants who with endlessly gripe about their rights being violated.

Hence, there is a need to carve in legal stone the Court's ability to deal with Contempt issues, whether the Court wants to deal with it or not - specifically for the benefit of future sets of Justices who may actually want to maintain order and due process.

All said and done, the reason I asked for an extension of the formal debate was due to the fact that, 1.) I changed the language of the bill and that a re-set of formal debate is required so that if needs be, we can get a better law as a results, and; 2.) to give the Court more time to attend to something I believe they have absolutely no intent of dealing with at all.

To use Chasmanthe's excellent example and reference to English Law (or any common law system that 99% of us are familiar with) and to extend it to its logical conclusion, Contempt is not a matter of Procedure, it is a matter of Criminal intent - and that criminal intent is to defuse and disrupt Due Process which is guaranteed by TNP Constitution and the BOR is, in fact, a criminal act.

Unless we defuse the matter of Contempt by creating a specific law dealing with it, Contempt will always be a successful tactic to derail trials one way or another regardless of all the Court Rules you can create (since the Court can technically only create procedural rules, but some may contend otherwise. A creative argument can wipe out any Court Rule, which is why a Contempt law is necessary and good).
 
I note, as has been noted earlier, that no motion is necessary for formal debate to be extended, merely the request of the proposer, and, such a request having been made, I extend formal debate by one week. Formal debate shall now conclude in nine days, at which time a vote shall be scheduled.

I also note that objections to scheduling a vote are, at this time, premature, as no vote has yet been scheduled.
 
Mr Speaker, Since this is now, in effect, an entirely new bill, i object to us being in formal debate.

The bill should be removed from the table and resubmitted from scratch.
 
Legislative Proposal Procedure

During the five days after a vote a called for, the member who introduced the proposal may continue to amend it.This period, hereafter referred to as Formal Debate, may be shortened at the member who introduced the proposal's request. Once Formal Debate has ended, the proposal may no longer be amended, and the Speaker will schedule a vote to begin no fewer than two days hence.

This is NOT a new bill. It is still on the same subject as contempt of court. This is just a different edit of the bill. The bill proposer may amend or edit a proposed bill at their whims and discretion until such a time as FD is over. The bill sponsor is within their legal procedures to make changes, alter, or submit new language until FD is over.

If at the time of FD being over you arent a fan of the bill. Then object to a vote actually being scheduled.
 
flemingovia:
Mr Speaker, Since this is now, in effect, an entirely new bill, i object to us being in formal debate.

The bill should be removed from the table and resubmitted from scratch.
Why do you always object to logical, rational laws even being discussed?

Remember, Mr. Flem, parliamentary tricks to suppress logical and rational legislation can be a sword that cuts both ways, and will should such tactics be initiated.

Now I understand your underlying disdain for the complexity of our Laws and Constitution and the absurd quantity of bureaucracy and procedure. I too feel your pain and frankly I am at times equally, no, even more frustrated at the nearly Byzantine arrangement we call our 'System'. Now, if you are interested in actually changing the system we have to make it more rational, reasonable, objective and in a way that preserves individual Rights and Liberties, then by all means, do so and you will find support from rational and reasonable individuals.

However, if you intend to bring down the entire system, replace it with a monarchy and make it a Theorcratic Dictatorship my mucking things up via misuse of parliamentary procedure or violations of it, then you won't get any support, at least not from reasonable and rational people.

But, as The Speaker has said, until the formal debate is closes, all bills are essentially a work in progress until they go to a vote in fixed form.

So, I might suggest that rather than be a stumbling block to rationality, it would be a service to the region for you to either suggest reasonable changes to the bill. You might be surprised at how flexible I am when it comes to reasonable and rational changes.

I can't imagine an Almighty Deity being afraid of a little piece of rational and reasonable legislation going to a vote in the RA. I mean, after all, you are an omnipotent Deity so such matters as mortal legislation should be meaningless to you and of no consequence should it pass or not. Well, that is unless you are less than God, in which case your objections are duly noted. :lol: :P

But never the less, the formal debate continues.

With that out of the way, does anyone see any modifications of this bill before I move it to a formal vote at the appropriate time?
 
I already pointed out my objections. Putting this into the criminal code would require that contempt of court charges be determined in an entirely new trial before any disciplinary actions could be taken. That is assuredly not a good way to handle immediately disruptive behavior.
 
Remember, Mr. Flem, parliamentary tricks to suppress logical and rational legislation can be a sword that cuts both ways, and will should such tactics be initiated.

thank you, Dr Rom, I shall remember that. You really are becoming quite the master of the veiled threat.

Moving on to the substance of the new bill, then. I have three points which will, at the moment, cause me to vote against. I will try to be brief.

1. in the main, i believe that this matter should be dealt with by court rules rather than legislation. I understand the justices are drawing up rules to deal with this, and I would rather not cut across their bailiwick.

2. I do not like clause 26 ("26. Presiding Justices or the Greater Court may act appropriately and proportionately to remedy issues of Contempt.) The wording is far too loose and open to challenge and draconian interpretation. An unstable judge throwing a wobbly could justify all sorts of behaviour citing this clause.

3. the right of defendants to choose their own counsel without restriction is still not addressed.

I would urge all respondents to be brief. I have given up reading over-long posts.
 
I thought that the right for defendants to choose their own counsel was already part of our legal code. If I am incorrect, I agree with Flem that it is something that needs addressing.
 
Egalotir:
I thought that the right for defendants to choose their own counsel was already part of our legal code. If I am incorrect, I agree with Flem that it is something that needs addressing.
the right of a defendant to choose their own counsel is a right preserved in the Bill of Rights.

HOWEVER, what the BOR says is this:

7. When charged with criminal acts, Nations of The North Pacific shall have a fair, impartial, and public trial before a neutral and impartial judicial officer. In any criminal proceeding, a Nation is presumed innocent unless guilt is proven to the fact finder by reasonably certain evidence. A Nation may be represented by any counsel of the Nation's choosing. No Nation convicted of a crime shall be subject to a punishment disproportionate to that crime.

Now this is quite sweeping, and hypothetically could prevent a competent justice from maintaining order in the court. Let me outline just a few ways:

A defendant may insist on being represented by an individual banned from the forum.
A defendant may insist on being represented by a counsel removed from the court for disruption
A defendant may refuse counsel appointed by the court.
A defendant may insist on being represented by a counsel team rather than an individual.
and so on.

As things stand, and this bill does nothing to solve this, a court could not deal with this problem without breaking a defendant's rights under the BOR, which alone could cause a case to collapse.

I know others disagree with this interpretation, but I have been a justice many times, and this is to me the plainest reading of our laws. It is a loophole and issue that ought to be dealt with. Without it any contempt bill is pretty useless.

The revised rules the justices are working out may help. this bill does not.
 
We need an appeals court. That way if someone is sentenced they can write an appeal saying their rights were violated by the attorney of their choosing being kicked out of the 'court room'.

Would make for interresting court drama. :)
 
I have had a plan that I first suggested during the drafting phase of the current constitution, where there would be four justices, and on any given case, one justice would be the justice of the trial division for that trial, and the other three justices would be the justices of the appeals division for that trial. The roles would rotate for each trial. That seems to me to be the easiest way to have a mechanism for appeals, and keep the trial justice off the appeals panel. (I wouldn't be surprised if the Chief Justice would always be sitting on the appeals panel with the trial role rotation among the other three justices and or temporary hearing officers when necessary) It would require only a minimum amount of legislating and the Court would have to provide rules for the two divisions rotation and how and when appeals would be lidged, but ito my mind it would be fairer than the current approach.
 
Egalotir:
I thought that the right for defendants to choose their own counsel was already part of our legal code. If I am incorrect, I agree with Flem that it is something that needs addressing.
A defendant has that right, but not the right to allow or direct their counsel to disrupt a trial.

Flemingovia is NOT correct, and Silly String is also absolutely incorrect that enforcing order in the Court via a Contempt Law would cause the need for a new trial.

And the other point being is that the Court will do nothing to create rules to assure order in the Court, mainly because the current state of affairs allows the Court (with two Flemingovian Justices on it) to simply punish some people and not other people according to arbitrary rules that are fluid and nebulous. Too much room for the Court to enforce a 'State Religion'.

Until the Court has the authority to deal with matters of Contempt, every trial will end in a mistrial because defence Counsels will use Contempt as a tactic. And, I suppose the Court approves of that tactic because it renders the Court null and void, and thus increasing the potential for a 'harmless state religion' to create laws to replace everything with a hair-brained Fiqh system to complete the dismantling of Democracy in this region.

The Edit stays the same, so far, unless I hear a valid reason to change the wording.
 
Romanoffia:
Egalotir:
I thought that the right for defendants to choose their own counsel was already part of our legal code. If I am incorrect, I agree with Flem that it is something that needs addressing.
A defendant has that right, but not the right to allow or direct their counsel to disrupt a trial.

Flemingovia is NOT correct, and Silly String is also absolutely incorrect that enforcing order in the Court via a Contempt Law would cause the need for a new trial.

And the other point being is that the Court will do nothing to create rules to assure order in the Court, mainly because the current state of affairs allows the Court (with two Flemingovian Justices on it) to simply punish some people and not other people according to arbitrary rules that are fluid and nebulous. Too much room for the Court to enforce a 'State Religion'.

Until the Court has the authority to deal with matters of Contempt, every trial will end in a mistrial because defence Counsels will use Contempt as a tactic. And, I suppose the Court approves of that tactic because it renders the Court null and void, and thus increasing the potential for a 'harmless state religion' to create laws to replace everything with a hair-brained Fiqh system to complete the dismantling of Democracy in this region.

The Edit stays the same, so far, unless I hear a valid reason to change the wording.
I am very flattered, but not everything in this region is about flemingovianism.

It's beginning to look silly, tying everything to the state religion bill.
 
Your State Religion is looking silly. When did you declare yourself Supreme Ruler of the Region.

So, now lets get back on topic about the Contempt Law before it gets called for a vote (and, of course, Flemingovia tries to stop the vote because he's afraid that a logical and reasonable law might pass).
 
Agreed. Back on topic.

Nobody has addressed concerns with the loose and open wording of clause 26, nor really how this might cut across court rules that the justices say are being revised.
 
flemingovia:
Remember, Mr. Flem, parliamentary tricks to suppress logical and rational legislation can be a sword that cuts both ways, and will should such tactics be initiated.

thank you, Dr Rom, I shall remember that. You really are becoming quite the master of the veiled threat.

Moving on to the substance of the new bill, then. I have three points which will, at the moment, cause me to vote against. I will try to be brief.

1. in the main, i believe that this matter should be dealt with by court rules rather than legislation. I understand the justices are drawing up rules to deal with this, and I would rather not cut across their bailiwick.

2. I do not like clause 26 ("26. Presiding Justices or the Greater Court may act appropriately and proportionately to remedy issues of Contempt.) The wording is far too loose and open to challenge and draconian interpretation. An unstable judge throwing a wobbly could justify all sorts of behaviour citing this clause.

3. the right of defendants to choose their own counsel without restriction is still not addressed.

I would urge all respondents to be brief. I have given up reading over-long posts.
Point by point rebuttal (and I will use as many words as I see fit to answer your questions.):

1.) The Court refuses to address this issue because they have absolutely no intent to address this issue. Contempt which is an act of disrupting Due Process in an intentional fashion should be made a point of Legislation precisely because Contempt denies or disrupts Due Process, which, is a violation of the Constitution and BOR. Your argument is moot.

2.) Justices are entitled to impose penalties that are not disproportionate as part of their job. Why is that not also far too loose and open to challenge and draconian interpretation? Your argument is not only moot, but it is a straw-man.

3.) This law in no way denies a defendant the right to choose their own counsel without restriction. That is in the BOR and this point you bring up is also moot and a straw-man. The Justices, even with this law, still have to take into account that they may not violate defendants right to anything. Justices still have to respect that right of the defendant and this law in no way gives a Justice or the Court any lawful ability or right to violate the specific right you mention. Justices are still restrained by the Constitution and BOR in their imposition of any penalty or restriction used in order to deal with Contempt.

In other words, you arguments are either moot, straw-men, or both. Let the RA decide.

Here is the exact wording of the proposed law. Nowhere is the right of the defendant to counsel of choice denied or abridged in any way. Justices can impose penalties for Contempt, but that does not give the Justices the right to violate any of the Defendant's rights including council of choice. The penalties for Contempt are up to the Justices within the confines of the BOR (as are all of their other actions of any kind). Justices will just have to be creative in their imposition of penalties, that is unless we want to go to a 'cook-book' system of penalties for all laws.
 
I have to side with Roman on this still. The Judges are still bound by the Constitution and BOR and can't just give ridiculous penalties for the Contempt. Although I do like the idea of an appeals court, in case such things occur. Having a rotation of judges to the appeals court, like previously stated, also sounds good, and reduces the chance of, again, as Flem put it "Draconian interpretation".

Having rules for disrupting Due Process is just something we need.
 
Egalotir:
I have to side with Roman on this still. The Judges are still bound by the Constitution and BOR and can't just give ridiculous penalties for the Contempt. Although I do like the idea of an appeals court, in case such things occur. Having a rotation of judges to the appeals court, like previously stated, also sounds good, and reduces the chance of, again, as Flem put it "Draconian interpretation".

Having rules for disrupting Due Process is just something we need.
Couldn't have put it better myself.
 
I think we are making a fundamental mistake in our thinking here. There seems to be a delusion that the Court needs "fixing". I think that the Court of TNP is one of the wonders of NS, and to seek to change it is truly a terrible thing.
 
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