J G Garson - significado y definición. Qué es J G Garson
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Qué (quién) es J G Garson - definición

AMERICAN JUDGE
Gerald P. Garson; Gerry Garson; Gerry P. Garson; Gerald Phillip Garson
  • Romeo y Julieta]] cigar; Siminovsky gave Garson a box of the Dominican cigars
  • [[New York Supreme Court]],<br>Brooklyn, New York

Mike Garson discography         
Mike Garson Discography
This article contains a comprehensive collection of information related to recordings by American pianist Mike Garson.
JG Thirlwell discography         
J.G. Thirlwell discography; J. G. Thirlwell discography
This article details the complete work of an Australian-born composer and music producer JG Thirlwell, from his beginnings in 1980 to the present. It covers his output under multiple pseudonyms as well as his work as a collaborating artist and soundtrack composer.
James Garson         
AMERICAN PHILOSOPHER
Garson, James
James Garson is an American philosopher and logician. He has made significant contributions in the study of modal logic and formal semantics.

Wikipedia

Gerald Garson

Gerald Phillip Garson (August 3, 1932 — February 6, 2016) was an American lawyer and New York Supreme Court Justice who heard matrimonial divorce and child custody cases in Brooklyn. He was convicted in 2007 of accepting bribes to manipulate the outcomes of divorce proceedings. Garson was imprisoned from June 2007 until December 2009.

In the bribery scheme, a "fixer" told people divorcing in Brooklyn that for a price he could steer their case to a sympathetic judge. After the fixer received a payment, he would refer the person to a lawyer contact of his, who had given Garson drinks, meals, cigars, and cash—accepting (and receiving) preferential treatment in return. The fixer and the lawyer, Paul Siminovsky (a lawyer for children appointed by Garson), would then bribe court employees to override the court's computer system, which was programmed to ensure that cases were assigned to judges randomly. Instead, they would have the case assigned to Garson. Garson, in turn, would then privately coach the lawyer. He would tell him questions the lawyer should ask of witnesses in the case before Garson, and arguments that the lawyer should make to Garson in court. Garson would then rule in favor of the lawyer.

Garson was indicted in 2003, on the basis of video surveillance of his judicial chambers, and recordings made on a body wire worn by his "favored" lawyer. At his four-week trial in 2007, he was acquitted on four counts, but found guilty on one count of accepting bribes, and on two lesser charges of receiving rewards for official misconduct. He was sentenced in June 2007 to three to ten years in prison. In December 2009, after 30 months in prison, he was released for good behavior at the age of 77.

The New York Times, commenting on Garson's conviction, observed: "It was news that confirmed every sneaking suspicion, every paranoid fantasy of anyone who had ever felt wronged in a divorce court."