Judges

1.  Criminals and Victims: A Trial Judge Reflects on Crime and Punishment, Lois G. Forer, 1980.
2.  A Rage to Punish: The Unintended Consequences of Mandatory Sentencing, Lois G. Forer, 1994.
3.  Money and Justice: Who Owns the Courts? Lois G. Forer, 1984. 
4.   The Supremacists: The Tyranny of Judges and How to Stop It, Phyllis Schlafly, 2004.
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ARTICLES
1. How Dare She!” Doug French, 2003 on California Justice, Justice Janice Rogers Brown of the California Supreme Court.

Just what makes Justice Brown so horrifying? It must be statements like “Where government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates, and our ability to control our own destinies atrophies.” In that same speech, Brown went on to say, “The result is a debased, debauched culture which finds moral depravity entertaining and virtue contemptible.”

Justice Brown has led a life that embodies the American dream — at least the dream as envisioned by the nation’s founding fathers. The 54-year-old Brown was born in Greenville, Alabama, the daughter of sharecroppers. Excelling in law school though a single mother, she graduated from UCLA Law School in 1977. She became a successful attorney, a successful judge and was elected to the California Supreme Court. The last time she ran for the court in 1998, she garnered 76 percent of the vote. During the seven years she’s served on the court, Brown has written over 200 opinions. And these are opinions that — unlike most legal scribbling — are actually readable. Wrote Vance Raye for the Sacramento Bee: “Her fresh and incisive mode of expression — a delightful departure from the vapid style that characterizes most legal writing — is admired even by those who disagree with her views.”

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