Anyone remember Allyson Campbell?
If not, that’s understandable. After all, it’s been a couple of years since we had a STORY about her exploits in the 4th Judicial Court in Monroe. She’s the Monroe News-Star society columnist who showed up occasionally at her supposed full-time job as law clerk for 4th JDC Judge Wilson Rambo (gotta love that name; wonder if they have a judge named Rocky?).
On Wednesday, 12 of the 13 judges of the First Circuit Court of Appeal (only Judge Curtis Calloway did not hear arguments) dealt the self-promoting columnist/clerk a major setback when it ruled in an en banc (full court) decision that she does not enjoy “absolute immunity” from her actions in destroying court files and that a lawsuit against her may go forward.
But it was the dissenting opinion of one of the three judges who gave written opinions that makes for the best reading.
The ruling comes nearly two years after Louisiana Inspector General STEPHEN STREET found there was no “sufficient cause” to bring charges against Campbell for what witnesses said were repeated instances of her destroying or concealing trial briefs. For that matter, Louisiana State Police and the Louisiana Attorney General’s office also declined to pursue the matter, leaving only one state official, Legislative Auditor Daryl Purpera, with the integrity and courage to call Campbell out for her actions.
She was also the central figure in:
- The controversy that erupted when the Ouachita Citizen made a legal request for public records from the court—and was promptly sued by the judges for seeking those same public records.
- The filing of a lawsuit by Judge Sharon Marchman against four fellow judges and Campbell over Campbell’s claiming time worked when she was actually absent—including time when she was in restaurants and/or bars for which she claimed time—and the four judges who Judge Marchman said were complicit in covering for her.
- A complaint by Monroe attorney Cody Rials that Campbell had boasted in a local bar that she had destroyed Rials’ court document in a case he had pending before Judge Carl Sharp so that Sharp could not review it. One witness interviewed by Judges Sharp and Ben Jones quoted Campbell as saying that she had “taken great pleasure I shredding Rials’ judgment” and that she had given Rials a “legal f—ing.”
Now a DECISION by the First Circuit Court of Appeal, in overturning a lower court’s 2015 decision, has held that a lawsuit by Stanley Palowsky, III, against Campbell for damages incurred when she “spoliated, concealed, removed, destroyed, shredded, withheld, and/or improperly handled” his petition for damages against former business partner Brandon Cork may proceed.
At the same time, the First Circuit ruled that the five judges he added as defendants—Stephens Winters, Sharp, Rambo, Frederic Amman and Jones—for allowing Campbell “free rein to do as she pleased and then conspiring to conceal (her) acts” enjoyed “absolute immunity” from being sued and were dismissed as defendants despite their repeated denials that any documents were missing from the Palowsky file.
Palowsky argued that Campbell undertook her acts with malice and to obtain advantages for his opponents in the lawsuit. Moreover, he argued that Campbell’s supervising judges, Amman and Rambo, “did not just sit back quietly and let Campbell commit such acts, they actively worked and schemed to cover up her actions.”
Palowsky also said that Campbell’s wrongdoings “have been reported time and again by different attorneys in different cases and investigated time and again by defendant judges but have nevertheless been allowed to continue. It is now painfully apparent that not only has Campbell been unsupervised and uncontrollable for years, but defendant judges have actively schemed to allow her conduct to continue unabatedly (sic).”
Campbell, who doubles as a society columnist of sorts (if one really stretches the definition of the term) for the News-Star, is obviously her own biggest fan—unless you count her stated infatuation for Cork’s attorney Thomas Haynes, III, about whom she wrote in one of her columns that he…had the “IT” factor, “a somewhat undefinable quality that makes you and everyone else around stand taller when they enter the room, listen a little more closely, encourage you to take fashion or life risks, make each occasion a little more fun and generally inspire you to aim to achieve that ‘IT’ factor for yourself.”
If they taught that method of courtroom coverage in my Louisiana Tech journalism classes, I must have been absent that day.
Needless to say, the First Circuit upheld the lower court in expunging that paragraph from Palowsky’s petition.
In fact, the lower court struck 46 paragraphs from his lawsuit against Campbell and the five judges, but the First Circuit restored 21 paragraphs to the petition. The 25 it allowed to remain removed involved matters not directly related to Campbell’s alleged destruction of files, the judges said.
In 2014, Campbell published a column entitled, “A Modern Guide to Handle Your Scandal,” in which she wrote, “Half the fun is getting there, and the other half is in the fix.” She then went on to advise her readers to “keep the crowd guessing. Send it out—lies, half-truths, gorilla dust, whatever you’ve got.” She told readers, “You’re no one until someone is out to get you.”
(There’s a line in there somewhere about Trump, but it’s just too easy.)
In July 2015, she wrote in her column, “It’s not cheating if it’s in our favor.”
That paragraph was removed from Palowsky’s petition as was one that noted that on one occasion, 52 writ applications went missing for more than a year before it was discovered that Campbell had used the applications as an end table in her office.
Say what?!!?
One paragraph left in the petition was one in which Palowsky pointed out that the five judges might not be out of the woods yet, if the Louisiana Judiciary Commission does its job. The Louisiana State Constitution provides as follows: “On recommendation of the judiciary commission, the (Louisiana) Supreme Court may censure, suspend with or without salary, remove from office, or retire involuntarily a judge for willful misconduct relating to his official duty, willful and persistent failure to perform his duty, persistent and public conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice that brings the judicial office into disrepute, conduct while in office which could constitute a felony, or conviction of a felony.”
It would appear in consideration of the judicial protection of Campbell, a case could be made that the judges are guilty at least of slipshod management at best and criminal malfeasance at worst.
All the judges in the 4th JDC recused themselves when Palowsky sued and his case was heard by Ad Hoc Judge Jerome Barbera, III, who cited in his Dec. 11, 2015, ruling dismissing the five judges as defendants an 1871 ruling that said, “It is a general principle of the highest importance to the proper administration of justice that a judicial officer, in exercising the authority vested in him, shall be free to act upon his own convictions, without apprehension of personal consequences to himself.”
Even though Palowsky was claiming that the judges protected Campbell despite their full knowledge of what she had done, Barbera said, “Allegations of bad faith or malice are not sufficient to overcome judicial immunity.”
Another way of putting it is that the judges are untouchable and that their edicts, like those of the Pope, are infallible, divinely inspired.
Barbera extended the immunity to Campbell but the First Circuit opinion, written by Judge Page McClendon, overturned Barbera on that point. While two of the Appeal Court judges, Vanessa Whipple and Guy Holdridge upheld immunity for the five district court judges in their written opinions, all three rejected the idea of immunity for Campbell and all three voted to reinstate 21 of the paragraphs in Palowsky’s petition.
But it was that third judge, William Crain, who wrote that none of the defendants deserved immunity from events in the 4th JDC.
“Judicial immunity is of the highest order of importance in maintaining an independent judiciary, free of threats or intimidation. But it is a judge-created doctrine policed by judges.” (emphasis mine)
He also said that when judicial actors “perform non-judicial acts, they are not protected by this otherwise sweeping immunity doctrine.
“The duty to maintain records in cases involves many non-judicial actors and can only be considered a ministerial, not judicial act,” he wrote.
“For the same reasons (that) the law clerk is not immunized for her non-judicial acts related to maintaining court records, the judges are not immunized for allegedly aiding, abetting, then concealing those acts. Failing to supervise a law clerk relative to a non-judicial act is not a judicial act for purposes of immunity.
“The doctrine of judicial immunity does not shield judicial actors from civil liability for criminal acts (and) while later cases suggest judicial immunity extends even to judicial acts performed with malice, those cases do not immunize judicial actors from criminal conduct grounded in malice or corruption.
“Extending the doctrine of judicial immunity to include civil liability for alleged criminal conduct, as in this case, risks undermining the public’s trust in the judiciary, which I cannot countenance.”
So, how, you might ask, has Campbell managed to withstand the barrage of charges of payroll fraud, absenteeism, records destruction, and critical audit reports and still keep her job?
And continue to flaunt her actions in a newspaper column?
That can be explained in one word: Connections.
Campbell’s father is George Campbell, an executive with Regions Bank. George Campbell is married to the daughter of influential attorney Billy Boles who was instrumental in the growth of Century Telephone and who is a major contributor to various political campaigns.
Allyson Campbell is also the sister of Catherine Creed of the Monroe personal injury law firm of Creed and Creed. Christian Creed, Campbell’s brother-in-law, contributed $5,000 to Attorney General Jeff Landry’s 2015 campaign, which could explain, in part, why the AG backed off its investigation of Campbell the following year.
In a town the size of Monroe, those connections are sufficient, apparently.
The Legal Profession needs more members like Judge William Crain..
Once again, the State Police, Attorney General, and Inspector General have FAILED TO DO THEIR DUTY! TIME TO DRAIN THE SWAMP!
Great article …. thanks
“In 2014, Campbell published a column entitled, “A Modern Guide to Handle Your Scandal,” in which she wrote, “Half the fun is getting there, and the other half is in the fix.” She then went on to advise her readers to “keep the crowd guessing. Send it out—lies, half-truths, gorilla dust, whatever you’ve got.” She told readers, “You’re no one until someone is out to get you.”
I believe the POTUS has an opening for you, Ms. Campbell.
What you point out is spot on Stephen but with the news feed this morning i can’t imagine ANYONE other than maybe Bannon or Alex Jones wanting to work for Trump now. That dude Is radioactive now.
Many, including Sarah Huckabee Sanders, are still willing to risk radiation poisoning in pursuit of the personal and ideological gain they believe comes with fealty to him, along with many in elected office – Steve Scalise, as one such example.
Great article! Will Crain has been elected without opposition to a 22nd JDC seat and the Appeals Court. It is a welcome and infrequent occasion when we have the right to be proud of someone’s character and devotion to the rule of law even though voters have never cast a single vote for Judge Crain.
Great article and comments. Mr. Winham is correct. The 4th JDC is big time Jindal/duck dynasty group, and Huckabee hucksters, amazing what money and religion can do, like destroy our country, but we will be alright, as long as we, love always ron thompson
Stanley Polowsky and Sedric Banks must have made some big donations to the Louisiana Voice April fundraiser for you to write such a one-sided article. Why don’t you shine the light on yourself and publish a list of donors and amounts donated to the Louisiana Voice.
To be absolutely candid, you are incorrect. Neither has ever contributed to LouisianaVoice, neither has ever communicated with me, and you are grasping at straws.
If I didn’t know better, I’d think perhaps I struck a nerve. Moreover, everything in my article was taken directly from the public record. You may wish to take your issue up with the First Circuit.
As for publishing a list of my donors, I have no problem with that but because some of my donors work for the state, for sheriffs, and for other entities, revealing their identities would bring reprisals against them and I’m sure you would never wish that on anyone, being the reasonable, level-headed, rational person you obviously are.
Your admitted receipt of donations by “state employees” is an illegal payment by the state employees. (See La. R.S. 42:1117). Maybe the Louisiana State Police should investigate. You won’t reveal your donor list because it would show a tie between donations and article. (Pay to Play!)
WELL SAID TOM!
Perhaps one should read R.S. 42:117 and especially the next article 1118.1
This is not a isolated occurance .
I had a family member file in 2015. It is now 2019 and we have not made it to trial. Our case deals with some of the same individuals and procedures. Our case was criminally denied due to politics. As this is what the Attorney General advised me. I will still continue to pursue civilly as others are encouraged also. It takes a village to beat corruption.