Patton Oswalt's bit comes to mind about how every year after 90, one law no longer applies to you. Speeding was one of the earlier ones, I think this guy is able to legally murder so long as he does it with his hands.
Could someone be so kind as to enlighten me as to what this show is? Every clip I see is someone standing in front of his honor. He has a chat, has a joke, sometimes ribs the portly cop near him then let's the person off their trump charge
His name is Judge Caprio. He televised is court room on a show called Caught in Providence, which is in Rhode Island. He was well known for showing compassion. He retired a while ago due to pancreatic cancer.
Thanks. So these were legitimate charges? I can't imagine this lovely elderly gentleman speeding. So I thought it was more like Judge Judy (fake court)
Judge Judy is a arbitration court. They get people to agree to drop their small claims cases in favor of mediation. It’s not a regular courtroom, but it’s still “real” with actual cases and legally binding decisions.
Always loved when people left judge Judy going "fuck that I'm not paying that" then shortly after being brought back in to be reminded that this is legally binding, you DO have to pay that lmao
It’s actually a court, though the show pays the fines. That’s why if she REALLY wants to stick it to someone, she finagles it so it’s not just money, or there are conditions. Idk who told you she was disbarred, but that’s not true.
Going by fault memory I heard something along the lines of in one of her cases she decided she had the power to stop a parents access to a child and was sued over it, could be fake news though.
She was a family court judge before she was a TV judge. She doesn’t do anything with access to a child on the show - in fact, if you watch, she will specifically point out she can’t do that in this role. She can’t be sued personally as a judge, either - qualified immunity. So that sounds like fake news.
Judges can definitely be sued in NY (where she sat on the bench). They have qualified immunity and the case will be dismissed as long as they acted within the duties of their job, but anyone can file a lawsuit against a judge or anyone really. Often they are filed as Article 78 Petitions. I’d say the majority of judges get sued at some point in their career, it’s not really a knock on them as long as they acted above board, they work in a job where by definition 50% of the people they interact with leave unhappy. It’s bound to happen especially when everyone they see is already in some kind of legal battle.
Depends on how you define "court". In the U.S legal system the show technicly falls under private arbitration. There is a real dispute, the parties are bound by the decistion, and the settlement is final. (No case can be brought on the same set of facts in another court), and government courts may issue enforcemnt orders based on the result.
And I believe they pull actual cases/disputes out of the local small claims dockets and offer to arbitrate them.
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u/creuter Feb 27 '25 edited Feb 27 '25
Patton Oswalt's bit comes to mind about how every year after 90, one law no longer applies to you. Speeding was one of the earlier ones, I think this guy is able to legally murder so long as he does it with his hands.
https://youtu.be/sbJs-Ul1QFo?si=0QGprQRVOilQifaC