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No-nonsense jurist cast into spotlight by NBA brawl

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  • No-nonsense jurist cast into spotlight by NBA brawl

    Detroit Free Press
    Feb 25 2005

    CANDID COURTROOM: No-nonsense jurist cast into spotlight by NBA brawl



    BY L.L. BRASIER
    FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER



    District Court Judge Lisa Asadoorian had a warning for the rowdy
    national media and basketball fans who crowded into her courtroom not
    long ago to watch as five Indiana Pacers players were charged with
    assault.

    ABOUT JUDGE LISA ASADOORIAN
    Age: 40

    Residence: Rochester.

    Family: Single. Her mother, sister and brother live in the area.

    Education: Bachelor's degree in criminal justice, Michigan State
    University; University of Detroit Law School.

    Background: She is a former Oakland County assistant prosecutor and
    magistrate. She is so adamant about the dangers of driving under the
    influence that she sends everyone who appears before her on a drug or
    alcohol conviction to tour the county morgue.

    Hobbies: Likes spending time with her extended family. She keeps
    treats in a desk drawer for visiting nieces and nephews.

    What she drives: 2002 Jeep Grand Cherokee.



    "I am a blunt person," she said.

    Then, she showed just how blunt.

    Ticking off her fingers, she told spectators what they were allowed
    to do in her Rochester Hills courtroom: "Sit, stare and breathe."

    Camera crews quieted. Reporters turned off cell phones. Onlookers
    stopped whispering. The diminutive judge with the wild mop of hair
    and stern voice was holding court on national television, and there
    was no doubt who was in charge.

    Asadoorian, who otherwise might have whiled away her years on a
    relatively unknown district court bench in a largely peaceful Detroit
    suburb, is enjoying her national debut as the get-tough jurist
    overseeing the cases of five basketball players and five fans charged
    in the Nov. 19 melee at the Palace of Auburn Hills.

    The courtroom action could be more fun to watch than the brawl.

    Tall players. Short judge. Fabulously wealthy, pampered superstars
    facing a firebrand with demanding ways who tends to point her finger
    when she lectures. This is a woman who, a few months into her
    judgeship, issued a ruling an attorney did not like, prompting him to
    storm out of her courtroom. She leaped off the bench, black robe
    flying, and chased him down the hall, chastising him and demanding
    that he return. He did.

    "She is very aggressive, very passionate," said John Skrzynski, a
    senior Oakland County prosecutor who worked with Asadoorian when she
    was an Oakland assistant prosecutor in the mid-1990s. "If you were in
    a fight with her, you knew it."

    Asadoorian is expected to get lots of airtime as the cases wend their
    way through the courts. The Palace brawl, aired around the world, and
    the subsequent fallout, including the criminal charges, have garnered
    the attention of Court TV, ESPN and the national networks, and the
    interest isn't expected to diminish.

    More court action will come today -- the first of a series of
    deadlines set by Asadoorian -- as attorneys for the five players file
    motions by the end of the day. Ron Artest, Stephen Jackson, Anthony
    Johnson, David Harrison and Jermaine O'Neal face misdemeanor assault
    charges and are due back in court April 6. Trials could begin this
    spring.

    Some of the attorneys will question whether Asadoorian should have
    been assigned all of the Palace cases simply because she was assigned
    the first one, that of Flint-area fan Bryant Jackson, who is accused
    of tossing a chair. In their motions, the attorneys will ask that the
    Pacers' cases be reassigned in a blind draw of all three judges on
    the 52-3 District Court bench.

    Asadoorian has indicated that she will not consider typical,
    first-time offender programs for the defendants, none of whom has a
    prior record. Such programs often allow convictions to be expunged or
    defendants to plead guilty with the understanding that their
    punishment will be limited.

    "I happen to like Lisa Asadoorian. She is always attentive and polite
    and conscientious, even if I may disagree with her rulings from time
    to time," said attorney James Burdick, who represents Pacer forward
    Jackson. Burdick and wants his client's case reassigned to a blind
    draw. "Besides that, my client is innocent."

    Asadoorian, in keeping with court rules, declined to discuss the
    cases while they are pending before her.

    The attorneys, should Asadoorian deny their requests to reassign the
    cases, can take the matter to a higher court.

    If Asadoorian is flustered by the national attention and television
    cameras, she has not shown it. "I've got a face for radio," she
    deadpanned during a recent interview.

    And she has not changed her courtroom demeanor one whit.

    Sometimes she is so formal as to seem haughty.

    "Welcome, citizens," she might say as she begins her morning session.

    Other times, she is so informal, it unnerves the deputies who guard
    her. She has left the bench during a hearing, taken off her robe and
    perched on the end of the defense table to talk to teens before her
    on drug or alcohol problems.

    "I want them to know that I believe in them. That I am not their
    friend, not their mother, that I'm their judge, and that I believe
    they can do what they have to do," she said.

    Off the bench, she can be hilariously funny. During the recent
    investiture ceremony of her close friend, newly elected Oakland
    County Circuit Judge Cheryl Matthews, Asadoorian offered this advice
    to the new judge as several hundred people listened:

    "You can't say to an attorney in your courtroom who is arguing
    nonsense, 'Don't bring that pile of crap in here, sprinkle it with
    sugar and try to tell me it's an Eskimo Pie.' No, you have to say,
    'The court does not feel inclined to entertain that motion.' "

    "She is the funniest person I know," Matthews said. "And she is the
    most intensely loyal person I know."

    Asadoorian's strong temperament -- "I can't think of anything that
    scares me" -- is what led her to become a prosecutor and then
    eventually to challenge incumbent 52-3 District Judge Ralph Nelson in
    2000, a move considered ill-mannered in the staid politics of
    judicial circles. Incumbents, the unwritten and unspoken rule goes,
    have the job for life.

    She said her large, extended Armenian family gave her the support she
    needed for success in life. She was close to her maternal
    grandparents, both Armenian immigrants, and was raised by a single
    mother who taught her a sturdy work ethic.

    She offers up a simple explanation of how she runs her court:

    "No one comes to court because they want to. So somebody has to take
    charge and make sure things run efficiently. That's my job -- to let
    the people know I'm in charge."
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