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Judicial Nomination Exhumes ADL Fiasco, Councilors Condemn Complicit

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  • Judicial Nomination Exhumes ADL Fiasco, Councilors Condemn Complicit

    Judicial Nomination Exhumes ADL Fiasco, Councilors Condemn Complicity in Denial

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2013/11/24/judicial-nomination-exhumes-adl-fiasco-councilors-condemn-complicity-in-denial/
    By Nanore Barsoumian // November 24, 2013

    Massachusetts Superior Court Nominee Faces Opposition for Failing to
    Act in Face of Genocide Denial

    BOSTON, Mass. (A.W.) - `I don't enjoy voting no, but it is the right
    thing to do,' Councilor Marilyn M. Pettito Devaney told the Armenian
    Weekly during an interview, as she explained why she opposes a
    Superior Court judicial nomination that would put a member of the
    Anti-Defamation League (ADL) on the bench. `They have bullied Congress
    into defeating [Armenian] Genocide resolutions, and they continue to
    deprive the Armenians of their history,' she said.

    Devaney is leading the opposition in the Governor's Council against
    Gov. Deval Patrick's nomination of attorney Joseph S. Berman to the
    position of Associate Justice of the Superior Court. Devaney deems
    problematic Berman's involvement with ADL - an organization that claims
    to combat anti-Semitism and discrimination but refuses to
    unequivocally recognize the Armenian Genocide - and his failure to
    resign from the organization's Board when it became clear that ADL had
    been lobbying Congress against the recognition of the Armenian
    Genocide.

    Berman would need the support of five of the eight councilors to be
    confirmed for the judgeship. Berman's public hearing took place on
    Nov. 13, during which he was questioned for a span of four hours. On
    Nov. 20, the vote was postponed by an eager Governor, after it became
    clear that five councilors would instead oppose Berman's nomination.
    The ADL fiasco took center stage in arguments against his nomination.

    `I received a letter asking, what does a 100-year-old Armenian
    Genocide by the Turks have to do with the nomination of a Justice for
    the Superior Court? Simple answer: Justice for all,' Devaney told the
    panel.

    Devaney was referring to the ADL's refusal to recognize the Armenian
    Genocide, and the organization's lobbying efforts against
    Congressional resolutions recognizing the Genocide.

    Berman, a partner at the Looney & Grossman law firm in Boston, has
    been a national commissioner for ADL since 2006, and a member of its
    New England Board and Executive Committee.

    Devaney told the panel that when she was a Watertown Councilor At
    Large, she urged towns to cut ties with the ADL's `No Place for Hate'
    program in 2007. That year, she also authored a Watertown Town Council
    proclamation that was passed unanimously, severing ties with the
    organization. Watertown was followed by eleven other Massachusetts
    municipalities (Belmont, Newton, Arlington, Northampton, Bedford,
    Lexington, Westwood, Medford, Needham, Newburyport, and Peabody) in
    severing ties with the ADL program, following broad-based community
    opposition as part of the `No Place for Denial' Campaign lead by the
    Armenian National Committee of Massachusetts.



    Berman

    ADL's New England Regional Director Andrew Tarsy then called on the
    organization to recognize the Armenian Genocide; ADL responded by
    firing him.

    `At the Governor's Council hearing, when Councilor Jubinville asked
    why he didn't withdraw his membership from ADL, Mr. Berman answered:
    `I wrote a resignation letter in my head but didn't write it because
    of all the good things the ADL does,'' recounted Devaney before the
    Council on Nov. 20.

    `I asked Mr. Berman if he belonged to an organization who denied the
    Holocaust, would he remain as a member because of all the other good
    things they do. I said I would resign,' added Devaney.

    `The refusal of the ADL to properly acknowledge the Armenian Genocide
    and its long-time opposition to Armenian Genocide resolutions in
    Congress is deeply offensive to the Armenian-American community and
    discredits an organization that claims to defend human rights,' Dikran
    Kaligian, Chairman of the Armenian National Committee of Eastern
    Massachusetts, told the Armenian Weekly. `Complicity in the Turkish
    Government's international denial campaign must be condemned by those
    who believe in justice for those subjected to crimes against humanity.
    Press statements by ADL officials this week show that they still don't
    get it.'

    In 2007, once the scandal around ADL's policy on the Armenian Genocide
    had erupted, the organization issued a `Statement on the Armenian
    Genocide,' declaring that `The consequencesof those actions were
    indeed tantamount to genocide.' Many found the statement
    unsatisfactory, as the wording placed the issue of intent under
    question - a main factor in the 1948 UN Genocide Convention
    definition - and sneaked a qualifier before the word genocide.

    Armenian Weekly contributor Michael Mensoian was one such critic. he
    wrote: `The belated backtracking of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL)
    in acknowledging the planned, systematic massacre of 1,500,000
    Armenian men, women and children as `tantamount to genocide' is
    discouraging. Tantamount means something is equivalent. If it's
    equivalent, why avoid using the term? For the ADL to justify its newly
    adopted statement because the word genocide did not exist at the time
    indicates a halfhearted attempt to placate Armenians while not
    offending Turkey.'

    Later, when ADL National Director Abe Foxman was confronted, he
    reportedly retorted, `No one can dictate to you to use the word that
    you want us to use. We will use the words that we feel comfortable
    with.'

    Devaney said she expected Berman, who had held a prominent position in
    the organization, to have done more. `Joseph Berman could have made
    the difference by collecting signatures of all the members of the New
    England ADL chapter and presenting them to the National ADL to support
    the recognition of the Genocide,' she told the Council.

    At his hearing, Berman had said he had chosen to stay, since he was
    in agreement with ADL on all issues except for the Armenian Genocide,
    and he believed that it would be more effective to change the
    organization from within.

    During her interview with the Armenian Weekly on Nov. 22, Devaney said
    the issue was important to her especially since she had heard about
    the atrocities that took place during the Genocide from survivors
    themselves. She remembered how in 2007, Genocide survivor Areka
    Derkazarian, whom she calls a friend, accompanied her as she appeared
    before the Massachusetts Municipal Association (MMA) to urge them to
    withdraw sponsorship from ADL's program. The MMA unanimously voted to
    end its affiliation with the ADL program in April 2008, following the
    `No Place for Denial' action campaign and a petition signed by over 30
    local churches and organizations.



    The statement signed by five councilors, declaring that if the vote
    had taken place as expected on Nov. 20, the undersigned would have
    voted `No.'

    Devaney said that soon after news of her opposition to Berman got out,
    she began getting hate mail from Berman supporters. `I've never
    experienced in my tenure getting hate mail for doing the right thing,'
    she said, shaking her head. Then, leaning forward, she added, `This
    has been really misunderstood... The ADL has been working hard to
    prevent the Armenians from having their history.'

    Earlier, at Berman's hearing on Nov. 13, councilors also criticized
    ADL for sending letters to U.S. Senate Judiciary Committees before
    candidate hearings, which according to Councilor Jennie Caissie,
    amount to `bona fide litmus tests.' `I don't want ideologues on the
    bench,' added Cassie. Councilor Jubinville, too, had noted that
    Berman's involvement with ADL raised concerns regarding his ideology.
    In response, Berman said that he was not going to assume the position
    of an `ADL judge,' and that he would `decide cases based on the
    facts.'

    Berman's `Contributions campaign'

    Berman's campaign contributions were another sore point during the
    hearing on Nov. 13. After his 2004 bid to a judgeship were rejected by
    the Judicial Nomination Committee - a body appointed by the Governor to
    oversee judicial nominations - Berman's campaign contributions
    increased, surpassing $110,000 in ten years.

    Among the state candidates receiving Berman's donations were Gov.
    Patrick, Congresswoman Katherine Clark, Attorney General Martha
    Coakley, State Treasurer Steven Grossman, Senator Elizabeth Warren,
    and others. All the recipients were Democratic candidates.

    When grilled about whether he contacted any of those elected officials
    on behalf of his judicial nomination, Berman acknowledged that he had
    contacted Katherine Clark that morning and asked her to call
    Councilors Albano and Jubinville.

    `After he applied for a judicial appointment in 2004 and was rejected,
    he started his contribution campaign and donated $110,000 total,
    giving the appearance he was going to buy his way to a judgeship,'
    Devaney later told the Weekly, adding, `In my tenure, I've never seen
    any nominee contributing so much.'

    `I don't look for a political activist/fundraiser as a quality in a
    judge,' Devaney told the panel on Nov. 20.

    Berman's `demeanor' and `behavior' were also bothersome to Devaney,
    who found some of the attorney's responses arrogant and short.

    In addition, Berman's lack of criminal trial experience - he specializes
    in commercial litigation - and his interest in `time standards' in the
    courtroom were also raised as points of concern.

    Vote postponed

    Only one of the councilors, Terrence W. Kennedy, voiced his support of
    the attorney.

    Disappointed with the councilors' position vis-à-vis his nominee, Gov.
    Patrick said he would postpone the vote, indicating that in the coming
    days he would work to sway the votes in favor of Berman.

    `This Council will have the opportunity... to vote on this nominee. I am
    going to work hard to get the votes. I have not had an opportunity to
    do that, and I am not ready today,' said the Governor, adding, `I
    appreciate that some of you have views that had been hardened. But I
    think that this is a candidate who is more than ready to serve...'

    `We are not going to change our minds,' said Devaney. `We are going to
    stand by the vote. I want you to know that.'

    Anticipating the Governor's move, Councilor Robert L. Jubinville had
    prepared a typed statement declaring that if the vote had taken place
    as expected on Nov. 20, the undersigned would have voted `No.' The
    document was signed by Jubinville, Devaney, Oliver P. Cipollini, Jr.,
    Jennie L. Caissie, and Christopher A. Iannella, Jr.

    `We put on the record our objection to continuing the vote on Mr.
    Berman's confirmation,' further read the statement.

    The vote is expected to take place on Dec. 4. However, it is also
    possible that the nomination would be withdrawn before that date.

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