In a decisive and uncommon rebuke, the Minnesota Supreme Court removed an Anoka County district judge from the bench Wednesday for living outside of his district and lying to voters about his residence on his affidavit of candidacy.
In its 39-page decision, the court agreed to the harshest penalty possible for Alan Pendleton — only the fourth time it has pulled a judge from the bench.
The majority's decision said, "In order for the public to have confidence in the integrity of the judicial system, the public must believe that there is an effective system in place to ensure judges abide by our Constitution and follow their ethical obligations."
Only Justice David Stras disagreed with the action. He filed a dissent saying that Pendleton should have been censured and suspended for six months, but not removed.
The state's Board on Judicial Standards had recommended a suspension of at least eight months. The state Supreme Court heard arguments on the dispute in September and suspended Pendleton from office with pay then.
Of the court's three prior removals of judges, two of them involved criminal convictions — Hennepin County Judges Harvey Ginsberg in 2004 and Robert Crane Winton Jr. in 1984. A third was removed in 1978 for misconduct before he took the bench. He was found to have caused legal injury to more than a dozen former clients.
The court said Pendleton's misconduct didn't involve a criminal conviction, but considering the "totality of the circumstances of this case, we hold that Judge Pendleton must be removed from office."
Kerr Karasov case cited
The court essentially said Pendleton knew better because he wasn't the first judge in recent years to face investigation for living outside his district. In 2013, the court suspended for six months now-retired Hennepin County District Judge Patricia Kerr Karasov for failing to live in her district for three months and then not cooperating with an investigation by the board.