A
former State Supreme Court judge was convicted yesterday of accepting
bribes to manipulate the outcome of divorce proceedings in a case that
led to a broad political and judicial corruption inquiry in Brooklyn.
The
judge, Gerald P. Garson, 74, could face as many as 15 years in prison
if he is sentenced consecutively on the three guilty verdicts, on
bribery and two lesser charges. The jury acquitted him on four other
counts after a four-week trial in State Supreme Court in Brooklyn.
In
his roughly five years on the bench in Brooklyn, Mr. Garson handled
nearly 1,100 matrimony cases, making decisions on child custody and
financial matters. In finding him guilty, the jury endorsed the
prosecution theory that he had an agreement with a divorce lawyer to
take cash, dinners and cigars in exchange for courtroom assignments and
favored treatment. [...]
Mr.
Garson was first charged in 2003, along with the divorce lawyer, Paul
Siminovsky, as well as one of his clients, a court officer, a former
clerk and a man described as a fixer. All six were charged with
felonies.
The
case immediately reverberated throughout Brooklyn, from playpens and
dinner tables to the upper echelons of politics. Divorce cases were
reopened. Judges feared that their offices were wired for surveillance.
The system of nominating judges was ruled unconstitutional.[...]
“Finally, we have justice,” said Frieda Hanimov, whose divorce case was
handled by Mr. Garson and who wore a surveillance device to collect
evidence against him. Adding that she and other victims were planning
civil lawsuits, she said, “Now hopefully they’re going to learn and
realize we have corruption everywhere.”