The contents of this brief post are excerpted from the previous one. They’re highlighted separately here because of their almost unique significance. It’s very rare for a judge to frankly criticize the protective order process and the indifference of the justice system to false accusation. The occasion that prompted the judge’s candid discussion of the fraudulent abuse of court process was the dismissal of allegations brought by then University of Arizona scientist Jen J. Terpstra.
“I’ve been doing this for 20 years,” Judge [Tony] Riojas told the writer on Aug. 25, 2017, “and I’ve never known a police [officer] or a prosecutor to charge someone for…false reports, no matter how blatant….” He added: “I wish they would, because I think people come in, and they say things that are just blatantly false—and lying.” A false or vexatious complainant “can keep filing [protective orders] as much as [s/he] wants,” Judge Riojas said (costing an attorney-represented defendant thousands of dollars a pop and his or her accuser nothing; application is free to all comers). “There is no mechanism to stop someone from filing these orders.” What may be worse, even a dismissed order, the judge explained, “can’t be expunged” (and anything may be alleged on a fill-in-the-blank civil injunction form, for example, rape, conspiracy to commit murder, or cross-dressing; whether heinous or merely humiliating, allegations that may be irrelevant to the approval of a keep-away order and/or that may never be litigated in court, let alone substantiated, will still be preserved indefinitely in the public record above a judge’s signature). Significantly, Judge Riojas, who is the presiding magistrate of the Tucson [City Court] (and a member of the Arizona Judicial Council and the Task Force on Fair Justice for All), agreed that restraining orders were “abused”. Of that, he said, “[t]here’s no doubt.”
Copyright © 2018 RestrainingOrderAbuse.com
*In a given year, there are reportedly 5,000 active restraining orders in Tucson City Court, which recently added an annex dedicated to their administration exclusively—and the municipal court is just one of three courts in Tucson that issue such orders.
Janet G Cooper
June 17, 2021
I was just in front of Judge Rojas yesterday trying to get an injunction an abuser got for retaliation purposes. After he obtained the order the neighbor assaulted me and was emboldened and began stalking me. The defendant had been arrested for violation in the past and was caught in obviously proven lies in the courtroom on three occasions. Still Rojas ruled in his favor. I did feel a strong misogynistic bias from him. He also has an underlying anger. He is the Least perceptive judge who lacks discernment I have ever encountered. He needs to retire or perhaps be moved to traffic court.
LikeLike
Todd Greene
July 17, 2021
What your experiences corroborate in essence is that the system has no “rules,” not really, and this authorizes judges to act arbitrarily (in proceedings afforded mere minutes on the docket). Judges are seldom accountable for following biases, whether personal or political. The system is designed to be this way according to the priorities of its feminist pioneers. But women are commonly violated by it, too. And you’re right that it emboldens those who “prevail” to abuse their so-called victimizers with impunity. The credibility of the person with the injunction against her is shot.
LikeLike
patricia nash
August 14, 2020
I have a question…my son was convicted of interfering with a judicial proceeding for texting is estranged wife in somewhat vulgar terms violating a protective order. Now this wife is an ex- probation officer having an affair with an ex-probation officer. This wife regularly appeared before Judge Tang. They took her word as fact that my son raped her. Which is laughable considering I was there the weekend she claimed this. No one asked me about any of it. A very corrupt court ststem.
LikeLike
A Victim of False Allegations
January 10, 2018
Reblogged this on Falsely Accused.
LikeLike
Anonymous
January 10, 2018
This gives me hope! I am doing okay mentally but my experience with an obviously psychotic man former sweetheart left me broken both physically and emotionally. Three years later I am beginning to put the pieces together but may never completely recover. Thanks for the info and keep on blogging. Hopefully more judges will see the blatant misuse of restraining orders and the law ultimately will be changed.
LikeLike
Anonymous
May 17, 2021
This is disgusting! The fact that a man who says stuff like this and discredits victims is a judge who handles DV cases is so wrong. This man hates women and I’ve seen it first hand in his court room. He’s dismissed cases where men were threatening to cut off someone’s head after breaking everything in the house. The other comments o. This screams volumes! A bunch of people trying to defend abusers and claiming to be falsely accused. Judge Rojas is the perfect example of how fucked the court systems are. This is why DV victims end up dead or don’t seek help. Because of misogynistic pigs like Judge Rojas.
LikeLike
Todd Greene
July 17, 2021
I appreciate your frustration but it’s an inescapable fact, if an inconvenient one, that “victims” who aren’t victims victimize, and they discredit real victims and the system itself, which isn’t designed to be fair. It’s designed not to be fair, specifically for the accused (the system isn’t the product of male lobbying). Liars, of course, come in all shapes and sizes, and they’re excremental whatever their contours.
LikeLike
Todd Greene
July 17, 2021
See Patricia’s comment above, for example. “Rape” is not something that should be adjudicated in a quickie civil court proceeding, in which a defendant may be forbidden attendance, will not be afforded any protections, will not be provided with an attorney, will be judged according to the lowest standard of evidence, and will have no grounds for appeal.
Liberals often mouth the word justice. I defy anyone to explain how it applies to the laws that make this possible.
A finding like this authorizes a plaintiff to tell anyone, completely legitimately, that a judge ruled she was raped. People have to live with this. Their moms have to live with this. Their kids have to live with this.
LikeLike