Deport! Texas Judge Suspended After Officials Find Out She's Not A US Citizen

Somebody did not do their job
To serve on the district courts, a judge must be:
  • a U.S. citizen;
  • a resident of Texas;
  • licensed to practice law in the state;
  • between the ages of 25 and 75;*
  • a practicing lawyer and/or state judge for at least four years; and.
  • a resident of his or her respective judicial district for at least two years.
Judicial selection in Texas - Ballotpedia
Judicial selection in Texas - Ballotpedia

This ain't a district court, so irrelevant. Nor is it an appellate court. This is a Municipal court, about which your own link simply says, and we quote:

>> The rules regarding judges of the Texas Municipal Courts vary by each city's charter. The majority of the judges are appointed to a two-year term by the city's governing body, though some instead compete in partisan elections.[6][7] <<

--- and as we keep pointing out, this particular city has an ordinance requiring citizenship. An ordinance that not even the city itself seems to have been aware of.
 
Last edited:
Somebody did not do their job
To serve on the district courts, a judge must be:
  • a U.S. citizen;
  • a resident of Texas;
  • licensed to practice law in the state;
  • between the ages of 25 and 75;*
  • a practicing lawyer and/or state judge for at least four years; and.
  • a resident of his or her respective judicial district for at least two years.
Judicial selection in Texas - Ballotpedia
Judicial selection in Texas - Ballotpedia

This ain't a district court, so irrelevant.
So you are saying that in Texas you can be a Judge an not be a citizen?
The article seems to refute your theory
 
>> Rubio says the city never asked during the qualification process to become a municipal judge whether Burkett was a citizen, and says Burkett never tried to deceive or misrepresent her background. <<

--- that's from your own link, Dumbass McRacist.

From another, more detailed article derived from an actual authentic news source (as opposed to your Jim Fucking Hoft Hateway Blunder site):

>> A question about citizenship wasn't on the application for appointment, Corpus Christi City Councilman Rudy Garza Jr. said Wednesday. The documents instead had a question about whether the applicant was eligible for legal employment in the state.

Young Min Burkett is a permanent resident and eligible for lawful employment, he added.


.... “The error was a city error and we don’t feel Judge Burkett was insincere or did anything in her application or interview that led to any dishonesty on her part,” Garza said.

... Burkett did not return phone calls Wednesday requesting comment. Her husband, Nathan Burkett, sent a message to the Caller-Times late Wednesday.

In it, he said his wife has been a lawful permanent resident since 2007.

"The job posting specified only the ability to work in the U.S.," Nathan Burkett wrote. "She has never made a representation that she is a citizen." <<​

What's more, she already revealed this status two years ago:

>> Burkett was most recently appointed by the City Council to serve in that position in February, and previously, in 2015.

She is a South Korean native who came to the United States to study law, according to a letter she wrote to the council in February 2015.

Burkett graduated from Texas Tech University School of Law in 2005, and later worked as a Nueces County prosecutor, starting in 2008, according to her resume.

She has been licensed to practice law in Texas since 2007, according to state bar records. <<​




Fucking asshole LIAR.
Deport her ass.
 
Somebody did not do their job
To serve on the district courts, a judge must be:
  • a U.S. citizen;
  • a resident of Texas;
  • licensed to practice law in the state;
  • between the ages of 25 and 75;*
  • a practicing lawyer and/or state judge for at least four years; and.
  • a resident of his or her respective judicial district for at least two years.
Judicial selection in Texas - Ballotpedia
Judicial selection in Texas - Ballotpedia

This ain't a district court, so irrelevant.
So you are saying that in Texas you can be a Judge an not be a citizen?
The article seems to refute your theory

A Municipal judge, yes. Read your own link. The criteria you posted above are for district court judges, also matched by appellate court judges. This is neither.

Fatter o' mact nor is it required to be a county judge either. That's in your same link.
 
Last edited:
>> Rubio says the city never asked during the qualification process to become a municipal judge whether Burkett was a citizen, and says Burkett never tried to deceive or misrepresent her background. <<

--- that's from your own link, Dumbass McRacist.

From another, more detailed article derived from an actual authentic news source (as opposed to your Jim Fucking Hoft Hateway Blunder site):

>> A question about citizenship wasn't on the application for appointment, Corpus Christi City Councilman Rudy Garza Jr. said Wednesday. The documents instead had a question about whether the applicant was eligible for legal employment in the state.

Young Min Burkett is a permanent resident and eligible for lawful employment, he added.


.... “The error was a city error and we don’t feel Judge Burkett was insincere or did anything in her application or interview that led to any dishonesty on her part,” Garza said.

... Burkett did not return phone calls Wednesday requesting comment. Her husband, Nathan Burkett, sent a message to the Caller-Times late Wednesday.

In it, he said his wife has been a lawful permanent resident since 2007.

"The job posting specified only the ability to work in the U.S.," Nathan Burkett wrote. "She has never made a representation that she is a citizen." <<​

What's more, she already revealed this status two years ago:

>> Burkett was most recently appointed by the City Council to serve in that position in February, and previously, in 2015.

She is a South Korean native who came to the United States to study law, according to a letter she wrote to the council in February 2015.

Burkett graduated from Texas Tech University School of Law in 2005, and later worked as a Nueces County prosecutor, starting in 2008, according to her resume.

She has been licensed to practice law in Texas since 2007, according to state bar records. <<​




Fucking asshole LIAR.
Deport her ass.

Fine. Give me a basis for "deporting" a legal resident who's committed no crime.

And I mean a real basis, not like that pulled-out-of-your-ass bullshit thread I exposed last night.
 
>> Rubio says the city never asked during the qualification process to become a municipal judge whether Burkett was a citizen, and says Burkett never tried to deceive or misrepresent her background. <<

--- that's from your own link, Dumbass McRacist.

From another, more detailed article derived from an actual authentic news source (as opposed to your Jim Fucking Hoft Hateway Blunder site):

>> A question about citizenship wasn't on the application for appointment, Corpus Christi City Councilman Rudy Garza Jr. said Wednesday. The documents instead had a question about whether the applicant was eligible for legal employment in the state.

Young Min Burkett is a permanent resident and eligible for lawful employment, he added.


.... “The error was a city error and we don’t feel Judge Burkett was insincere or did anything in her application or interview that led to any dishonesty on her part,” Garza said.

... Burkett did not return phone calls Wednesday requesting comment. Her husband, Nathan Burkett, sent a message to the Caller-Times late Wednesday.

In it, he said his wife has been a lawful permanent resident since 2007.

"The job posting specified only the ability to work in the U.S.," Nathan Burkett wrote. "She has never made a representation that she is a citizen." <<​

What's more, she already revealed this status two years ago:

>> Burkett was most recently appointed by the City Council to serve in that position in February, and previously, in 2015.

She is a South Korean native who came to the United States to study law, according to a letter she wrote to the council in February 2015.

Burkett graduated from Texas Tech University School of Law in 2005, and later worked as a Nueces County prosecutor, starting in 2008, according to her resume.

She has been licensed to practice law in Texas since 2007, according to state bar records. <<​




Fucking asshole LIAR.
Deport her ass.

Fine. Give me a basis for "deporting" a legal resident who's committed no crime.

And I mean a real basis, not like that pulled-out-of-your-ass bullshit thread I exposed last night.
You exposed nothing.
 
She held back her citizenship status on purpose. She has 90days together. We should have a nation where "legal residents " can sit in judgement of citizens.
 
>> Rubio says the city never asked during the qualification process to become a municipal judge whether Burkett was a citizen, and says Burkett never tried to deceive or misrepresent her background. <<

--- that's from your own link, Dumbass McRacist.

From another, more detailed article derived from an actual authentic news source (as opposed to your Jim Fucking Hoft Hateway Blunder site):

>> A question about citizenship wasn't on the application for appointment, Corpus Christi City Councilman Rudy Garza Jr. said Wednesday. The documents instead had a question about whether the applicant was eligible for legal employment in the state.

Young Min Burkett is a permanent resident and eligible for lawful employment, he added.


.... “The error was a city error and we don’t feel Judge Burkett was insincere or did anything in her application or interview that led to any dishonesty on her part,” Garza said.

... Burkett did not return phone calls Wednesday requesting comment. Her husband, Nathan Burkett, sent a message to the Caller-Times late Wednesday.

In it, he said his wife has been a lawful permanent resident since 2007.

"The job posting specified only the ability to work in the U.S.," Nathan Burkett wrote. "She has never made a representation that she is a citizen." <<​

What's more, she already revealed this status two years ago:

>> Burkett was most recently appointed by the City Council to serve in that position in February, and previously, in 2015.

She is a South Korean native who came to the United States to study law, according to a letter she wrote to the council in February 2015.

Burkett graduated from Texas Tech University School of Law in 2005, and later worked as a Nueces County prosecutor, starting in 2008, according to her resume.

She has been licensed to practice law in Texas since 2007, according to state bar records. <<​




Fucking asshole LIAR.
Deport her ass.

Fine. Give me a basis for "deporting" a legal resident who's committed no crime.

And I mean a real basis, not like that pulled-out-of-your-ass bullshit thread I exposed last night.
You exposed nothing.

Considering "nothing" is exactly what your sorry thread was made of, yes I did.

And here --- you answered nothing.
 
She held back her citizenship status on purpose. She has 90days together. We should have a nation where "legal residents " can sit in judgement of citizens.

She did not "hold back" anything. There was no indication on the application as the city FAILED to put it on there. Which is why I keep saying it's a city ordinance that not even the city itself was aware of.

Moreover, she spelled out her whole immigration history, IN WRITING, to the same City Council that appointed her to the position, over TWO YEARS ago. So they were aware of it, and proceeded to appoint her, and then two years later, reappoint her. It's only recently that somebody discovered this discrepancy in the application and went back to cross-check the past. At NO point did she withhold or misrepresent anything.

Unlike, say ---------- your insipid threads.

You got nothing.
 
>> Rubio says the city never asked during the qualification process to become a municipal judge whether Burkett was a citizen, and says Burkett never tried to deceive or misrepresent her background. <<

--- that's from your own link, Dumbass McRacist.

From another, more detailed article derived from an actual authentic news source (as opposed to your Jim Fucking Hoft Hateway Blunder site):

>> A question about citizenship wasn't on the application for appointment, Corpus Christi City Councilman Rudy Garza Jr. said Wednesday. The documents instead had a question about whether the applicant was eligible for legal employment in the state.

Young Min Burkett is a permanent resident and eligible for lawful employment, he added.


.... “The error was a city error and we don’t feel Judge Burkett was insincere or did anything in her application or interview that led to any dishonesty on her part,” Garza said.

... Burkett did not return phone calls Wednesday requesting comment. Her husband, Nathan Burkett, sent a message to the Caller-Times late Wednesday.

In it, he said his wife has been a lawful permanent resident since 2007.

"The job posting specified only the ability to work in the U.S.," Nathan Burkett wrote. "She has never made a representation that she is a citizen." <<​

What's more, she already revealed this status two years ago:

>> Burkett was most recently appointed by the City Council to serve in that position in February, and previously, in 2015.

She is a South Korean native who came to the United States to study law, according to a letter she wrote to the council in February 2015.

Burkett graduated from Texas Tech University School of Law in 2005, and later worked as a Nueces County prosecutor, starting in 2008, according to her resume.

She has been licensed to practice law in Texas since 2007, according to state bar records. <<​




Fucking asshole LIAR.
Deport her ass.

Fine. Give me a basis for "deporting" a legal resident who's committed no crime.

And I mean a real basis, not like that pulled-out-of-your-ass bullshit thread I exposed last night.
You exposed nothing.

Considering "nothing" is exactly what your sorry thread was made of, yes I did.

And here --- you answered nothing.
I never posted the thread spasmodic liberal idiot.
 
She held back her citizenship status on purpose. She has 90days together. We should have a nation where "legal residents " can sit in judgement of citizens.

She did not "hold back" anything. There was no indication on the application as the city FAILED to put it on there. Which is why I keep saying it's a city ordinance that not even the city itself was aware of.

Moreover, she spelled out her whole immigration history, IN WRITING, to the same City Council that appointed her to the position, over TWO YEARS ago. So they were aware of it, and proceeded to appoint her, and then two years later, reappoint her. It's only recently that somebody discovered this discrepancy in the application and went back to cross-check the past. At NO point did she withhold or misrepresent anything.

Unlike, say ---------- your insipid threads.

You got nothing.
Ohhhhh. I see. But aren't you one of the nuts calling Donald Trump a liar with no credible evidence?
 
Somebody did not do their job
To serve on the district courts, a judge must be:
  • a U.S. citizen;
  • a resident of Texas;
  • licensed to practice law in the state;
  • between the ages of 25 and 75;*
  • a practicing lawyer and/or state judge for at least four years; and.
  • a resident of his or her respective judicial district for at least two years.
Judicial selection in Texas - Ballotpedia
Judicial selection in Texas - Ballotpedia

This ain't a district court, so irrelevant.
So you are saying that in Texas you can be a Judge an not be a citizen?
The article seems to refute your theory

A Municipal judge, yes. Read your own link. The criteria you posted above are for district court judges, also matched by appellate court judges. This is neither.

Fatter o' mact nor is it required to be a county judge either. That's in your same link.
If it is not required, why is she in trouble and why has she been given the gift of 90 days to become a citizen. So citizenship is require or this would not be an issue
 
Somebody did not do their job
To serve on the district courts, a judge must be:
  • a U.S. citizen;
  • a resident of Texas;
  • licensed to practice law in the state;
  • between the ages of 25 and 75;*
  • a practicing lawyer and/or state judge for at least four years; and.
  • a resident of his or her respective judicial district for at least two years.
Judicial selection in Texas - Ballotpedia
Judicial selection in Texas - Ballotpedia

This ain't a district court, so irrelevant.
So you are saying that in Texas you can be a Judge an not be a citizen?
The article seems to refute your theory

A Municipal judge, yes. Read your own link. The criteria you posted above are for district court judges, also matched by appellate court judges. This is neither.

Fatter o' mact nor is it required to be a county judge either. That's in your same link.
If it is not required, why is she in trouble and why has she been given the gift of 90 days to become a citizen. So citizenship is require or this would not be an issue

She isn't "in trouble". Read the links --- the city fully acknowledges it fucked up. There was no such line on the application. They weren't even aware of their own ordinance. Maybe they used a standard app form that wouldn't have had it on there since it's not state law. That's what it sounds like.

Nor has she been "given a gift", unless you consider 90 days suspension without pay some kind of "gift". What, she can catch up on her gardening?

The city fucked up. And they admitted it. She told her whole immigration story, in writing to the city, when they first appointed her (and then two years later re-appointed her). It was over two years before somebody happened across the discrepancy between the city ordinance and the application form. Nobody knew about it before now.
 
As a municipal judge, should she not familiarize herself with cities by-laws, to be effective? I know, I know. You don't hold others responsible for their actions.
She held back her citizenship status on purpose. She has 90days together. We should have a nation where "legal residents " can sit in judgement of citizens.

She did not "hold back" anything. There was no indication on the application as the city FAILED to put it on there. Which is why I keep saying it's a city ordinance that not even the city itself was aware of.

Moreover, she spelled out her whole immigration history, IN WRITING, to the same City Council that appointed her to the position, over TWO YEARS ago. So they were aware of it, and proceeded to appoint her, and then two years later, reappoint her. It's only recently that somebody discovered this discrepancy in the application and went back to cross-check the past. At NO point did she withhold or misrepresent anything.

Unlike, say ---------- your insipid threads.

You got nothing.
 
As a municipal judge, should she not familiarize herself with cities by-laws, to be effective? I know, I know. You don't hold others responsible for their actions.

That's uh ----- not how things work. Do you know nothing about the court system, literally?

A judge (or a lawyer) doesn't memorize all the laws and then apply accordingly. No one could do that. The prosecutor and defense look up the laws applicable to the case, and then argue TO the judge that this statute should prevail, or that one should negate it. The judge doesn't necessarily know either particular statute --- that's the attorney's job The judge's job is to decide which one prevails after each side is argued.

And second, the city's criteria for its own judges are not a part of the law that that judge would be judging. She was appointed BY that same city, AFTER recounting her entire immigration story, and then reappointed. She fully complied with everything asked on the application --- which did not ask that question. All of which indicates a city that didn't even know about its own ordinance.

It wasn't her job to put the application together -- it was the city's. And they failed to reflect their own city ordinance on their own application.

Just as you once again have failed to figure out how the quote button works.

The city, at least, was honest enough to fully admit their fault --- while you're still too damned lazy to have the common courtesy to stop fucking up every post you answer. The city TOOK FULL RESPONSIBILITY for its mistake. The only one evading responsibility here is you with your fucked-up quote clusterfucks.
 
Just think of all the cases this criminal presided over. Just think of the many non-whites out there in positions of authority who hold those jobs under illegitimate circumstances.


www.thegatewaypundit.com/2017/05/texas-judge-suspended-officials-find-shes-not-us-citizen/

Good news, McRacist!

Judge Burkett is reinstated effective tomorrow morning.

>> Corpus Christi Municipal Court Judge Young Min Burkett's months-long fight to get her job back is almost over.

The City Council voted 7-2 Tuesday to reinstate Burkett effective Aug. 9. She won't go back to work until Aug. 14, however, to comply with terms of the council's original decision to place her on unpaid administrative leave for 90 days, City Attorney Miles Risley told the council.

.... Burkett registered to vote on July 10, three days after becoming a citizen, but Texas law requires a 30-day waiting period for registrations to become effective.

In order to meet the "qualified voter" requirement in the city charter, a judge's voter registration must be fully active, according to at least one provision of state law, Risley explained. << --- Corpus Christi Caller Times

How you like America now, boy?
 
Last edited:

Forum List

Back
Top