Lance Ito
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Lance Allan Ito (born August 2, 1950 in Los Angeles, California) is a Japanese-American Los Angeles County Superior Court judge, best known for his presiding role during the O. J. Simpson murder trial. He currently hears felony criminal cases at the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center.
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[edit] Early life and career
Ito was born to two Japanese-American parents, Jim and Toshi Ito. As children, both had been kept in Japanese American internment camps with their families during World War II. Ito attended John Marshall High School, where he was student body president and received the Scholar Athlete award in 1968. He earned his Bachelors Degree with honors from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1972, and his J.D. degree from the University of California, Berkeley's Boalt Hall in 1975. He then joined the Los Angeles district attorney's office in 1977, working in the hardcore gang unit and the organized crime and terror unit, among others.[1]
In 1981, he married Margaret Ann York, the first woman to attain the rank of Deputy Chief in the Los Angeles Police Department and that department's highest ranking woman officer at the time of her retirement in 2002.[2] The two met while at an Eagle Rock murder scene. York is currently the Chief of the Los Angeles County Police.
Republican Governor George Deukmejian appointed the Democrat to the Municipal Court in 1987, and then elevated him to Superior Court in 1989. In his spare time, Ito enjoys restoring his hundred-year old Pasadena home.[3]
[edit] Charles H. Keating Jr.'s trial
In 1992, he presided over Charles H. Keating Jr.'s trial in the Savings and Loan scandal; Keating's 10-year sentence was later overturned on appeal because Ito had neglected to instruct the jury to determine whether Keating intended to defraud investors. It was the prosecution's position that Keating was liable as a matter of strict liability.[4]
[edit] O.J. Simpson's murder trial
Ito became familiar to American television viewers when he presided over the 1995 murder trial of O.J. Simpson at which Simpson was acquitted.
Some judges[who?] disliked Ito's handling of the Simpson case because they felt he allowed his courtroom to be turned into part of the media circus; however, Ito and others present in the courtroom[who?] dispute this characterization, challenging critics to identify a proceeding that was not under control. Because the jury was sequestered, an attorney gag order would not have been supported by any appellate court, leading to often chaotic scenes outside the courthouse. Ito himself notes that his demeanor in his trials was a result of the Japanese way of shikata ga nai, or "it can't be helped".
Ito was the subject of parody with comedian Jay Leno's "Dancing Itos" a regular part of The Tonight Show during the Simpson trial and has remained regular fodder for crossword puzzles.[5]
[edit] Current career
Ito continues to hold office as a Los Angeles Superior Court Judge. He is regarded as an expert in the area of the use of spoken-language interpreters in courtroom proceedings and regularly teaches at the Judicial College of California and Chapman University School of Law.
To date, Judge Ito declines to give interviews regarding the O.J. Simpson trial because the Canons of Ethics that guide the conduct of California trial court judges forbid comment upon pending matters or matters likely to come before the courts. Given the continuing efforts of the family of Ron Goldman to collect the multi-million dollar wrongful death civil judgement and O.J. Simpson's frequent brushes with the law, including an arrest in Las Vegas, Nevada in September of 2007, it is unlikely Judge Ito will break his silence on the guilt or innocence while he is still a sitting judge.
Ito has considered writing a book about the Simpson trial but believed that resigning from his position would be a dishonor to his family. He has noted his disbelief that public interest in the trial extended through the "turgid" DNA section of the trial, and has used his notoriety to work on issues of judicial reform, such as increasing the number of translators and enforcing rules for foreign national defendants in the court.[6]
[edit] References
- ^ "Ito's Fairness Doctrine", Mike Tharp, U.S. News, October 23, 1994
- ^ The Week, Time, August 28, 1995
- ^ Judicial Profile
- ^ "Charlie's An Angel?", Adam Zagorin, Time, February 3, 1997
- ^ "Clued in to joy of short names with vowels", Jean Gonick, San Francisco Chronicle, November 11, 2006
- ^ Judicial Profile
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