Dallas appeals court rules fired prosecutor can pursue whistleblowing case against Abbott’s office
In May 2009, a former assistant attorney general in Greg Abbotts office sued the Office of the Attorney General in Dallas County court, claiming shed been fired for refusing to lie under oath about a Dallas County judge. Five years later, the Dallas-based Fifth Court of Appeals has ruled that Ginger Weatherspoon can go forward with her lawsuit.
The AGs office has spent years trying to get the suit tossed, claiming, among other things, that Weatherspoon didnt make a good faith effort to blow the whistle to the right links in the chain of command. A three-justice panel disagreed, and issued an opinion Monday written by Justice David Evans that said Dallas County Judge Martin Hoffman did the right thing last year when he refused to grant the AGs office its request for summary judgment.
Weatherspoons initial filing in 2009 garnered media attention because of its explosive content: She claimed she refused to sign a false affidavit filled with a number of misrepresentations and mischaracterizations about David Hanschen, who, at the time, was a Dallas County family court judge involved in a pretty nasty tussle with the Abbotts office over child support.
Long story short: Hanschen was letting men take DNA tests to determine whether kids at the center of child-support battles were actually theirs. As the judge told the Dallas Observer in April 2008, In my court, the truth does not have a statute of limitations. But Abbotts office disagreed, and would file emergency court orders in attempts to stop the DNA tests. Megan Feldman wrote that supervising attorneys within the offices Child Support Division launched a concerted campaign to collect affidavits from nearly a dozen staff lawyers in some cases exerting pressure on them with the apparent goal of filing a complaint alleging judicial misconduct against Hanschen and another family court judge.
More at http://trailblazersblog.dallasnews.com/2014/06/dallas-appeals-court-rules-fired-prosecutor-can-pursue-whistleblowing-case-against-greg-abbotts-office.html/ .
Link to the court opinion: http://www.scribd.com/doc/230118225/Weatherspoon-v-Office-of-the-AG