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ASSOCIATION OF THE BAR OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
COMMITTEE ON PROFESSIONAL AND JUDICIAL ETHICS
Year 1987 Ethics Opinions
THE ASSOCIATION OF
THE BAR OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
FORMAL OPINION 1987-5
COMMITTEE ON
PROFESSIONAL AND JUDICIAL ETHICS
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June 2, 1987
ACTION: Formal
Opinion
OPINION:
In N.Y. City 883 (1973), this
Committee presented an extensive discussion of general ethical
principles and prohibitions in the conduct of judicial elections.
The Committee on Professional Ethics of the New York State Bar
Association simultaneously issued a textually identical opinion,
N.Y. State 289 (1973). Among other things, it was stated in
section C(5) of those opinions that incumbent judges should not
take "unfair advantage" of their office by using
campaign material that depicts them in court, or in judicial
robes.
In N.Y. State 558 (1984), and with
this Committee's unpublished concurrence, the prohibition against
the wearing of judicial robes in campaign materials was modified
to permit such use if the judge was lawfully entitled to wear
judicial robes and customarily did so in the performance of
judicial duties. The other prohibitions contained in N.Y. City
883 and N.Y. State 289, including the proscription against
depiction in court, remained unchanged.
The State Bar Committee has
further modified its views on the use of judicial robes in
campaign materials to permit such use provided only that the
judge is lawfully entitled to wear such robes and regardless of
whether the judge customarily does so in the performance of
judicial duties. We agree that no violation of the Code of
Judicial Conduct would occur in these circumstances, because the
identity of the judge is not misrepresented by being depicted in
judicial robes, "even if the judge does not wear robes in
the course of his duties, because it does not constitute a
representation that he wears his robes, but only that he is a
judge and is entitled to wear them." N.Y. State 581 (1987).
Accordingly, we amend N.Y. City
883 to delete the prohibition in section C(5) against the use, by
an incumbent judge who is entitled to wear robes, of campaign
material in which the judge is depicted wearing judicial robes.
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