Common_Sense_Matters wrote:
No, because you like the bonehead you are, you ASSUMED that Judge Gregory S. Ross and Judge Roger Gregory must be the same person because the one shares his first name with the other as their last name. A real Einstein you are aren't you?
I stand corrected !
So Pete I apologize Sir:
I redid a complete search and could not find anywhere what political party Judge Gregory S. Ross belonged too !
He in fact could very well be a Republican and if that's the case I'd be just as hard on him as if he were a liberal Democrat !
However to his credit whether he was a Democrat or a Republican he rescinded his order and this is what I found !
One good thing about it was The assistant prosecutor in charge of the case, Eric G. Scott, was fired on October 18, 2017 .
Christopher Mirasolo custody case (2017)
Ross awarded Christopher Mirasolo joint legal custody of an 8-year-old boy in September 2017 after DNA testing established Mirasolo's paternity of the child. He put the custody order on hold on October 10, 2017, and rescinded it on October 17, 2017.
Mirasolo allegedly raped the boy's mother in 2008, when she was 12 years old. The Detroit News reported that the original charges for the assault carried a potential sentence of 25 years to life, but Mirasolo received a one-year plea deal for a reduced charge of third-degree criminal sexual conduct. He was released to take care of his sick mother after six and a half months in county jail. After his release, he was convicted of a second sexual assault, on a victim between the ages of 13 and 15, and served additional time.
In the October 17 order rescinding his original custody ruling, Ross said he was unaware of Mirasolo's sexual misconduct convictions when he ruled in the case. "The question that everyone is asking is 'How could a judge do such a thing?'" he said. "The answer is that this judge was not aware, did not have knowledge of the fact that the defendant raped the plaintiff and the child was born as a result."
Sanilac County Prosecutor James Young, whose office initiated the custody hearing when Mirasolo's victim applied for state aid, released a statement to the Port Huron Times Herald apologizing for the handling of the case. The assistant prosecutor in charge of the case, Eric G. Scott, was fired on October 18, 2017. "This action [firing Scott] is the result of the prosecutor's review of the office policy, procedures and the legal review of Mr. Scott's handling of the paternity case involving Christopher Mirasolo," the Sanilac County Prosecutor's Office said in a press release.