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Cross-dressing lawyer hangs up his dress WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) -- A male lawyer who appeared in court dressed in women's clothes as a protest against what he said was New Zealand's overly-masculine judiciary was suspended Wednesday after being found to be in contempt of court. The High Court found Rob Moodie, a 68-year-old, balding man who appeared in court in dresses and toting a handbag, was in contempt for circulating suppressed documents outside the court in one of his cases. Moodie officially changed his name to "Miss Alice" as part of his protest against the "old boys network" that he said runs the nation's judiciary, and was granted an award for the most bizarre conduct by a lawyer in 2006 by London's The Times newspaper. The protest began after a coroner's inquest largely blamed a farming couple for the collapse of a bridge on their property built by the army. Moodie obtained documents apportioning much of the blame for the collapse to faulty wood used by New Zealand Defense Force engineers, and posted the report on the Internet despite a judge's order it not be distributed. The High Court on Wednesday found Moodie guilty of contempt of court, suspended him for three months, fined him and ordered him to pay costs. Moodie announced after the ruling he would quit the law altogether, and end his cross-dressing protest because he no longer needed to appear "in a 19th-century Alice in Wonderland environment that allows pomp, self-importance and deference to the court to eclipse the truth." | ||
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He shoulda changed his name to Klinger. | |||
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Bravo, Greg! Miss Alice seems to have fallen short of the judicial equivalent of the Section 8 that always eluded Jamie Farr's character. What an InJustice. | |||
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wasn't this a Boston Legal episode? (Not that I watch it - just heard some folks talking about it) | |||
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Apparently he didn't get that Section 8 after all. Moodie Changes Mind on Retirement Suspended lawyer Rob Moodie, who yesterday resolved to leave the law for good, has decided to remain after all. In a judgment released yesterday, the High Court suspended Dr Moodie for three months, effective immediately, fined him $5000, and ordered him to pay costs. . . . Dr Moodie said today that plenty of positive feedback had encouraged him to reverse his decision to remove his name from the roll of barristers and solicitors of the court. "I've not only had lawyers and members of the public ringing me, telling me to keep going, but I've also had two judges," Dr Moodie said. | |||
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