Page 12 Arthur D. Dalessando, in- cumbent candidate for Judge of the Luzerne County Court of Common Pleas, has indicated, during a recent interview with the Dallas Post, his belief that the upcoming election will be a very close race between him and his opponent, Atty. Frank Townend. In listing his own major qualifications, which include 17 years as a trial lawyer, and 18 months wearing a judge's robe, Judge Dalessandro pointed out that his opponent’s practice is big business-oriented, adding that Mr. Townend is a ‘‘high- type gentleman...but we are not “electing a civil defense of- ficial.” The judge referred to a Gov. Milton Shapp resolution on the merit selection of judges. The document calls for professional competence in the state's judges. ‘Trial lawyer com- pelence is needed here”, he sums up. The judge proudly claims to having tried over 300 ‘‘actual” cases as a judge, thus far. In his position he tries all manner of counly cases, working on a rolaling assignment system with the other county judges. He is specifically responsible for the jury system, general rules of court, court statistics, boards of revue, out-of-state judges, and out-of-county lawyers as well. He is also proud of two in- novalions he has added to the county courl system. With the lawyers ‘‘0.k.”, he has tried a number of cases with a’ jury of six, rather than the traditional 12, and, again with pre-irial approval of the lawyers in- volved, he has accepted five- sixth agreement as a decision in jury trials. He points out that the U.S. Supreme Court has sus- tained Louisiana’s three-fourths decision system, and that they also have approved deviations from the jury of 12. The judge claims that the jury-of-six system has saved a great deal of money and time, ~—especially~in-condemnation cases, which only he (ries. These (rials invariably call for the busing of the juries lo sites in question, he said. Jurors are currently paid $9. a day. The time factor, and the hung-jury problem, “are his reasons for favoring the five-sixth decision, he said, which is being suppor- ted by a bill now in Harrisburg. Another personal innovation the judge finds helpful is “charging” the jury before the cases are presented. Charging the jury is what judges tradi- tionally do following the full presentation of both lawyers. The judge explains basic funda- mentals of pertaining laws, lets the jury know its options, and guides its decision to an extent. Judge Dalessandro finds that by explaining some of the funda- mentals before the case begins, the jurors have a better idea of what is going on as the cases develop. He charges them again al the end, reminding them of the basics and giving them the other supplementals. Judge Dalessandro also thinks that his age, 47, com- pared to that of his opponent, is another advantage that he has. He points out that a judge must relire at age 70. The judge has been admitted lo practice in the U.S. Supreme Court; the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, at Philadelphia; the U.S. Eastern District Court at Philadelphia; the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsyl- vania, al Scranton; the Penn- sylvania Supreme Court; Pennsylvania Superior Court; the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, and the Luzerne County Courts. He is especially proud, and he finds it especially to his advantage as a candidate, to have actually practiced in every one of those courts, ex- cept the new Commonwealth Court. Asked what he thought of executive privilege, as Presi- dent Nixon is currently evoking it, the judge replied, ‘‘I don’t like it."’ He added, ‘‘For one man lo say ‘laws don’t apply to me’ is very wrong...This is a drastic thing...the respect for our government and officials.” He gave the opinion that the effect of distrust of national officials, will affect even local officials and police officers. He declined an answer when asked what he thought of the way Superintendent Leonard Mack is running the State Correctional Institution at “Dallas (SCID). He said that it was not in his jurisdiction and that he lacked the facts. He did point out that he has heard some mention that the superintendent s ‘‘too soft”. Giving his opinion on another subject, he said, ‘“The death penally is essential to our society.” He pointed out that he doesn’t want himself or any one man lo have the power to say “who lives and who dies’’, but he favors the system as it did exist in Pennsylvania. If one jury turned in a ‘‘guilly of first degree murder’ decision, another jury would decide if the death penalty would be used; if it was a trial without jury, two other judges would normally be called in, so that three men would decide, by majority, if the death penalty should apply. Judge Dalessandro is not sure that mandatory death penalties, for certain crimes, is the an- swer. He said he feels that a judge’s discretion may be necessary in some cases. The judge offers the opinion that the majority of the members of the U.S. Supreme Court, in abolishing the death penalty, did not give any con- sideration to the victims. The judge favors legislation that would provide for the victims and the families of the victims of vicious crimes. He points out that it would have to be a “strictly administered’, insur- ance-lype program. On a similar train of thought, he said, “I violently disagree with giving bail to accused mur- derers.”” He points out that the only time he has been over- turned by the stale Supreme Court, it was on his refusal to grant bail in the recent Minelli murder case. ‘I didn’t mind being reversed on that because I believe I was right,” he adds. The Supreme Court’s reasoning in the reversal was that since there is no more capitol punishment in the state, there are no more capitol crimes, so all crimes are bail- able. The judge does not think that long jail terms are a cure. He points out that he gives a long term in special cases only. ‘Our system is one of rehabilitation’’, he commented. Asked about the recent concern of some that men from SCID were being released to outside work programs without the approval of the sentencing judge, his answer revealed that the issue is not a large cause of concern with him. ‘When a man is sentenced to two years or more, his parole is oul of our hands...in the jurisdiction of the Pennsylvania Board of Pro- bations and Parole.” He added that some judges were con- cerned about their personal safely, when men they had sentenced were released to work programs without their knowledge. Judge Dalessandro said that now the judges are being advised of upcoming Memorial Hwy. DALLAS releases, and that the judges are also asked for their opinions on the release. The judge does not agree with those who would have the jury- trial system done away with. He feels that the right to ‘‘a trial by one’s peers is another check in the nation’s system of checks and balances.” He commented thal many instances of past oppression were carried out under court systems that lacked the trial-by-jury right. He added that he would like to see a ‘‘belter cross-section of the population on the juries.” Because the system is ‘‘almost on a volunteer basis’, there is an over-abundance, an over- representation of the elderly and the lower-classed income group on the juries, the judge claims. He attributes this to the working person’s desire to stay on the job, and to the $9 per day jury pay. He expressed the opinion that more young per- sons especially, should be iaking seals on juries. The judge said that he truly enjoyed his years as a trial lawyer and that he enjoys being a judge, though he points out that it’s not an easy job. He says that he spends many sleepless nights, “It’s not easy to sen- lence a man.” The judge is openly proud of his past employment record, which helped him get through law school, and which reads like the ‘About the Author’ page on a novelist who tried just about everything once before settling down to writing about life. He was a paper boy, a farm worker, a short order cook, a theater usher, a clerk in a social security office, a grease boy and mechanics helper, a coal truck driver, a department store salesman promoted to manager of the sporting goods department, a highway con- struction worker, and an insur- ance salesman, in that order, before he started his law career. As a trial lawyer, he attended he finds to his advantage now. He points out that he now at- tends judicial seminars. The judge was born in Yates- ville, the son of a coal miner and a silk mill worker, Dominiek and Mary Dalessandro. He married the former Florence Yasko Dowling of Hanover Green. He lives al 874 Exeter Ave., Exeter, with his wife and their nine-year old son, Daiv Arthur. He lists travel and photo- graphy as his favorite hobbies, and he is fond of telling stories of cases from his practicing law days. New Phone Number Franklin Twp. Police 333-4848 EARTH I CARE Choice Boneless CHUCK ROAST $1.39. Boneless CHUCK STEAK $1.29.. Elmdale Tomatoes 42$1.00 Log Cabin Syrup 30 oz. Bottle 75° THE DALLAS POST, JULY 19, 1973 ? * IA Greenstreet News Co. o. Publication SE EN EVEN BETTER REASONS WHY MORE SAVERS SAVE AT NORTHEASTERN NATIONAL! i 7% SAVINGS CERTIFICATES ® Minimum $1,000 -@ Term 4 years ® Interest compounded continuously. © Redemption at maturity. e Choice of interest payment options —monthly, quarterly, annually or upon redemption. 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