Law Legislators call for impeachment of Allegheny County judge after fatal Montour Trail stabbing - Another "soft-on-crime" judge facing consequences for not doing his job

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District Judge Xander "Bail is Racist" Orenstein

Several local Republican politicians are demanding the removal of a controversial jurist after a criminal defendant freed last year by District Judge Xander Orenstein was arrested Monday in a fatal stabbing.

Authorities say Anthony Quesen killed Benjamin Brallier, 44, a civilian employee of the Pennsylvania State Police who was jogging on the Montour Trail in Moon.

Police arrested Quesen, a 25-year-old homeless man and charged him with homicide.

Now some are questioning whether Quesen should have been out of jail at all and pinned the blame on Orenstein for releasing him on nonmonetary bail in June 2023 in a simple assault case.

That incident did not involve a weapon, was apparently a first-time offense and led to a minor injury, according to court papers.

Allegheny County Councilman-at-large Sam DeMarco Wednesday called for Orenstein, an elected official, to step down from the bench and said he wants County Council to launch an investigation.

“People are making decisions based on their feelings and not based on the law,” DeMarco said Wednesday.

State Sen. Devlin Robinson of Bridgeville, in the meantime, called on his state House colleagues to trigger impeachment proceedings against Orenstein.

“This is dereliction of duty — either step down and let somebody else take this oath — or we’re going to take this to the next step,” said Robinson, who represents parts of Pittsburgh’s South Hills.

State House whip Tim O’Neal, a Washington County Republican, Wednesday said he plans to introduce a bill of impeachment to remove Orenstein in connection with the 2023 case.

“A judge who lets dangerous suspects on the street as a matter of routine policy poses a danger to all Pennsylvanians,” O’Neal said in a prepared statement. “In my capacity as a House member, I intend to get Xander Orenstein off the bench.”

Under the state constitution, an elected official can be removed only through impeachment, with a motion introduced in the state House and a trial in the state Senate.

During interviews with TribLive, neither DeMarco nor Robinson specified what laws or guidelines they believe Orenstein violated in giving Quesen nonmonetary bond last year, but each raised concerns with the district judge’s previous decisions about no-cash bail.

DeMarco called Orenstein a “far left activist.”

Orenstein, who uses they/them pronouns, declined comment, saying a statement might breach ethics rules by impacting future proceedings.

On Wednesday, Robinson lambasted no-cash bail systems. In April, he co-sponsored a Senate bill that sought to prohibit the use of non-monetary bail for dangerous individuals, according to state Republican leaders.

The bill was sent to a House committee and never became law.

“It’s not just Orenstein,” Robinson told TribLive. “We’re worried that people aren’t taking their jobs seriously — and they’re releasing hardened criminals.”

A sprained knee

Police first arrested Quesen in June 2023 and filed a simple assault charge, accusing Quesen of trying to snatch a man’s phone at Point State Park in Downtown Pittsburgh.

Quesen struggled with the man, who was at the park with his son, and ripped the man’s FitBit watch off his wrist before fleeing from authorities and jumping into the Allegheny River, a criminal complaint said.

The incident left the victim with a sprained knee, police said.

Court documents reviewed by TribLive show that administrators who conducted a risk assessment advised Orenstein to release Quesen — then named Antonia Kaseim — on nonmonetary bond, meaning without putting up any money or collateral.

Quesen underwent a psychiatric evaluation, according to court paperwork. When Quesen was arraigned on June 13, nine days after the incident, the court’s pre-trial services division recommended releasing him without cash bail as long as he continued mental health treatment and didn’t contact the victim and his family, court records showed.

Orenstein followed the recommendation and released Quesen without cash bail.

Quesen subsequently failed to appear at three preliminary hearings, which led judges to issue three bench warrants for his arrest, starting June 23, 2023, court records show.

Authorities did not find Quesen until Monday, when he was arrested near the scene of the stabbing.

On Wednesday, Tanisha Long, a community organizer with the Abolitionist Law Center, defended Orenstein’s decision and criticized “using cash as this carrot to dangle in front of people to get them back to court.”

“Other judges would have made the same exact decision Xander did,” said Long, who is based in Pittsburgh. “It’s beyond the right call. It’s the call you see in the courts literally every day. I don’t think people are aware of the number of people who are bailed with charges that are far worse.”

Long said it doesn’t make sense to require cash bail for someone with a clean record who committed a minor assault without a weapon, where the only injury was a sprained knee.

The state constitution prohibits “excessive” bail and fines for those accused of a crime. It also calls for affordable bail, unless a suspect is charged with capital offenses such as a premeditated killing, crimes that could face a sentence of life imprisonment, or instances where anything other than imprisonment could not assure a person’s or the community’s safety.

“It’s political,” Long said. “If we look at every single judge in this county, they’ve had somebody re-offend after releasing them — on cash bail or without cash bail.”

Past controversies

The first stop for criminal defendants after arrest is typical in the courtroom of a district judge, a member of the minor judiciary. District judges typically arraign people on new criminal charges, set bail and preside over preliminary hearings. Orenstein, whose courtroom is in Pittsburgh’s Lawrenceville neighborhood, sometimes presides Downtown in the Pittsburgh Municipal Courts Building.

District judges receive a non-binding bail recommendation from Allegheny County’s pre-trial services division.

Orenstein has drawn criticism for opposing the use of cash bail. Orenstein has released two defendants in high-profile crimes on nonmonetary bail — one an accused drug dealer, the other, a man charged with fleeing police and assaulting a law enforcement officer. Both men went on the lam but have since been detained.

In September 2023, Orenstein released a New York man accused of bringing $1.6 million of fentanyl into Pittsburgh. Again, Orenstein went against a no-release recommendation made by pre-trial services.

Police said the suspect, Yan Carlos Pichardo Cepeda, had 450,000 doses of fentanyl and a kilogram of cocaine.

Cepeda fled the Pittsburgh region and later was apprehended.

In April, Orenstein released defendant Hermas Craddock on nonmonetary bail, again disregarding a recommendation by pre-trial services to deny bail and keep Craddock jailed.

After the Craddock incident, Allegheny County Common Pleas President Judge Susan Evashavik DiLucente barred Orenstein from presiding over arraignments, the stage in court proceedings when bail is first set for criminal defendants.

Despite DiLucente’s prohibition, Orenstein continues to work as a district judge in other capacities, including preliminary hearings Downtown at Pittsburgh Municipal Court.

I issued this press release earlier today calling for the immediate resignation or removal of District Judge Xander Orenstein after another dangerous suspect he allowed to walk free without bail has been arrested in the murder of PSP Liquor Enforcement Officer Benjamin Brallier. pic.twitter.com/zK4Ot0z88F
— Sam DeMarco ???????????????? (@sdemarcoii) October 23, 2024

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Upload of statement from Twitter


A stabbing on the trail

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PSP LCE Officer Benjamin J. Brallier (left) and his accused killer Anthony Alexi "Antonia" Quesen (source)

Police say on Monday Quesen killed Brallier of Coraopolis, who worked as a liquor control enforcement agent with the Pennsylvania State Police.

Braillier died at Heritage Valley Sewickley hospital just before 4 p.m.

Brallier, who had stab wounds to his back, upper chest and hand, was off duty at the time of the stabbing, police said.

Investigators found Quesen about a third of a mile from the scene with cuts to his hands and blood stains on his clothes, according to a criminal complaint.

Quesen was arraigned Tuesday and remains in the Allegheny County Jail.
 
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Aww, poor boo boo.

Reasons ONE through TWENTY why I'll never forgive, or feel empathy for, dipshitocrat voters after 2020.
I voted for the leopards, but never thought they'd rip my face. Waaaaaaa.

I am curious what makes this guy an "embarrassment to the progressive movement," since from where I'm sitting he appears to have assumed its final form. Emerged as its apotheosis, goes forth as its distilled essence, etc.
 
  • Winner
Reactions: Syikeblade
Surprise, surprise, Xander Orenstein was ACLU-approved in their campaign to end the unjust prosecution of innocent drug dealers and violent, knife-wielding junkies

Here's the link to the questionnaire. Warning: bleeding heart trite ahead. Here are some standouts I found:

Do you believe racial discrimination in Pennsylvania’s criminal legal system is an issue?
In Pittsburgh, Black residents make up only 23.2% of the population, yet they experienced 44% of all traffic stops, 71% of frisks, 69% of all warrantless searches and seizures, and 63% of arrests conducted by the Pittsburgh Police. Additionally, while the population of Allegheny County is less than 13% Black, the population of Allegheny County Jail is 67% Black.
...I don't even have to make the joke here.

If elected to the position of Magisterial District Judge, will you work towards making sure you aren’t deciding cases in a way that is discriminatory towards black and brown communities?
Answering this question falls under making a pledge as to how I would rule in certain cases and could be seen as prejudging a case. However, I do find it prudent to mention that I have been working hard to educate myself on the experiences of Black Americans in the criminal legal system, as well as the ways that our society has enforced and codified principles of white supremacist and racist ideology into our legislation and culture. This is a lifelong process of unlearning and I will constantly be working to know better and to do better.
🙄

If elected to the position of Magisterial District Judge, will you schedule payment determination hearings for defendants who have fallen behind on payment pursuant to the Rules of Criminal Procedure (456), rather than immediately issuing a discretionary warrant for arrest?
Justice should not be about revenge, nor should there be an automatic assumption of bad faith. Setting these payment determination hearings ensures people will be given ample opportunity and flexibility so that we can achieve restorative as opposed to punitive justice.
"Gee, people shouldn't have to pay for bail, what if they have no money????"
 
Oy Vey

He had a puff piece in the Jewish Chronicle. His rabbis name is one of the most jewish names I have ever heard - Rabbi Shlomo Silverman
Pittsburgh’s Xander Orenstein may be first out nonbinary person to hold judicial post in US
Orenstein was elected as a magisterial judge serving parts of Lawrenceville, Polish Hill, Bloomfield and the Strip District.
By Justin Vellucci
November 8, 2021, 12:19 pm | 0
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Xander Orenstein (Photo courtesy of Xander Orenstein)

Pittsburgh voters have elected Xander Orenstein, a housing advocate, Carnegie Mellon University alum and passionate Jew, as a city magisterial judge. Orenstein may also be the first out nonbinary person elected to a judicial seat in the United States.

Orenstein uses they/them pronouns.

“Any time a candidate makes history, it’s good — and it really signifies another moment showing the full diversity of the LGBTQ community,” said Sean Meloy, vice president of political programs for the LGBTQ Victory Fund, which endorsed Orenstein. “Xander put together a really well-organized campaign, in that they had a clear message that differed from the incumbent and, we feel, spoke to voters.”

Bex Tasker, Orenstein’s campaign manager, acknowledged earlier this year the weight of Orenstein being the first openly nonbinary elected official in Pennsylvania.

“This is a huge honor but also a huge responsibility for our team to take on,” Tasker told the Pittsburgh Current. “We want to make sure we get this right because we’re setting the precedent of how to be openly trans and campaign in this city. Everyone who works on our campaign is LGBTQ, which wasn’t a deliberate choice — it just turns out all the best people for the job happened to be gay. As a trans yinzer, knowing that there would be someone like me in our justice system would be a welcomed radical change.”

Orenstein, 30, of Lawrenceville, beat incumbent Magisterial Court Judge Anthony M. Ceoffe for a six-year term on the bench by just 40 votes out of 2,469 cast in the Lawrenceville area in the spring Democratic primary. Orenstein ran unopposed Nov. 2, after Ceoffe, who won the uncontested Republican primary for the judgeship in the spring, dropped out of the race.

Magisterial Court District 05-3-10, which Orenstein will serve after completing judicial training in Harrisburg, covers parts of Lawrenceville, Polish Hill, Bloomfield and the Strip District. Ceoffe’s current term ends Jan. 3, 2022.

Orenstein’s campaign advocated social justice and more equity in the judicial system, including curtailing the use of cash bails and championing housing rights. That placed them as a real alternative to Ceoffe, who Orenstein said had sided with landlords in housing disputes 97% of the time during the previous 12 years.
“For a judge to prioritize the financial success of a corporate landlord — which, let’s face it, in Pittsburgh a lot of landlords are part of large corporations — over the health of the community is extremely disturbing,” Orenstein told the Current when launching their campaign in February. “My goal in justice is going to ensure compromise and understanding at the center of any decision I make.”

Orenstein, who moved to Pittsburgh 11 years ago, grew up in a modern Orthodox household in suburban Rockville, Maryland, speaks fluent Hebrew and currently observes holidays and enjoys Shabbat dinners at the home of Rabbi Shlomo Silverman, who leads Chabad of Carnegie Mellon University.

Orenstein holds degrees from CMU and Johns Hopkins University. Before working in housing advocacy in Pittsburgh during the COVID-19 pandemic, they were a bench scientist doing disease research, working in cancer and aging labs, and dealing with pharmaceuticals.

“All through my career as a scientist, all I wanted to do was to make the world a better place through my work,” Orenstein told the Chronicle. “I wasn’t able to have the impact I was hoping for.”

Chabad’s Silverman said that since the primary last spring, he has been teaching Orenstein more about the Sanhedrin, assemblies of elders and rabbis who sat on tribunals in every city in ancient Israel, as well as Jewish concepts of law and justice. The lessons are very informal, the rabbi said, and “really are meant to be open discussions and learning.”

“Xander definitely seems passionate,” and “definitely wants to make a difference in the courtroom,” Silverman said. “It’s great whenever I see people going into the community and using their Jewish beliefs to help others.”

Orenstein’s strongest belief when it comes to justice — not law, which they say is different — comes down to treating others with respect and kindness.

The point is illustrated, Orenstein said, by the Talmudic story of a gentile who wanted to convert to Judaism. The man told Rabbi Shammai, a member of the Sanhedrin, that he would accept Judaism only if he would teach him the entire Torah while the prospective convert stood on one foot. Rabbi Shammai would not do it, but Rabbi Hillel, another Sanhedrin member, did, saying, “What is hateful to you, do not do to your neighbor. That is the Torah, the rest is commentary,” Orenstein recounted.

“None of that matters unless the center of who we are as a people is to be kind to others,” Orenstein said. “That’s who I am at my core because I am Jewish.”

They will try to be forgiving as a judge, they said.

“I see justice at its heart as restoration, as making things better across the board,” Orenstein said. “The other approach was focused on punishment, how to reprimand those who had done wrong.”

Orenstein believes those concepts and stances “really resonated with a lot of voters.” The main drive of their campaign was “to treat people kindly, to treat people with respect and to take each case with the seriousness and respect it deserves. We are all people and we all deserve that kind of respect.”

Orenstein, who had three grandparents who survived the Holocaust, said that “Jewish identity is, at its core, a major part of who I am — the idea that I am only here because of the sacrifice of others. That’s just been a part of my family and the center of who we are. Intertwined in this idea is that tikkun olam is the center of what we should be doing as the Jewish people.”

Judaism also taught Orenstein that God is merciful and kind.

“That idea reinforces the core concept that we should be working for others, to take care of the stranger, to take care of the people who cannot take care of themselves,” Orenstein said.
Orenstein, though, is quick to note their limitations as well.

“I know I’m not going to solve everything — I’m not going to make the right decision every time,” they said. “But we’re not trying to articulate the ideal of justice, because that’s an impossible thing … But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be trying and learning from our mistakes.”

When asked about future plans, Orenstein responded: “Tzedek, tzedek, tirdof,” which translates as “Justice, justice, you shall pursue.”

A law degree is not necessary to be a magisterial judge; one only needs to live in their magisterial district for one year.

“Law is not the same as justice,” Orenstein said. “At the end of the day, the important thing is we that we don’t end up hurting people while we’re getting there.” PJC

Justin Vellucci is a freelance writer living in Pittsburgh.
 
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