from a particular Justice after "contributing to" him is pretty spectacular.
From
http://judgepedia.org/index.php/Louisiana_Supreme_Court :
'Court's impartiality questioned
Tulane University study.
In February of 2008, Tulane University Law Professor Vernon Palmer and John Levendis, an economics professor at Loyola University in New Orleans, released a study (
http://www.law.tulane.edu/uploadedFiles/Tulane_Journal_Sites/Tulane_Law_Review/docs/824palmer27.pdf ) that concluded that Supreme Court Judges overwhelmingly rendered verdicts that favored people who had made contributions to the justices. ...
After researching 181 cases over 14 years, the chances of a justice ruling in a benefactor's favor increased significantly--"If a litigant or attorney had made at least one contribution to a justice the court ruled in their favor 65% of the time." Two of the seven justices had a "contributors in-favor percentage of at least 80%." (
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/29/us/29bar.html )'
Chief Justice disputes study.
The Louisiana Supreme Court Chief Justice called the study by Tulane University Law Professor Vernon Palmer and Loyola University Professor of Economics John Levendis a "baseless and unsupported" attack. Chief Justice Pascal Calogero wrote in a statement posted on the court's Web site, that the published Tulane Law Review article relied on "flawed data and methodology in concluding that some justices have been 'wittingly or unwittingly' influenced by donations from lawyers who appear before them."
Tulane apologizes, authors don't.
In September 2008, Tulane University Dean of Law, Lawrence Ponoroff, sent an apology letter to the Louisiana Supreme Court. <16> "Because of the miscalculation in the underlying data, the reliability of some or all of the authors' conclusions in the study as published has been called into question." In a September 15th, 2008 interview with The Times-Picayune, study author Professor Vernon Palmer took full responsibility for the errors found in the study, but stood by the conclusions of his study. "Yet with all the mistakes now corrected, he said, the study's conclusions, broadly speaking, are the same." (
http://www.nola.com/news/index.ssf/2008/09/law_school_issues_apology_to_h.html )