Cook County judge removed from ‘judicial duties’ following alleged racist comments and witness tampering

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A Cook County judge who was accused of making racist remarks and “witness interference and tampering” has now been removed from judicial duties, officials said.

Judge William Hooks made inappropriate and racist comments about Arab American men in a January meeting with prosecutors, attorney Matthew Fakhoury alleged in a recent court filing.

Following a meeting, the Cook County Circuit Court executive committee responded with a special order authorizing an investigation by the court system’s Judicial Inquiry Board and “assigning Judge Hooks to restricted duties or duties other than judicial duties.”

“Thursday’s order was issued to promote public confidence in the integrity and impartiality of the judiciary and is effective immediately,” Chief Judge Timothy Evans said in a statement Thursday.

Hooks is accused of a variety of remarks, including speaking “stereotypically” about people who are accused of domestic violence, records show. “Middle Eastern men are also controlling and abusive,” Hooks said in the January meeting, according to the motion.

“I would shoot and kill men like that from Middle Eastern countries,” Hooks continued, referring to his military service, the motion states.

In the motion, Fakhoury requested a new judge, arguing Hooks couldn’t be fair and impartial, and Hooks removed himself from the case.

Another filing states Hooks improperly contacted prosecutors who were present at the January meeting to discuss their memory of the events. Judges are legally forbidden from discussing a case with one party while the other side is absent.

After initially missing the call, one assistant state’s attorney returned the call after receiving texts from Hooks, the motion says. Once on the phone, Hooks asked if she recalled the meeting and told her that Fakhoury had filed a motion alleging he had “said something discriminating against Arab men.”

Hooks insisted that “he would never say something like that and that she would have called him out on it if he did.” The prosecutor was “uncomfortable” during the call and she “did not know how to respond,” according to the disclosure statement.

Hooks then saw another prosecutor last week at the Leighton Criminal Courthouse and tried to speak with him in chambers, telling him, “I just wanted to say about this whole situation, I hope you know I did not threaten to kill that man,” according to the disclosure statement.

The prosecutor interrupted the judge and declined to discuss the matter further, the filing states, and the conversation ended.

In his filing, Fakhoury called the judge’s alleged actions “not only unprofessional, unethical and illegal but may also rise to the level of witness interference and tampering.”

He continued: “The attempted cover-up of the prejudicial, offensive, unethical and racist conduct exhibited by Judge Hooks … is further evidence of his personal bias against me and my client.”

Hooks couldn’t be reached for comment.

Fakhoury declined to comment Thursday, but told the Chicago Sun-Times last week that the prosecutors displayed courage by informing him of the contact they had with Hooks following the allegations.

“This shows that no one is above the law, including Judge Hooks,” Fakhoury said last week.

Contributing: Matthew Hendrickson



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