Judge resigns over online racial remarks
March 4, 2004
RICHMOND, Virginia (AP) -- A Virginia judge has resigned after the disclosure
of racially charged remarks he wrote in an Internet chat room, including statements
suggesting that blacks have a biological tendency toward violence.
Richmond General District Judge Ralph B. Robertson stepped down after 19 years
on the bench. He stopped hearing cases last week and filed for retirement, which
is to take effect April 1.
The Richmond Free Press, a weekly newspaper with a predominantly black readership,
reported Thursday that Robertson endorsed the notion that "African-Americans
are prone to crime and violence because it is in their genes" and agreed
with another chat-room writer who said that some minorities are "people who
have no regard for sanitation, courtesy, private property, etc."
"My heart and my deepest apology go out to the black community of the city
of Richmond," he said in remarks published Thursday in the Free Press.
When reached at his home by The Associated Press, Robertson would say only that
he was sorry and declined to comment further.
Robert E. Walker, a black defense attorney who frequently appeared in Robertson's
court, said he still considers Robertson "a good person and a good judge"
who always decided cases based on the facts and the law.
"I never had a feeling when I practiced in front of him that he's racist,"
Walker said.
The judge's online comments were posted between January 25 and February 19. The
Free Press got the comments from a member of the chat room and later spoke to
Robertson, who confirmed that he wrote them.
"I am not a racist," he wrote, according to the paper. "I am a
racialist. The difference being I don't discriminate against an individual, but
I do recognize the fact that there are a lot of differences between races which
I assume from a biological standpoint is caused by difference in DNA.
"If DNA controls everything else, why shouldn't it cause a difference in
ability to learn or play sports or a proclivity for violence?" he wrote.
Robertson, 60, criticized civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. as a plagiarist
and described Jesse Jackson as "a thief, a liar and a traitor to his own
people."
He was also critical of the civil-rights movement in which he participated when
he was younger. "I have long since removed myself from the civil-rights movement
and generally see it for the scam that it (is) and was," he wrote.
Robertson was a defense attorney and assistant prosecutor before becoming a judge
in 1985. He was elected to his fourth six-year term last year. Top