Hillsborough Circuit Judge Gregory
Holder, who for years has been blowing the
whistle on courthouse shenanigans, was in danger
of assassination -- physical, character or both
-- by corrupt judges or law enforcement
personnel, according to a confidential police
affidavit obtained by the Weekly Planet.
"We emphasized to Judge Holder the extreme
danger he was in," Tampa Police Detective James
Bartoszak said in his affidavit, signed Oct. 27.
"This was done for his protection and that of
his family."
Also, federal agents and prosecutors
apparently and inexplicably have called off an
investigation into courthouse corruption --
despite an abundance of evidence of wrongdoing
by Hillsborough officials, Bartoszak's sworn
statement recounts.
The possible shutdown of the federal probe
resulted in Holder filing a complaint a year ago
with the U.S. Department of Justice's Office of
Professional Responsibility. Both Holder and
Bartoszak said the department's inspector
general is investigating Holder's complaint.
U.S. Attorney Paul Perez responded to
inquiries about the complaint and Bartoszak's
affidavit with the authoritarian panache of his
boss, Attorney General John Ashcroft. "Your
questions do not warrant a response or any
comment whatsoever," Perez said by e-mail.
Perez also would not comment on whether his
office and the FBI are doing anything to protect
Holder and his family.
Holder's participation in the federal probe
definitely put him in danger, according to
Bartoszak, a 25-year police veteran who has long
teamed with federal agents. "We had very grave
concerns about his [Holder's] safety and the
lengths that the targets [of the federal probe]
would go to either harm Judge Holder or attempt
to discredit his testimony,'' his affidavit
says.
The affidavit reveals many details in the
Hillsborough corruption investigation, but
doesn't name names. "Specifically, we had
information regarding corruption being committed
by local members of law enforcement and the
judiciary, including taking bribes," Bartoszak
said.
"Each and every agent," Bartoszak said, felt
the corrupt judges and cops "had the money,
resources, and the motivation to conduct
wiretaps, conduct surveillance, arrange
'suicide,' and even murder."
The affidavit says agents believed "Judge
Holder's cell phone had been tapped and his
phone conversations with our agents were being
monitored. At that point, we asked Judge Holder
to change his personal cell phone number and
begin carrying one of our own FBI cell phones. …
It became obvious that those persons that we
were investigating had knowledge of Judge
Holder's participation and cooperation.''
Bartoszak said he met clandestinely with
Holder along with FBI agent Kelly Thomas. "Judge
Holder provided us with tremendous leads in this
investigation and was always absolutely
truthful."
Holder was involved, according to Bartoszak,
because "we were confident he was not committing
any corruption."
Holder assisted Bartoszak and federal
authorities for two years, until late 2002 when,
the detective said in his affidavit, "the
investigation was halted and the investigation
team dismantled for reasons that were not made
clear. … I am uncertain whether the federal
investigation remains open or closed."
The affidavit has surfaced in connection with
a state Judicial Qualifications Commission
inquiry into allegations that Holder plagiarized
parts of an Air Force research paper. Holder
authored the research paper as part of the
process to gain promotion to colonel in the Air
Force Reserve.In July, the JQC brought charges
against Holder, alleging that the judge copied
10 of 21 pages of his research paper. In early
2002, someone slipped Holder's paper and the one
he allegedly plagiarized under the door of
Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeff Del Fuoco, who kept
the documents without acting for about a year
before forwarding them to the Air Force.
Bartoszak's affidavit is one of four
affidavits made public so far that support
Holder's claim of innocence -- and which also
spotlight the likelihood that Tampa's sleazy
courthouse denizens are trying to exact revenge
on the whistle-blowing judge.
The charges of plagiarism "are payback for
what I had to do with the investigation. Nothing
else makes sense," Holder said in an interview.
In his affidavit, Bartoszak agreed. ""I am
convinced that it is more than an 'amazing
coincidence,' that the allegations against Judge
Holder only surfaced after he wrote to complain
about the [courthouse] investigation being
stopped."
Bartoszak explained how Holder could have
been framed.
"The persons we were investigating had
complete access to and control of the courthouse
computer system," Bartoszak said. "It would be
very easy for them to forge a plagiarized
version of the Air Force paper. I believe, based
upon my extensive knowledge of this case and the
target individuals, that is exactly what
happened."
The Bartoszak affidavit was not submitted to
the JQC but to the Air Force, which, after Del
Fuoco forwarded the allegedly plagiarized paper,
reprimanded Holder and removed him as a military
judge. Holder is appealing that.
The Air Force, in turn, sent Bartoszak's
affidavit to JQC lawyers, who failed to post the
document on the commission's website where other
papers in the case can be viewed.
Bartoszak refused to comment except to say
that he was angry that the Air Force released
his confidential affidavit to the JQC.
JQC Special Counsel Tom Pillans, who is in
essence the prosecutor against Holder, at first
denied the Planet's request for the
affidavit. Then, unable to find an exemption to
court rules governing public records, he
produced the document last week. Pillans said he
had no obligation to post the affidavit online
after it came into his possession.
Pillans, a Jacksonville lawyer, reports to
Thomas MacDonald, the Tampa-based JQC general
counsel. MacDonald is perceived by many Tampa
lawyers as using his position to pursue
vendettas -- as when the JQC in the late 1990s
sought removal of appellate Judge Richard Frank.
Frank several years earlier had caused the bank
fraud prosecution of Tampa lawyer Steve
Anderson, a close friend of MacDonald's. Frank
and his attorneys felt MacDonald inappropriately
leaked JQC material to the St. Petersburg
Times.
MacDonald could not be reached for comment,
but Holder sees the current episode as more of
the same.
"MacDonald frequently leaks heavily spun,
heavily tainted information," he said. "And now
Pillans is mad because he was forced to release
information that is exculpatory to me."
The complete Bartoszak affidavit can be
found here.
Other documents in Judge Holder's case are
posted at http://www.flcourts.org/pubinfo/summaries/briefs/03/03-1171/index.html.
John F. Sugg was editor of the Weekly
Planet until 2001. He now is senior editor of
the Planet's sister paper in Atlanta.
Sugg can be reached at 404-614-1241 or at john.sugg@cln.com.