Idiot Wind blows thru Provo
  Utah judge at rape sentencing: Ex-Mormon bishop a 'good man'                                                             
  By  HALLIE GOLDEN
                      Apr. 14, 2017 11:31 PM EDT                                        2 photos                                                                                                                                                                     In this Thursday, March 30, 2017, photo, Keith Vallejo leaves the courtroom, in Provo, Utah. A Utah... Read more
                             
   
  PROVO,  Utah (AP) — A Utah judge is facing a deluge of complaints after calling  a former Mormon bishop convicted of rape an "extraordinarily good man"  who did something wrong, a judicial oversight organization said Friday.
   The criticism began around the time Judge Thomas Low let Keith Robert  Vallejo out of custody after a jury found him guilty of 10 counts of  forcible sexual abuse and one count of object rape, said Jennifer Yim,  executive director of the Utah Judicial Performance Evaluation  Commission.
   But Yim said most of the roughly 40 emails, six voicemails and some  Facebook messages received since late March came after Low sentenced  Vallejo to up to life in prison and seemed to get emotional during the  hearing.
     Julia Kirby, 23, one of Vallejo's victims, said she was shocked by the judge's sympathy.
   "That judge didn't care about me," she said Friday. "He only cared  about the person he was convicting, and I think that is really kind of  despicable."
   Kirby agreed to have her name published to show the judge that she will not let him get away with these comments.
   Kirby said she was 19 when she said Vallejo, a relative, groped her  multiple times when she stayed at his house while attending Brigham  Young University in 2013.
   Ryan McBride, the prosecutor on the case, said Low's comments were  inappropriate and said it may have come in response to more than 50  character letters about Vallejo, most of them detailing the good things  he has done. The defendant's brother spoke at the hearing and compared  Vallejo to Jesus in making the argument that he was wrongly convicted,  McBride said.
   "I don't think it's wrong to acknowledge the good things that someone  has done in their lives," the prosecutor said. "But I think whenever  you do that in a case like this, you've also got to say, 'But it doesn't  excuse what you've done.' "
   Low declined comment through a court spokesman.
   "I maintain my innocence," Vallejo said during the hearing after a  brief comment on how the justice system bullies people into confessing.
   The abuse occurred in Provo, a Mormon stronghold that is home to  Brigham Young University. Low attended the school, where almost all  students are Mormon, but it is not clear whether he is a member of the  faith.
   There was no indication that the judge had any prior relationship  with Vallejo, McBride said. Low would have to disclose something like  that, he said.
   In the faith, bishops are regular church members who lead their  congregations for four to five years. The position is unpaid and part of  the religion's lay clergy structure that makes it different from many  other religions.
   Low's comments also sparked outrage Friday from advocates for sexual assault victims.
   "The signal that it sends to sexual violence survivors is that if you  choose to disclose, that we're still going to treat your perpetrator as  if they're a good person," Turner Bitton, executive director of the  Utah Coalition Against Sexual Assault. |