The Eleventh Judicial District Commission on Judicial
Performance unanimously recommends that Judge William G. Fox BE
RETAINED.
Judge Fox was appointed to the County Court bench in Fremont County
in 1986 and currently hears criminal (including felony and misdemeanor),
traffic, traffic infractions, domestic relations and civil cases.
Surveys for evaluation of Judge Fox were completed by attorneys
who have practiced in his court. Non-Attorney surveys were completed
by defendants, plaintiffs, law enforcement, employees, jurors, and
victims. The responses to the surveys rated Judge Fox highly overall.
Attorney participants surveyed strongly recommended that Judge Fox
be retained by a percentage well above the statewide average for
other county court judges. Although non-attorney participants surveyed
were less positive, non-attorneys recommended that Judge Fox be
retained at the rate of 72%, just slightly below the statewide average
for non-attorneys.
Based upon information supplied to the Commission through surveys,
public hearings, a personal interview with Judge Fox, and courtroom
observations, the Commission feels that Judge Fox should be commended
for his continuing legal education for himself, the legal community
and the public, for his initiative in developing procedures to make
justice more efficient and for his willingness to remedy the concerns
reflected by non-attorneys concerning his ability to communicate.
Judge Fox is aware of his ethical duties and works to avoid any
appearance of impropriety.
Judge Fox is active in community affairs as evidenced by his involvement
in the DARE Program, by training Russian police, prosecutors and
judges on domestic violence cases and restraining orders in the
Cañon City/Valdai (Russia) Sister City Association, and by
teaching the Judicial program for the Leadership Conference of the
Cañon City Chamber of Commerce.
Judge Fox respects his role as judge and is committed to being
a member of the judiciary by showing initiative, as evidenced by
the work he has done to establish County Court Directives governing
procedures in his court which are available to all parties and attorneys;
being the first judge in Colorado to provide Attorney Mediators
for the Small Claims Courts; receiving one of three Colorado scholarships
to attend the Scientific Evidence and Expert Testimony program at
the National Judicial College in 2002; and developing procedures
for handling inmate civil cases which have been copied by courts
in other Colorado counties which have state prisons and inmate litigation.
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