WITNESS TO OTHER VICTIMS
In 2005 the author sat in Judge Bobb's courtroom and watched in horror as one senior after another
was institutionalized against their will and lost their homes and valuable properties.
A black woman in a wheelchair sat
before Judge Aviva K. Bobb. The lawyer the court had appointed to represent her spoke with Judge Bobb in legal language and
apparently lied when he told the judge that the elderly woman could no longer get into her house.
Judge Bobb ordered the
sale of the wheelchair-bound woman's house.
The woman asked "may I speak?"
Judge Bobb "yes"
The woman "I had a ramp made over my
stairs. When can I go home?"
Judge Bobb (sarcastically) "I understand".
Judge Bobb then had the woman removed from the courtroom.
The sale of her house had already been ordered.
A young black man in a suit sitting close to the author rubbed his hands together
gleefully - most probably the woman's son looking for an early inheritance.
Another black woman lost her home that day
and was ordered to live in an institution which she made clear was against her will.
The next case was called.
The
white woman was surrounded by lawyers. As they spoke in legal language to Judge Aviva K. Bobb, the woman turned and addressed
the courtroom. She spoke in a French accent:
"They have stripped me of everything.
I have nothing left.
I don't even have
enough to buy a stick of gum"
Judge Bobb ordered that the woman be removed from her courtroom.
In case after case,
Judge Aviva K. Bobb made the same ruling - institutionalize the senior and sell their property.
April 20, 2005
As blind,
Alzheimers sufferer, Lee Peters stood before Judge Aviva K. Bobb, Lee said "I don't know who you are".
Judge Bobb replied (sarcastically)
"I know who I am".
Lee's long time care provider, her son, Casey, began telling Lee that she was standing in a court of
law and that she was about to be removed from his care and from her home.
Judge Bobb interrupted Casey Peters and had
him removed from her courtroom. Judge Bobb violated Lee Peters' civil rights when she failed to tell Lee where she was and what
was about to happen to her and she refused to let anyone else tell her.
Judge Bobb ordered strangers to take Lee away as
Lee called out "CASEY, CASEY - I WANT CASEY".
In 2005 Judge Aviva K. Bobb was awarded the Benjamin Aranda Access to Justice
Award. The following was reported in the November 2005 edition of California Bar Journal:
"The award is co-sponsored by
the Judicial Council, the State Bar, the California Judges Association and the California Commission on Access to Justice.
In presenting
the award, State Supreme Court Chief Justice Ronald George praised Bobb’s success in “improving access to the courts for all, stressing
fairness and respect for all litigants and promoting projects that assist self-represented litigants in navigating their way through
the legal system."
The following is taken from the website of Judge Bobb's current employer, ARC Mediation:
"Recognized as a Top Neutral
“Rising Star” by the Los Angeles Daily Journal in 2009, Judge Aviva Bobb is a versatile jurist with 30 years of experience in family
law, probate, and civil litigation.
Recipient, Aranda Access to Justice Award, Judicial Council of California, 2005; Judge of the Year,
Nat’l Child Support Enforcement Assoc., 2003; Judicial Officer of the Year, State Bar of California Award, Family Law Section, 2003;
Distinguished Jurist Award, American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers, 2001; Spencer Brandeis Award, Los Angeles Co. Bar, Family Law
Section, 2001."
Judge Aviva K. Bobb violated the civil and constitutional rights of a senior and a child when she denied Lee Peters
and Jeanene Bonner a voice in her courtroom and access to justice.
(Judge Bobb stole many peoples homes)