When Judges Let Thin Skin Undermine Justice

June 12, 2025
Diane Gujarati was scared one day, and said justice need not apply here.

By Juda Engelmayer

In the United States, our courtrooms are supposed to embody the best of the rule of law—fair, impartial, and immune to the passions of the moment or the pressures of the press. But during the recent federal trial of United States v. Nicole Daedone and Rachel Cherwitz in Brooklyn, I saw something far more troubling: a courtroom where judicial sensitivity to public criticism may have imperiled not just Nicole and Rachel’s rights, but fundamental constitutional principles.

The OneTaste case was always an unconventional prosecution—a single count of forced labor conspiracy built largely on contested memories and shifting cultural narratives, not clear evidence of coercion or crime. But even within the boundaries of a difficult case, defendants are entitled to mount a full and fair defense. That includes the right to counterbalance relentless government leaks and media narratives through public advocacy. It includes the right to tell their side of the story.

I work in public relations, not in law, but our Constitution draws no distinction: the First Amendment protects the ability of both attorneys and advocates to speak. It is a necessary counterweight when prosecutors wage their battles not only in court, but also in the press.

Yet throughout the trial, it became apparent that Judge Diane Gujarati viewed these efforts not as an exercise of free speech, but as a personal affront. In fact, after an independent news and opinion site posted a critical article about both the government’s conduct and the judge’s rulings during the trial—written and authored by me—Judge Gujarati’s tone on the bench notably shifted.

What followed should concern anyone who cares about the independence of the judiciary. The judge reversed her own magistrate’s ruling on key privilege issues, and effectively gutted the defense’s ability to expose government overreach. Then, after a verdict that will certainly be challenged on substantial appellate grounds, Judge Gujarati did something even more extreme: she remanded both Ms. Daedone and Ms. Cherwitz—first-time, non-violent defendants—into custody pending sentencing.

There was no necessity to do so. Both women had complied scrupulously with bail conditions for over a year, posed no flight risk, and had strong community support. The government itself did not seek remand. Yet Judge Gujarati imposed it anyway. In a courtroom that had often seemed more preoccupied with controlling public narrative than ensuring procedural fairness, this decision felt less like law, and more like vengeance.

I do not level this charge lightly. Judges carry immense responsibility and face intense scrutiny. But when they appear to let personal sensitivities about media coverage influence case outcomes, trust in the impartiality of the bench is eroded.

In this era of high-profile prosecutions and social media amplification, it is vital that judges remember: public relations is not a crime. Criticism is not a threat. Advocacy is not obstruction. When a judge reacts to protected speech by tightening the screws on defendants—or by suppressing legitimate defense arguments—they do more than damage individual lives. They diminish the credibility of the entire justice system.

In the coming months, this case will continue through the appellate courts. I have faith that over time, the errors that infected this trial will be corrected. But the deeper question will remain: do we want a justice system where the thin skin of a federal judge can override the thick protections of our Constitution?

That is a conversation worth having—not just in the legal community, but in the court of public opinion as well.

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Juda Engelmayer
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NiceGuy
6 months ago

Where the hell is the Alison Mack update?!?!?

Ooopsie!
Ooopsie!
6 months ago

“Judge Gujarati admonished that she was “disturbed” by actions inside the court by supporters and comments made by Juda Engelmayer, a press agent representing OneTaste.”

Jury Systemizer
Jury Systemizer
6 months ago

The jury has spoken.

Guilty.

All that $pending on PR by Daedone didn’t work out.

[sad trombone]

Anonymous
Anonymous
6 months ago

This judge was angry because the defendants had friends and loved ones fill the gallery to demonstrate their support and concern. She accused innocent supporters in the gallery of intimidating witnesses. And the defendants paid the price of having support by having their liberty taken when there was no danger and no flight risk.

This judge cannot be permitted to determine their sentence. Her hostility and rage is evidenced in her rant prior to remanding them into custody.

Shredding the constitution
Shredding the constitution
6 months ago

Great article – Family courts throughout the country punish and gag order protective parents who expose the well practiced child trafficking of our children.

Judges held to account for violations of due process through the media lash out and punish the targeted parent – suggesting giving information to the public and media about due process violations and free speech is harming our children and result in judicial restraining orders and gag orders- designed to further separate parents and children and taint the targeted parent as a criminal.

And now we’re seeing there is little relief in federal court either.

The prosecutors did not seek to remand but the judge does? And does so as punishment because these defendants had the support and capability to get their side of the story told to the public?

This must be appealed – the judicial bias has destroyed any hope of a fair trial and her final act of remanding non violent first time offenders is evidence of her bias.

Why do you hate America?
Why do you hate America?
6 months ago

The jury system is the bedrock of the Constitution.

The people have rendered their verdict.

Justice is done.

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