Education
In 1967, LaBuda graduated from high school in the Bronx. Three and a half years later, he graduated Phi Beta Kappa from City University.
In 1967, LaBuda graduated from high school in the Bronx. Three and a half years later, he graduated Phi Beta Kappa from City University.
He is currently the elected Sullivan County Court Judge and Surrogate and has served since 1997. He then went on to receive a Juris Doctor from Case Western Reserve University School of Law in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1978, he became Chief Assistant District Attorney in Sullivan County, New York and stayed at that position until 1989.
Subsequently, LaBuda was elected Town Justice in the Town of Mamakating in Sullivan County, and served four years.
LaBuda served in the Judge Advocate General"s Corps, United States Army in the Gulf War, as a Major in the 301st Logistical Support group. He also served in the 2003 Iraq War.
LaBuda is also past President of the Wurtsboro Fire Company #1 and a past President of the Sullivan County Volunteer Fireman"s Association.
People v. Carl Colberg
In Colberg, LaBuda held that that "battered person syndrome" can be used as a defense in criminal cases.
Previously, "battered woman defense" was the only "battered" defense available. People v. Embry
Paul Embry was sentenced to a six year determinate sentence for burglary. At that time, New York had passed a law requiring defendants such as Embry to be given an additional term of six months post release supervision (PRS).
However, in Embry"s case, he was not given the PRS at his sentencing.
The Department of Corrections added the PRS to his sentence when he initially began serving his prison sentence. In another similar case, the New York Court of Appeals held that a term of PRS is invalid if is added to a sentence by DOCS. The Court of Appeals said that a sentence is only valid if is pronounced by a judicial officer, not DOCS. Subsequent to this Court of Appeals decision, the prosecution filed a motion to have Embry resentenced to term of PRS. Embry argued that a resenticing violates his double jeopardy rights.
People v. Robar
In Robar, LaBuda held that the ban on discriminatory use of peremptory challenges, first announced by the Supreme Court in Batson v.
Kentucky, 476 United States. 79 (1986), applied not only to race or gender (see J.E.B. v. Alabama, 511 United States. 127 (1994)), but also to the discrete class of "hunters".
LaBuda declared, "To systematically exclude that recognized and defined class of people in a jury trial is something that raises the court"s attention under Luciano." In Luciano, the New York Court of Appeals defined the scope of Batson as including "race, gender or any other status that implicates equal protection concerns.".