WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. March 20, 2005: The Glen Hockley Larry Delgado saga unraveling over the last 4 and a half years going through more ups and downs, highs and lows and legal permutations than any person could have expected may finally be ending this evening -- or a new beginning in the Adventure of the Jammed Voting Machine may make history again in deposing affidavit signers.
Glen Hockley was granted the right to depose the 103 affidavit signees whose signed affidavits allowed the Attorney General to mount a successful quo warranto challenge resulting in Mr. Hockley's ouster from the Common Council, will meet with his legal team to night to determine his next step. The Appellate Court, Second Circuit in Brooklyn handed down the split decision on Mr. Hockley's motion for a jury trial instead of the summary judgment the Attorney General requested and received from Judge Francis Nicolai last July. They upheld the Supreme Court right to make that summary judgment in the matter but ruled the Supreme Court to hear depositions of the 103 jurors by June 30 and new arguments in 30 days after that.

GLEN HOCKLEY IN MAY, 2005 at a meeting of the Common Council: An impassioned advocate while on the Common Council, fighter for affordable housing and safe housing, Hockley told WPCNR he was pleased with the decision because it showed the Supreme Court was wrong in refusing to allow deposition of the 103 Republican voters signing the affidavits. He said he and his lawyers would be discussing their next course of action this evening, and "what makes sense." Photo, WPCNR News Archive.