Now, the Judicial Standards Commission has filed a motion asking the court to put the ban in place. Galvan had until June 16 to file a written response to the original petition.
Galvan resigned last year amid allegations that he raped and solicited a bribe from a
Galvan admitted in a statement to police to actions that may violate the judicial code of conduct. While drinking and flirting in a bar, he discussed with the woman a pending battery case against her husband, though she was the alleged victim in that case. He had sex with the woman, though she and her husband had been married two months earlier by Galvan.
He also took the woman for a ride in his Porsche, though he told police he had too much to drink before driving.
Before the rape allegation surfaced, Galvan was barred from hearing criminal cases for a time because he had a sexual relationship with an assistant district attorney while hearing cases she was prosecuting. He also has two prior drunken driving convictions.