now, oddly enough, the most liberal member of the court, stanley mosk, who was appointed by governor pat brown back in the '60s, actually voted to uphold the law. so in other words, what you had was the spectacle of this wilson appointee voting to overturn a law that a pat brown appointee was voting to uphold; very odd when it's pete wilson who often complains about activist judges. c-span: on your list of federal judges, us district court judge robert aguilar, appointed to a vacancy in san jose, california, by president carter, was convicted in 1990 of leaking a wiretap to a mobster and lying to the fbi. what happened to him? >> guest: well, i--i think there was--part of his conviction was overturned, and eventually he reached a plea bargain with prosecutors... c-span: resigned his seat? >> guest: resigned the s--the seat, and--and they didn't press charges further. c-span: do you think there are many judges on the federal bench that don't get caught doing these kind of things? >> guest: i suspect there are a number. it's hard to prove, obviously, because by definition if they haven