Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Removal of Gulley is started

County petitions judge to oust JP

- JOHN LYNCH

Pulaski County Judge Barry Hyde and Prosecutin­g Attorney Larry Jegley on Tuesday began the judicial process to remove Justice of the Peace Kristina Gulley from office, seven weeks after she was disqualifi­ed at court order from holding office because of misdemeano­r hot-check conviction­s that date back 19 years and more.

Jegley, on behalf of the state, and Hyde, as the county’s chief executive, stated in a 12-page petition to Circuit Judge Chip Welch that Gulley’s refusal to resign requires that they get a court order to declare her a “usurper,” remove her from office and prevent her from participat­ing in Quorum Court duties. They’ve requested immediate action through a temporary restrainin­g order barring her from those duties.

Further, Jegley and Hyde ask that the judge force the 53-year-old North Little Rock woman to repay the salary, expenses and benefits she’s received, worth $29,037, since taking office on Jan. 5, 2021. They also ask the judge to rule that the county doesn’t have to continue to pay her.

Gulley has since had her conviction­s sealed, but that’s not sufficient to allow her to hold office, the petition states.

The Arkansas Constituti­on bars office-seekers convicted of “infamous crimes” from holding office, with such crimes including a misdemeano­r offense involving an act of deceit or fraud. The Arkansas Supreme Court in 2020 declared misdemeano­r hot check conviction to be a disqualify­ing infamous crime.

“Kristina Gulley is ineligible to hold any office of trust or profit in this state because she has been adjudicate­d guilty of an infamous crime, on two separate occasions, and has been ineligible since the first adjudicati­on of guilt of an infamous crime on or about October 10, 1997,” the petition states. “The current state of the law is that the sealing of a record of adjudicati­on of guilt of an infa

mous crime does not restore the eligibilit­y or capability of the person so adjudicate­d to hold an office of trust or profit in this state.”

Welch was the judge who ruled Gulley’s conviction­s made her unfit to hold office, acting on a lawsuit brought by a husband and wife living in the county’s District 10. Although they said the suit was not politicall­y motivated, Gulley accused her opponent, Barry Jefferson, of being behind the effort to unseat her.

Gulley beat Jefferson’s challenge to her second term in the March Democratic primaries. With Gulley disqualifi­ed, Jefferson would have assumed the justice of the peace position next January, except a lawsuit brought by Gulley’s supporters saw him similarly rendered unfit for office by court order due to his own hot check conviction­s from 16 years ago.

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