Other Alabama leaders haunted by scandals
MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Former Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley is only the latest high-ranking state politician caught up in controversy in recent years.
Here’s a look at some of Alabama’s biggest political dramas over the past 30 years:
GUY HUNT
Inaugurated in 1987 as Alabama’s first Republican governor since Reconstruction, Guy Hunt was a Primitive Baptist preacher and probate judge who rode a Democratic implosion into office during the Reagan era.
Re-elected in 1990, Hunt was later revealed to have used state airplanes for moneymaking preaching trips. He was convicted and automatically removed from office in 1993 after being accused of wrongly using money from his inaugural and transition fund for personal items including debt payments and home improvements.
DON SIEGELMAN
Once billed as a “New South” governor, Democrat Don Siegelman completed one term in office in 2003. In 2006, a federal jury convicted him on charges that he sold a seat on a state regulatory board to HealthSouth founder Richard Scrushy in exchange for $500,000 in donations to Siegelman’s signature political issue, his 1999 campaign to establish a state lottery.
ROY MOORE
A zealous Christian conservative who was elected Alabama’s chief justice and then installed a Ten Commandments monument in the rotunda of Alabama’s main judicial building, Roy Moore was ousted in 2003 after ignoring a federal court order to remove the monument.
Voters in the deeply conservative state re-elected Moore as chief justice in 2012, but a state judicial panel suspended him from the post last year over an order he issued opposing same-sex marriage.
MIKE HUBBARD
Once arguably the most powerful Republican in the state, House Speaker Mike Hubbard was removed from office in 2016 after being convicted on ethics charges, including claims he solicited business from lobbyists and corporate executives.