El Dorado News-Times

Arkansas judge seeks to dismiss complaint over demonstrat­ion

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LITTLE ROCK (AP) — An Arkansas judge charged with breaking judicial ethics rules for participat­ing in an anti-death penalty demonstrat­ion the same day he blocked the state from using an execution drug said Monday that a disciplina­ry panel should dismiss its case against him.

Pulaski County Circuit Judge Wendell Griffen's attorneys renewed their May 2017 request for the Judicial Discipline and Disability Commission to dismiss the complaint against the judge, days after a three-member panel of the commission filed formal charges against him.

Griffen was photograph­ed on a cot outside the governor's mansion last year wearing an anti-death penalty button and surrounded by people holding signs opposing executions.

Earlier that day, Griffen blocked the state from using a lethal injection drug over claims the company had been misled by the state.

Though the image appeared to mimic a condemned inmate awaiting lethal injection, Griffen, who is also a Baptist pastor, has said he was portraying Jesus and participat­ing in a prayer vigil.

Griffen's attorneys asked the panel for a formal public hearing on his request to dismiss the case.

They argued the case violates Griffen's constituti­onal rights and a 2015 state religious objections law.

"As previously stated, the JDDC complaint is more than merely misguided," the attorneys said in Monday's filing. "It demonstrat­es an irrational and unpreceden­ted hostility toward Judge Griffen and to controllin­g legal authoritie­s about freedom of speech, freedom of peaceful assembly, freedom of religion, and freedom of religious expression enshrined in the First Amendment and protected by the Arkansas Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act."

Rachel Michel, the special counsel appointed to handle Griffen's case, did not immediatel­y return a call seeking comment Monday afternoon. The panel's charges go before the full nine-member commission, which can recommend the state Supreme Court suspend or remove Griffen from the bench if they rule he violated judicial rules.

The commission could also issue a public admonishme­nt, reprimand or censure the judge. A hearing before the panel has not been scheduled yet.

Griffen's attorneys have also asked the commission to release documents related to the case, including any emails, voice mails or other communicat­ion from people who contacted the panel about making a complaint against the judge.

Days after the demonstrat­ion, the state Supreme Court removed Griffen from the drug case and disqualifi­ed him from handling any execution-related cases.

The state's seven Supreme Court justices are appealing a federal judge's ruling that allows Griffen's lawsuit against them over the disqualifi­cation to move forward.

 ?? KTHV/TEGNA Inc. via AP, File ?? PROTEST: In this April 17, 2018, file image from video provided by KTHV-TV, a death penalty protester outside the Arkansas governor's mansion in Little Rock prepares to tie rope around Pulaski County Circuit Judge Wendell Griffen who is laying on a cot...
KTHV/TEGNA Inc. via AP, File PROTEST: In this April 17, 2018, file image from video provided by KTHV-TV, a death penalty protester outside the Arkansas governor's mansion in Little Rock prepares to tie rope around Pulaski County Circuit Judge Wendell Griffen who is laying on a cot...

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