Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Four impeached justices in W.Va. to face trial

- JOHN RABY

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Historic trials will be held in the West Virginia Senate starting next month for four impeached Supreme Court justices after last-ditch efforts to remove charges against some of them were rejected.

The state Senate voted 1915 Tuesday to reject a resolution that would have dropped charges, called articles of impeachmen­t, against Robin Davis, who retired shortly after the House of Delegates impeached her last month.

The vote came after Senate President Mitch Carmichael ruled a separate resolution to censure justices Beth Walker and Margaret Workman instead of subjecting them to impeachmen­t trials was out of order. The resolution would have allowed them to keep their seats on the court.

Trial dates were set for Oct. 1 for Walker, Oct. 15 for Workman, Oct. 29 for Davis and Nov. 15 for suspended Justice Allen Loughry.

The 34-member Senate is serving as a jury and some members of the House of Delegates are serving as prosecutor­s. A conviction means a justice would be disqualifi­ed from holding public office.

Democratic lawmakers, who hold minorities in the House and Senate, have characteri­zed the impeachmen­ts as an unpreceden­ted power grab by the GOP.

The impeachmen­ts stemmed from questions involving renovation­s to the justices’ offices. Individual office spending by the justices for renovation­s included $503,000 by Davis, $367,000 by Loughry, $131,000 by Walker and $113,000 by Workman.

Those questions evolved into accusation­s of corruption, incompeten­ce and neglect of duty.

The proposed censure agreement made with House managers had been announced earlier Tuesday.

Ohio County Republican Sen. Ryan Ferns objected to a resolution to approve the agreement, saying it was premature to make a decision without hearing any evidence. After a brief conference, Carmichael agreed.

Under the proposal, Walker and Workman would have taken responsibi­lity for the costs of renovating their offices and continued to implement reforms to improve the court’s administra­tion. The agreement said Walker and Workman “have publicly acknowledg­ed the need for changed policies and practices to rebuild public trust” in the court.

Loughry, who was suspended in June, was the only justice at the hearing Tuesday. A 25-count federal indictment against him alleges, in part, that he repeatedly lied about using his office for personal gain. His federal trial is set for Oct. 2.

A fifth justice, Menis Ketchum, resigned in July and pleaded guilty last month to a felony count of fraud related to his personal use of a state vehicle and gas fuel card. He faces up to 20 years in prison.

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