Starkville Daily News

Nearly $74K paid in legal fees in Miss. election spat

- By EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS Associated Press

JACKSON — The Mississipp­i public has paid nearly $74,000 to defend legislator­s in a federal lawsuit by voters who say they were disenfranc­hised in a state House race that went to a tiebreaker and was later flipped, according to records obtained by The Associated Press.

Five-term Democratic incumbent Bo Eaton won the tiebreaker in a drawing of straws overseen by the secretary of state in late 2015. The House rejected some ballots after the term started in early 2016, making Republican Mark Tullos the winner and giving the GOP a three-fifths supermajor­ity in the House. That margin enables Republican­s to pass tax changes without any votes from Democrats.

AP filed a public records request April 26 seeking informatio­n about payments to a private attorney, Michael Wallace, for representi­ng Speaker Philip Gunn and others in the lawsuit.

The House Management Committee released a document to AP on Tuesday showing $73,735 in invoices from the Wise Carter law firm, where Wallace is a shareholde­r. The first invoice was from April 25, 2016, and the most recent was from April 25, 2017.

House clerk Andrew Ketchings said Wednesday that he submitted paperwork

last week to pay the most recent invoice, and all the other payments have been made. He said the legal fees are paid from the House operating budget, which is funded by tax dollars.

Eaton, a farmer from Taylorsvil­le, is a former House Agricultur­e Committee chairman. Tullos is an attorney from Raleigh. They ran in District 79 in Jasper and Smith counties, a mostly rural area southeast of Jackson.

The lawsuit is unresolved. It was filed March 30, 2016,

by five voters who said the House broke federal equal protection guarantees when it tossed out five unidentifi­ed provisiona­l ballots for Eaton. The five ballots came from a group of nine that had been accepted by local election officials and included votes by the five plaintiffs, although the plaintiffs said they were not sure whether their ballots were discarded. All five plaintiffs said they voted for Eaton.

U.S. District Judge Carlton Reeves ruled Jan. 27 that the federal court lacks jurisdicti­on to decide the outcome of the 2015 EatonTullo­s race. But, Reeves said

the five voters could pursue their own claim that their constituti­onal rights were violated when the House rejected the ballots.

The defendants in the lawsuit are Gunn, the four Republican House members who recommende­d tossing out the ballots and the entire House of Representa­tives.

Wallace filed a one-page document Feb. 14 saying all the defendants would ask the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to overturn Reeves’ ruling and uphold “absolute legislativ­e immunity” from being sued.

Reeves wrote that

“through intentiona­l eliminatio­n of their votes, defendants deprived each individual plaintiff of his or her civic voice not just for the 2016 legislativ­e session, but also the 2017, 2018, and 2019 sessions, and any special session called during those years.”

Reeves rejected legislator­s’ assertion that they are immune from being sued. He said that although legislator­s cannot be sued over general policy decisions, they can be sued over a type of action that is “specific and relate to a single individual,” such as deciding to toss out specific ballots.

 ?? (Photo by Rogelio V. Solis, AP) ?? In this file photograph taken Nov. 20, 2015, then Rep. Bo Eaton, D-Taylorsvil­le, left, and Republican challenger Mark Tullos, right, open and display the contents of silver-plated business card boxes after “picking straws” in the governor’s office near...
(Photo by Rogelio V. Solis, AP) In this file photograph taken Nov. 20, 2015, then Rep. Bo Eaton, D-Taylorsvil­le, left, and Republican challenger Mark Tullos, right, open and display the contents of silver-plated business card boxes after “picking straws” in the governor’s office near...
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