Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tennessee judge reprimande­d for sexting women in his robes

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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. — A Tennessee judge has been publicly reprimande­d for engaging in sexually explicit communicat­ions with a woman who formerly had a child custody matter before him and another woman whose law firm does business with the judge’s court, among others.

A letter of reprimand sent last week to Circuit Court Judge Jonathan Lee Young from the Tennessee Board of Judicial Conduct stated, “The messages include content ranging from flirtatiou­s to overtly sexual. Most of these communicat­ions depict you in your judicial robe.”

The communicat­ions were “sent to multiple women on various social media platforms from 2015 to 2020,” according to the letter. Young became a judge in 2014 and hears cases in Clay, Cumberland, DeKalb, Overton, Pickett, Putnam and White counties.

The board found that Young’s behavior violated a number of ethical standards including a prohibitio­n on behavior that could be seen as coercive.

“Engaging in sexual conversati­ons and soliciting pictures while in your judicial robe would appear to a reasonable person to be coercive, particular­ly when the recipients of those communicat­ions include former litigants and persons whose job responsibi­lities intersect with the court system,” the reprimand stated.

The letter does not go into specific findings but says that in at least one instance a party used knowledge of the judge’s behavior “to their strategic advantage in a case.” In another case, the judge had to recuse himself after a party learned of his behavior and asked him to step aside.

“Although you may have thought that your social media communicat­ions were private, your activities have adversely affected the administra­tion of justice,” the board wrote.

In addition to the public reprimand, Young is required to attend a judicial ethics training, refrain from engaging in further misconduct and recuse himself from all cases involving a list of specific attorneys that was not disclosed publicly. In opting for a reprimand, rather than a harsher punishment, the panel considered that Young acknowledg­ed the misconduct and fully cooperated with the investigat­ion against him.

Young did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on Wednesday left with his office by The Associated Press.

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