A Phoenix-area justice of the peace faces nearly
two-dozen charges of ethical misconduct, including accusations he used
court resources to boost his political campaign, failed to report
campaign donations and solicited corporate sponsorships for "Breakfast
with the Judge" events, according to the Arizona Commission on Judicial
Conduct.
Clancy Jayne, head judge of the Desert
Ridge Justice Court since 2008, has received warnings or reprimands by
the commission at least eight times during his eight-year tenure, not
including the new allegations. The Desert Ridge court precinct covers
parts of north Phoenix, north Scottsdale, Cave Creek and Carefree.
Jayne
is set to leave office in January after losing the Republican primary
race in August to Cathy Riggs, who was endorsed by Gov. Doug Ducey.
Riggs is unopposed in the Nov. 8 general election.
Jayne drew attention just before the Aug. 30 primary after blasting Ducey in the Yellow Sheet Report, a political tip sheet published by Arizona News Service. Jayne said he was "beyond pissed" by the endorsement and described Ducey as a "son of a bitch" who did "gofer" work decades ago when Jayne was head of Gilbert Days.
The
public comments are part of the 74-page statement of charges filed by
the commission's disciplinary counsel, April Elliott, against Jayne in
October as they "cast doubt on his temperament and fitness to serve as
judge."
Although Jayne only has two months left
as justice of the peace, Elliott recommends the Arizona Supreme Court
censure, suspend or remove Jayne from office and assess attorney's fees
against him for "conduct ... that brings the judicial office into
disrepute."
Jayne, in a formal response filed by
Mesa-based attorney David Brooks, denies the accusations of misconduct
and argues there is no basis for discipline. Brooks did not respond to a
request for comment.
Party at Turf Paradise
The
state's disciplinary counsel questioned Jayne's use of other judges'
email addresses, which it argues are not public, to invite officials
from around the state to his "65th birthday party" at Turf Paradise
horse track, where Jayne charged $50 per person and held an auction to
benefit his re-election campaign.
More than 100
people attended, and the auction featured more than 50 items, including
"artistic golf putters," and "raised more than $5,000 to kick off" his
campaign fundraising, according to an update on Jayne's website cited by
Elliott's report. Campaign-finance reports for that period, however,
list $1,567 in donations at the event and no in-kind contributions,
according to Elliott.
Full Article & Source:
Ethics charges filed against Desert Ridge Justice of the Peace Clancy Jayne
He sounds as bad as they come.
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