A Texas judge was suspended without pay this week after being
arrested on felony burglary and tampering with government records
charges, an indictment he calls a “ridiculous” political attack meant to
damage his candidacy in a runoff election.
The Texas Commission on Judicial Conduct suspended
San Jacinto County Judge John Lovett, 51, on Monday after a grand jury
indicted him for entering County Clerk Dawn Wright’s office after hours
in July last year and using Wright’s timestamp to approve a
commissioners court agenda.
The suspension order was made public on Thursday. If convicted, he
faces up to 3½ years in state prison and a fine of up to $18,000.
As the county judge, Lovett served in administrative and judicial
roles. He led the commissioners court, the county’s executive board, and
also presided over criminal, civil and probate cases at the county seat
Coldspring, 60 miles north of Houston.
A phone call to his office Thursday was not answered.
Voters elected Lovett, a Republican, in November 2014, though he is
not a licensed attorney. A layman can be a county judge in Texas. His
term expires in December.
Lovett has a bachelor’s degree in animal science from Texas A&M
University and worked in the financial services industry for more than
20 years before his election.
He placed second, with 226 votes, in the March Republican primary for
San Jacinto County Justice of the Peace Precinct 1, and qualified for
the May 22 runoff election.
Arrested Monday, Lovett posted bail and told local media he thinks the charges are political gamesmanship.
“In the full measure of time, I will be found not guilty of these
ridiculous charges. I find it suspect the timing of this indictment. An
incident that supposedly happened close to a year ago and they wait a
month before a runoff election to bring it before a grand jury,” he told
KTRK-TV, Houston’s ABC affiliate.
Lovett said that as county judge he is free to enter Wright’s office
any time. Though he got into the office with his master key, he set off a
silent alarm that alerted law enforcement. Wright asked the sheriff’s
office to investigate, local newspapers reported.
Lovett, who also was charged with misdemeanor forgery, said he will be vindicated.
“The clerk of the court is subservient to the court,” Lovett told
KTRK. “If I need to go into the office of the court, I think I have
every right to do so. The sheriff’s office is investigating the alarm
call. I don’t believe they are investigating any crimes. I don’t believe
there was any crime committed.”
San Jacinto County, pop. 28,000, is named for the Battle of San
Jacinto, a clash in 1836 near present-day Houston in which Anglo and
Tejano soldiers under the command of Gen. Sam Houston routed Gen.
Antonio López de Santa Ana’s troops.
Full Article & Source:
Texas County Judge Faces Felony Charges
Is he lying? Why doesn't he submit to a lie detector?
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