Judge Tim Horton |
The
testimony, at a disciplinary hearing for Horton at the Ohio Judicial
Center, was challenged during cross-examination by Casey Russo, an
assistant disciplinary counsel.
She produced a text message that then-bailiff, Elise Wyant, sent to the administrator, Atiba Jones.
Wyant
wrote in the text that she had to “ditch” the judge during a night of
drinking because he was making her “uncomfortable with comments and
touching.”
Jones testified that, after
speaking with Wyant, he attributed the incident to the close friendship
she shared with the judge, with whom she often went to bars for happy
hour.
“I followed up and I said, ‘What
specifically is happening?’ and she said, ‘Oh, it’s just him being him
... You know how he is. He’s just annoying’ ... I didn’t go farther than
that because I had witnessed him being annoying and obnoxious” when he
was drinking, Jones said.
Wyant’s
complaint alleged that Jones, with whom she had a brief romantic
relationship, failed to act on her complaints about the judge.
Jones,
who resigned two days after Wyant submitted her resignation and
complaint, was among the witnesses called by Horton’s lawyers as part of
their defense of the judge. The hearing before a three-member panel of
the Ohio Supreme Court’s Board of Professional Conduct began with three
days of testimony in July and is expected to conclude with Horton taking
the stand Thursday.
Horton, 48, was a Franklin County Common Pleas
judge from 2006 until 2014, when he won election to the county’s Court
of Appeals, a judgeship he still holds.
Wyant’s
complaint — in which she also accused Horton of requiring her to do
campaign work on county time and on county equipment — triggered a
series of investigations. In January, the Supreme Court disciplinary
counsel filed a complaint containing three charges of professional
misconduct against Horton.
Pat Sheeran,
the former administrative judge for Common Pleas Court, testified that
he passed along information to the disciplinary counsel after leading an
internal investigation of Wyant’s complaint.
“If I didn’t think there was a strong potential for a violation,” Sheeran said, “I wouldn’t have made the referral.”
Full Article & Source:
Text message contradicts ex-court administrator’s testimony in Judge Tim Horton’s defense
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