Julia H. Gordon v. Judicial Conduct Commission

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 2022
Docket2022 SC 0171
StatusUnknown

This text of Julia H. Gordon v. Judicial Conduct Commission (Julia H. Gordon v. Judicial Conduct Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Julia H. Gordon v. Judicial Conduct Commission, (Ky. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: OCTOBER 20, 2022 TO BE PUBLISHED

Supreme Court of Kentucky 2022-SC-0171-RR

JULIA H. GORDON APPELLANT

V. IN SUPREME COURT

JUDICIAL CONDUCT COMMISSION APPELLEE

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE HUGHES

AFFIRMING

The Judicial Conduct Commission (Commission) determined that Julia

Hawes Gordon, Family Court Judge for the 6th Judicial Circuit in Daviess

County, Kentucky, committed judicial misconduct as charged in five of the six

counts against her and ordered that she be removed from office. Judge Gordon

appeals from the Commission’s Final Order, raising multiple claims of error.

Finding no error warranting reversal of the Commission’s Final Order, we

affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Judge Gordon was elected as a Family Court Judge in 2016 and took her

oath of office on January 3, 2017. During the alleged misconduct, Judge

Gordon served as the only Family Court Judge in Daviess County and her

dockets included Juvenile Dependency, Neglect and Abuse (DNA), Civil Dissolution, Child Custody and Support, Termination of Parental Rights and

Adoption, and Domestic Violence.1

Prior to her election in 2016, Judge Gordon was an attorney and served

as a Guardian Ad Litem (GAL) in Daviess County. She served as GAL for a

child named Dalton since he was a young child, approximately a decade. After

years of Dalton being moved around the state with no permanent home or

family, Judge Gordon resigned as his GAL and she and her husband Sale

adopted him in 2013, just after he turned eighteen. Dalton suffers from

substance abuse and mental illness issues. He also has criminal history

dating back to 2017.

Throughout 2021 and 2022, the Commission received a series of

complaints alleging Judge Gordon engaged in numerous instances of judicial

misconduct. Between 2017 and 2021, Judge Gordon inappropriately inserted

herself into at least three of her son’s Daviess County criminal cases.2 Judge

Gordon was the complaining witness or victim in each of those cases, placing

her in the difficult position of concurrently being a parent, victim and judge in

the same county in which Dalton’s criminal cases were adjudicated. Given the

nature of the accusations, the Commission authorized a preliminary

1 During the alleged misconduct and throughout all Commission proceedings, Daviess County had only one family court. Judge Gordon served as the judge for Family Court, Division 3. On April 8, 2022, a new family court division was created in Daviess County, Division 4, by the enactment of House Bill 214. Judge Gordon filed to run in that race and faces two other candidates on the November 2022 ballot for the Division 4 seat. 2 The Daviess County criminal case numbers are 17-F-00748, 20-M-00492, and

20-F-01038.

2 investigation pursuant to Kentucky Supreme Court Rule (SCR) 4.170(1). The

Commission notified Judge Gordon of the allegations on July 6, 2021, and she

responded with a twenty-seven page sworn statement. Judge Gordon also

participated in an informal conference with the Commission. SCR 4.170(2).

After considering the evidence obtained from the preliminary

investigation and Judge Gordon’s statement, the Commission served Judge

Gordon with Notice of Formal Proceedings on October 21, 2021, outlining six

charges against her alleging violations of the Code of Judicial Conduct. In her

twenty-two page response, containing over one hundred pages of supporting

documentation, Judge Gordon conceded some of the allegations. After the

initiation of formal proceedings, Judge Gordon and the Commission agreed to a

temporary suspension, effective December 3, 2021, pending the outcome of the

formal hearing.

The formal hearing commenced on April 4, 2022, and lasted three days.

The Commission heard testimony from eleven witnesses and reviewed over

forty-five exhibits. Judge Gordon testified at the hearing. After the hearing,

the Commission rendered its Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Final

Order on April 22, 2022. The Commission found, by clear and convincing

evidence, Judge Gordon guilty of violating the Code of Judicial Conduct and

engaging in misconduct as outlined in Counts I through V. The charges in

Count VI were not established by clear and convincing evidence.

Some of the issues presented to the Commission, but not all, arose

because Judge Gordon’s son, Dalton, faced several criminal matters over the

3 last several years. The Commission concluded that the misconduct alleged

against Judge Gordon involved her repeatedly acting well outside the

constitutional role of judge, creating conflicts and bias by acting as counsel,

advisor, and advocate for her son in his criminal cases, and then lobbying and

pushing both the prosecutor and judge presiding over those cases to take

actions as she directed. As stated in the Final Order, the Commission’s

decision ultimately turned on proof of Judge Gordon’s:

[(1)] extensive and repeated pattern and practice, over her tenure on the Family Court Bench, of exercising improper influence for her own benefit and the benefit of her son in his numerous criminal matters; [(2)] extremely poor judgment and taking profoundly unwise actions that were also outside the scope and beyond the boundaries of proper judicial activity; [(3)] tampering with or destroying actual or potential evidence in criminal matters involving her son; [(4)] having dozens if not hundreds of recorded telephone calls with her son while he was in custody in the Daviess County Jail planning, establishing and confirming much of her misconduct;[3] [(5)] creating conflicts of interest because of the legal representation of her son in his criminal matters by an attorney regularly appearing before her in Family Court matters, which representation she failed to disclose to participants in court proceedings before her and for which she failed to recuse, creating actual bias or at least the perception of bias and the lack of impartiality; [(6)] sending and receiving hundreds of ex parte communications via (1) hundreds of text messages with the county attorney and counsel representing her son, both of whom regularly appeared before her in other matters, and (2) via text messages, personal meetings, and/or phone calls with the judges, the prosecutor and the defense attorney handling her son’s criminal cases through which she was attempting to represent and advocate for her son; [(7)] retaliating against the Cabinet for Health and Family Services (the Cabinet) and its workers who advocated

3 The Commission stated that the recorded jail calls are damning in a variety of

respects for Judge Gordon. The Commission heard only a few of the hundreds of calls during the hearing but enough were played to prove the allegations. Judge Gordon testified and argued that she did not think anyone would ever hear or listen to the calls, implying she otherwise would not have said the things she said if she knew anyone would hear them.

4 actions contrary to her views in JDNA matters; [(8)] exhibiting a lack of candor to the Judicial Ethics Committee (JEC) from which she obtained advisory opinions (based on limited or incorrect facts she presented) and using those advisory opinions to justify her actions and in defense of the Charges; and [(9)] exhibiting a lack of candor to the Commission.

(Internal footnotes omitted.) Ultimately, the Commission found that the claims

against Judge Gordon presented significant concerns and indicated a pattern

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