Current:Home > reviewsMontana’s attorney general faces a hearing on 41 counts of professional misconduct -ProfitClass
Montana’s attorney general faces a hearing on 41 counts of professional misconduct
View
Date:2025-04-13 23:39:36
HELENA, Mont. (AP) — A succession of controversies marks Republican Austin Knudsen’s nearly four years as Montana attorney general.
His office sided with a man who made an armed threat over a pandemic mask mandate and was accused of pressuring a Helena hospital over its refusal to administer a parasite drug to a COVID-19 patient. He tried to block three constitutional initiatives from the November ballot, recruited a token opponent for the June primary so he could raise more money, and got sued after forcing the head of the Montana Highway Patrol to resign.
Knudsen is facing a hearing Wednesday that could bring a reckoning in yet another dispute: allegations of professional misconduct over his aggressive defense of a law that allows Montana’s Republican governor to directly fill judicial vacancies. That law was part of a nationwide GOP effort to forge a more conservative judiciary.
A judicial disciplinary office concluded in 2023 that Knudsen’s office tried to evade the state Supreme Court’s authority by rejecting the validity of court orders.
His hearing before a state judicial panel on 41 counts of professional misconduc t could last up to three days, officials said.
Knudsen, who could lose his law license, argues he and his staff were “zealously representing” the Legislature in a separation-of-powers case. He also pressed allegations of judicial misconduct, saying the court was interfering in the Legislature’s investigation of the conduct of the judiciary.
Chase Scheuer, Knudsen’s spokesperson, said Tuesday that the case should have been dismissed months ago.
“The allegations are meritless and nothing more than an attack on him orchestrated by those who disagree with him politically,” Scheuer said.
Republicans have long accused Montana judges of legislating from the bench when the courts find Republican-passed laws regulating abortion or gun rights to be unconstitutional.
The alleged misconduct by Knudsen occurred in 2021. At the time, Montana lawmakers were working on a bill to eliminate a commission that reviewed potential judges.
Lawmakers learned a Supreme Court administrator used state computers to survey judges about the legislation on behalf of the Montana Judges Association. After the court administrator said she had deleted emails related to the survey, the Legislature subpoenaed the Department of Administration, which includes the state’s IT department, and received 5,000 of the administrator’s emails by the next day.
The Montana Supreme Court later quashed the subpoena, but not until after some of the emails had been released to the news media.
Then-Chief Deputy Attorney General Kristin Hansen, now deceased, responded to the Supreme Court writing the “legislature does not recognize this Court’s order as binding” and added that lawmakers wouldn’t allow the court to interfere in its investigation of ”the serious and troubling conduct of members of the judiciary.”
The Legislature also moved for the Supreme Court justices to recuse themselves from hearing the case, arguing that justices had a conflict of interest because the subpoena involved the court administrator. The justices denied that motion and suggested that the Legislature had tried to create a conflict by sending each justice a subpoena for their emails.
In a May 2021 letter to the court, Knudsen said the justices’ writings “appear to be nothing more than thinly veiled threats and attacks on the professional integrity of attorneys in my office.” He added that “lawyers also have affirmative obligations to report judicial misconduct.”
The complaint against Knudsen found the statements in his letter were contemptuous, undignified, discourteous and/or disrespectful and violated rules on practice. It also noted that complaints against the judiciary should be filed with the Montana Judicial Standards Commission.
Knudsen’s office in late 2021 asked the U.S. Supreme Court to take up the case, claiming judicial self-dealing on a possibly unprecedented scale. The justices declined.
Montana’s Supreme Court ultimately upheld the law allowing the governor to appoint judges.
veryGood! (5765)
Related
- A steeplechase record at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Then a proposal. (He said yes.)
- Lorde gets emotional about pain in raw open letter to fans: 'I ache all the time'
- NOT REAL NEWS: A look at what didn’t happen this week
- Why Chris Olsen Is Keeping His New Boyfriend’s Identity a Secret
- The GOP and Kansas’ Democratic governor ousted targeted lawmakers in the state’s primary
- US wage growth is finally outpacing inflation. Many Americans aren't feeling it.
- From an old-style Afghan camera, a new view of life under the Taliban emerges
- Anheuser-Busch says it has stopped cutting the tails of its Budweiser Clydesdale horses
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- The 'lifetime assignment' of love: DAWN reflects on 'Narcissus' and opens a new chapter
Ranking
- 3 years after the NFL added a 17th game, the push for an 18th gets stronger
- Are paper wine bottles the future? These companies think so.
- US ambassador to Japan calls Chinese ban on Japanese seafood ‘economic coercion’
- Iowa man disappears on the day a jury finds him guilty of killing his wife
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Ukraine launched a missile strike on Russia’s Black Sea Fleet headquarters, Russian official says
- Want a place on the UN stage? Leaders of divided nations must first get past this gatekeeper
- A peace forum in Ethiopia is postponed as deadly clashes continue in the country’s Amhara region
Recommendation
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
Dangerous inmate captured after escaping custody while getting treatment at hospital in St. Louis
Anheuser-Busch says it has stopped cutting the tails of its Budweiser Clydesdale horses
Zelenskyy visiting Canada for first time since war started seeking to shore up support for Ukraine
Family of explorer who died in the Titan sub implosion seeks $50M-plus in wrongful death lawsuit
Column: Coach Prime dominates the college football world. What might come next?
The big twist in 'A Haunting in Venice'? It's actually a great film
Joe Jonas Returns to the Stage After Sophie Turner’s Lawsuit Filing