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Bill Weisenberger

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Bill Weisenberger
Image of Bill Weisenberger
Prior offices
Madison County Justice Court


Bill Weisenberger was a judge for the Madison County Justice Court, District 3 in Madison County, Mississippi. He was elected to the court in 2011 to succeed Judge Cindy B. Alford.[1] Weisenberg was defeated in his bid for re-election in 2015.[2]

Elections

2011

Weisenberger won in the Republican primary election on August 2, 2011, and was elected to the Madison County Justice Court after running unopposed in the November general election.[3]

Noteworthy events

Judge at center of racial abuse case

In May 2014, Weisenberger was accused of slapping and kicking a mentally disabled black man and telling him, "Run, n*****, run."[4]

On May 8, 2014, 20-year-old Eric Rivers was trying to collect tips by asking vendors at the Canton Flea Market if they needed help loading or unloading. One of the witnesses was Robert Perkins, whose parents were vendors. Perkins said that he saw Weisenberger yelling at Rivers and explained, "[Weisenberger] pushed him, hit him, called him a n----- and told him to run." Perkins said that afterwards, he saw Weisenberger "laughing and giving a 'high five' to a police officer."[5]

According to Perkins' mother, Kelly Bailey Ray, Weisenberger had also cursed at her son. Ray said that she asked Weisenberger not to use profanity around children, but when Ray's husband entered the scene to talk to Weisenberger, the judge allegedly told him, "I'm going to deal with you because I don't take orders from a woman."[5] Later, when Ray confronted him about hitting Rivers, she said that Weisenberger explained his actions by saying Rivers had groped a woman. Ray later filed the complaint with the police.[5]

The former mayor of Canton, William Truly, is the current president of NAACP's Canton branch. He responded to the situation, stating,

When you preferentially choose, based on their ethnicity, to simply slap and kick and call them n*gger, that means that was in your heart—there was bitterness and hate for that person.[6]
—William Truly[4]

The NAACP called for Weisenberger to step down while the case was being investigated.

The case was initially given to District Attorney Michael Guest.[5] According to a statement by Guest: "We are awaiting records from Region 8 Mental Health Services, the facility where the victim was receiving treatment...One of the essential elements of (a potential charge) is that he qualifies as a vulnerable adult."[7]

The investigation was passed to the Attorney General's office in July 2014. The matter also appeared before the Mississippi Commission on Judicial Performance, but Darlene Ballard, the commission's executive director, stated, "Everything we do is confidential until we make a recommendation to the Supreme Court."[8]

Another lawsuit was filed against Weisenberger in December 2014, alleging that Weisenberger had had Charles Plumpp arrested on the trumped up charge of "roaming livestock." Plumpp's attorney stated that it was a "nonexistent crime" and that Weisenberger's actions were racially motivated (Plumpp is African American). The lawsuit also named Madison County as a defendant which impelled county officials to expedite the review of the multiple allegations against Weisenberger. Mike Espy, the attorney for Madison County's Board of Supervisors, stated, "The Board of Supervisors almost to a man is not happy with his (Weisenberger's) alleged actions and antics, and they asked me to seek a meeting with the Commission on Judicial Performance to discuss his recent history."[9]

On February 12, 2014, Weisenberger turned himself over to authorities after a grand jury indicted him with a simple assault on a vulnerable adult, for the May 2014 incident at the Canton Flea Market. He was then released on a $10,000 bond.[10]

On February 19, 2015, the Mississippi Commission on Judicial Performance filed a petition with the Mississippi Supreme Court seeking to have Weisenberger suspended in the interim period without pay. Weisenberger, in his response to the complaint, denied using a racial slur or committing assault. He also stated that he had made a mistake in handing down the sentence against Plumpp, and had had it changed to a sentence of 48 hours served.[11]

In December, the Commission on Judicial Performance recommended that the supreme court remove Weisenberg from office. They also recommend that he be faced with a $1,000 fine and $5,918.46 in assessed costs. If the supreme court agrees, Weisenberg would be barred from holding a judicial office in the future.[12]

Recent news

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See also

External links

Footnotes