A spokesperson for Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson on
Thursday said he had received a letter containing a notification
from the U.S. Judicial Conference of possible grounds for former
U.S. District Judge Joshua Kindred's impeachment.
The referral was a rarity for the Judicial Conference, which
U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts heads. It last
made such a referral in 2015. Only 15 judges have ever been
impeached, and only eight have been convicted by the Senate.
It was unclear what the House would do with the referral. While
Kindred is no longer in office, he could be barred from holding
any federal office in the future if he was impeached in the
Republican-controlled House and convicted in the Democratic-led
Senate.
Kindred could not be reached for comment.
Kindred, who was appointed to the bench by Republican former
President Donald Trump in 2020, resigned in July after a
judicial misconduct inquiry found he fostered an inappropriate
sexualized relationship with one of his law clerks and created a
hostile work environment for court employees.
The 9th Circuit Judicial Council's inquiry found that he went on
to have two sexual encounters with the clerk in October 2022
after she took a new job in the U.S. Attorney's Office in
Alaska, which he later lied about.
The inquiry found that Kindred also used crude language with his
law clerks and discussed with them his sex life, their
relationships and his "disparaging" views of colleagues and
public figures.
The judicial council reprimanded Kindred and asked for his
voluntary resignation. The council had also certified the matter
for the Judicial Conference to consider referring Kindred for
potential impeachment.
The Judicial Conference's Committee on Judicial Conduct and
Disability last month upheld the decision.
Representative Hank Johnson of Georgia, the top Democrat on the
House Judiciary Committee's courts subcommittee, in a statement
said he was glad the Judicial Conference took the allegations
seriously and made the impeachment referral.
"The behavior exhibited by former Judge Kindred is despicable
and unbecoming of any federal judge," he said.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; editing by Diane Craft and
Jonathan Oatis)
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