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Eugene

(62,767 posts)
Wed Mar 9, 2022, 08:54 AM Mar 2022

Attorney seeks to stop special election for Inhofe's seat

Source: Associated Press

Attorney seeks to stop special election for Inhofe’s seat

By SEAN MURPHY
March 8, 2022

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — A high-profile Oklahoma attorney is asking the state Supreme Court to stop the special election for Oklahoma’s open U.S. Senate seat, arguing the U.S. Constitution does not allow a special election to fill the post until it’s vacant.

Enid attorney Stephen Jones, who gained national prominence as the attorney for convicted Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh, filed the lawsuit late Monday.

Republican U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe, 87, the ranking Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, announced last month that he plans to resign in January, just two years into his six-year term. He submitted an “irrevocable pledge” to the Oklahoma Secretary of State’s Office on Feb. 28, triggering a new state law that allows the governor to set special election dates that coincide with Oklahoma’s regularly scheduled primary, runoff and general election dates. Gov. Kevin Stitt set the special election dates on March 1.

But Jones argues in his lawsuit that the governor lacked the authority to do so because Inhofe hasn’t vacated the office yet. He wants the state Supreme Court to direct the Oklahoma Election Board not to accept declarations of candidacy for the office or print ballots for the contest. The lawsuit contends the 17th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibits such an election until there is a vacancy and that the governor should appoint a replacement for Inhofe after he officially vacates the office next year.

-snip-

Read more: https://apnews.com/article/2022-midterm-elections-lawsuits-special-elections-oklahoma-constitutions-ba107bbb44aa2570ece2088aa9df752a

10 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Attorney seeks to stop special election for Inhofe's seat (Original Post) Eugene Mar 2022 OP
It seems pretty clear cut. LuvLoogie Mar 2022 #1
I totally agree. Having elections, appointments etc jimfields33 Mar 2022 #2
I've heard the same argument regarding SC Justice Breyer MichMan Mar 2022 #4
I could see both arguments on this jimfields33 Mar 2022 #5
Yeah, no. Kingofalldems Mar 2022 #8
SCOTUS judges are appointed for a life term, not temporary. LuvLoogie Mar 2022 #6
+1 Sneederbunk Mar 2022 #7
Same reasoning; what if Breyer changes his mind ? MichMan Mar 2022 #9
It's a hearing for an appointment. The relevant election has already occurred. LuvLoogie Mar 2022 #10
Enid attorney Stephen Jones mahatmakanejeeves Mar 2022 #3

LuvLoogie

(7,585 posts)
1. It seems pretty clear cut.
Wed Mar 9, 2022, 08:59 AM
Mar 2022

Besides the legality, the logistics are a gamble. I mean, what if he changes his mind?

jimfields33

(19,312 posts)
2. I totally agree. Having elections, appointments etc
Wed Mar 9, 2022, 09:16 AM
Mar 2022

Before a vacancy is ridiculous. Wait until the seat is empty then take action.

jimfields33

(19,312 posts)
5. I could see both arguments on this
Wed Mar 9, 2022, 10:19 AM
Mar 2022

One difference to Supreme Court is they are only 9. If we allow senators at 100. House next at 325? It’s too much.

LuvLoogie

(7,585 posts)
6. SCOTUS judges are appointed for a life term, not temporary.
Wed Mar 9, 2022, 11:07 AM
Mar 2022

There is no election for a Supreme Court seat.

LuvLoogie

(7,585 posts)
10. It's a hearing for an appointment. The relevant election has already occurred.
Wed Mar 9, 2022, 10:46 PM
Mar 2022

The relevant election is the previous presidential election and elected and sitting senators. A temporary filling of a vacant congressional seat can be appointed immediately. A governor can have someone lined up without holding an election. But an election has to occur.

Your argument supports McConnell's specious tactics.

mahatmakanejeeves

(61,606 posts)
3. Enid attorney Stephen Jones
Wed Mar 9, 2022, 09:16 AM
Mar 2022

Last edited Thu Mar 10, 2022, 07:23 AM - Edit history (1)

I like that guy a lot. He's paid a price along the way for a lot of his legal work.

I'd link to some earlier threads at DU, but Google is all messed up this morning.

{edited, the next morning} Here we go:

Wed Aug 21, 2019: That wasn't his only defense attorney.

Stephen Jones (attorney)

Stephen Jones (born July 1, 1940), is an attorney best known for taking on a series of high-profile civil rights cases beginning with his defense of a Vietnam War protester, including Timothy McVeigh, and continuing with the fraternity involved in the 2015 University of Oklahoma Sigma Alpha Epsilon racism incident.

Biography

Stephen Jones was born on July 1, 1940 in Lafayette, Louisiana. His father was an oil field supplies sales manager and his mother was the bookkeeper for a wealthy financier. Jones grew up in suburban Houston, received a law degree from the University of Oklahoma in 1966 and settled in Enid, Oklahoma where he still lives. Jones was a member of Phi Alpha Delta and served as Associate Editor of the Oklahoma Bar Journal from 1979 to 1986. He has been married to his wife Sherrel for the last 40 years and they have raised four children.

Legal career

On May 5, 1970, the day after National Guardsmen had shot and killed four students at Kent State University, Keith Green was arrested at the University of Oklahoma for carrying a Viet Cong flag in violation of a state law prohibiting the display of a "red flag or emblem of anarchy or rebellion". After 12 lawyers had refused to defend the student, Jones took the case and was promptly dismissed from the Enid, Oklahoma law firm where he was employed. Jones argued in court that the disloyalty statute was unconstitutional and the judge dismissed the case, overturning the statute. Later Jones would go on to represent Abbie Hoffman, the radical Yippie, when Oklahoma State University refused to let him speak on campus.

In 1975, Jones defended Bobby Wayne Collins, who was accused of the worst mass killing in Oklahoma history at the time. Mervin Thrasher (28), his wife Sandra (27) and their two young children, Penny (5) and Robert (18 months) were murdered in their four-room farm home one mile north of Woodward, Oklahoma. Collins was found guilty and sentenced to death for the brutal crime. On appeal in 1977, Jones successfully had Collins' death sentence commuted to life imprisonment. Bobby Wayne Collins was denied parole in both 2009 and again in 2015. He currently remains in custody at the Lexington Correctional Center.

{snip}

This is about a third one:

Defense attorney for Oklahoma City bomber dead at 57

Source: AP

TULSA, Okla. (AP) — Rob Nigh, a defense attorney who represented Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh and witnessed his 2001 execution, died Sunday after a battle with cancer, former colleagues said. He was 57.

Known for his encyclopedic legal knowledge, work ethic and intense preparation on every case he handled, Nigh also defended those accused of committing some of the state's most egregious crimes. Nigh died about three months after stepping down as Tulsa County's chief public defender for serious health issues.

Stephen Jones, McVeigh's lead defense attorney, told The Associated Press Sunday that he asked Nigh to be his assistant on the McVeigh case and recommended him to serve as the former soldier's appellate attorney because he thought of his colleague as "a zealous advocate" for clients.

Jones said his instinct to take Nigh on didn't disappoint.

Read more: http://hosted2.ap.org/TXAMA/9fe6901e65e14c17b96e6d68f3208992/Article_2017-09-24-US--Obit-Rob%20Nigh/id-bac156d67cba4f5ca604e0cfa5a70f06

Back to Stephen Jones:

Oklahoma man accused of molesting Kenyan orphans to testify

Source: Associated Press

Oklahoma man accused of molesting Kenyan orphans to testify
| June 17, 2015 | Updated: June 17, 2015 1:54am


[font size=1]
Photo By Sue Ogrocki/AP

Kyle Durham, left, and Melissa Durham, second from left, hold hands as they leave the Federal Courthouse in
Oklahoma City, following another day of testimony in the federal trial of their son, Matthew Lane Durham,
Monday, June 15, 2015. At right are their other two sons, Josh Durham, right, and Zac Durham. Matthew Lane
Durham is accused of 17 counts of sexual misconduct with children in Nairobi, Kenya.
[/font]

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — A 20-year-old Oklahoma man accused of sexually abusing children at a Kenyan orphanage is set to testify in his own defense.

Matthew Lane Durham is scheduled to take the stand Wednesday before a 12-member jury. Defense attorney Stephen Jones says Durham and his father, Oklahoma City Fire Department Maj. Kyle Durham, will both testify as the defense prepares to wrap up its case.

Matthew Durham faces 17 counts of sexual misconduct, including aggravated sexual abuse and engaging in illicit sexual conduct in foreign places. He's pleaded not guilty and faces up to life in prison if convicted.

Prosecutors allege that Durham molested the children between April and June 2014 while working as a volunteer at the Upendo Children's Home, which cares for neglected children in the Kenyan capital of Nairobi.

{snip}

Read more: http://www.chron.com/news/crime/article/Oklahoma-man-accused-of-molesting-Kenyan-orphans-6331849.php

OU SAE to sue University of Oklahoma and the University President

Yep. They're being slammed and punished for using their freedom of speech. Law professors are gearing up to help the students out.

NORMAN, Okla. — The local chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon is planning to pursue legal action against the University of Oklahoma, and possibly OU President David Boren.

The group has hired high-profile attorney, Stephen Jones to represent them.

Jones told NewsChannel 4 the group is outraged over President Boren shutting down the fraternity house and branding all SAE members as racists and bigots.

Jones says the two students who were expelled because of the incident have apologized sincerely for their remarks, and now the incident is being exploited.

He said they lacked judgment in a social setting, but they should not be tarred and feathered as racists.

{snip}

Stephen Jones has a reputation for taking on tough cases. I admire him greatly. I'd like to shake his hand.
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