This story was updated to add new information.
The Ohio Supreme Court has ordered the immediate removal of longtime judge Kim Hoover from office.
The court announced Tuesday that Hoover also has been suspended from practicing law for 18 months, with six months stayed, in connection with accusations against the longtime judge in the way he collected court fines and fees.
In February 2023, the court’s Board of Professional Conduct recommended that Hoover be immediately barred from practicing law and suspended from his office without pay for two years. The board’s recommendation followed an investigation and September 2022 hearings after a series of complaints filed starting in December 2021 claiming that Hoover was using illegal and coercive tactics to recover court-ordered fees from defendants.
Hoover appealed this sentence, with oral arguments taking place on May 17, 2023, nearly 1½ years ago. He had remained on the bench pending the outcome. Hoover would have been ineligible to run for judge again in 2025, when his term was to expire, because he turned 70 this year.
Neither Hoover nor one of his legal representatives could be reached for comment. The preliminary opinion released Tuesday stated that Hoover “maintains that the evidence does not support the boardâs findings that he treated defendants with a bias or prejudice” and noted his argument “that 16 out of the thousands of cases that he has presided over during his lengthy service as a judge do not demonstrate how he runs his courtroom.”
Rick Klinger, court administrator for the Stow Municipal Court, said the Ohio Supreme Court will make an appointment to fill Hoover’s unexpired term. His seat is up for election next year.
“In the short term his caseload will be covered by Judge (Lisa) Coates and our staff of magistrates,” Klinger said.
Justices rule Kim Hoover coerced defendants to pay costs, fines
According to the Ohio Supreme Court’s ruling, Hoover had unjustly imprisoned two defendants â one for four days and the other for seven days â and 14 defendants were coerced into paying costs and fines under threats of being sent to prison, which under Ohio law is illegal.
“Hooverâs overzealous collection of unsegregated fines and costs manifested a bias against those of lower socioeconomic status, a bias that ⌠was readily apparent during his interactions with these defendants,” Tuesday’s ruling stated. “Hoover leaned into the idea of a debtorsâ prison, unlawfully incarcerating or threating to incarcerate individuals for nonpayment of fines without due process, and unconstitutionally incarcerating or threatening to incarcerate individuals for nonpayment of court costs. And he routinely failed to inform the defendants of their right to counsel. In addition to harming the defendants, Hoover purposely involved the families of the defendants â innocent people â to extort money from them. The families of the defendants were not the wrongdoers, and Hooverâs endeavor to squeeze money from them so that they might keep their loved ones out of jail was reprehensible.”
Aside from violations that cost Hoover his job, court notes judge’s ‘good character’
The ruling noted that the disciplinary board found Hoover did not have a disciplinary record, and that he “did not act with a dishonest or selfish motive, cooperated with disciplinary counsel, and submitted substantial evidence of good character” in his nearly 40 years as both a lawyer and a judge.
“The board recognized that Hoover has done great things for the Stow Municipal Court, many defendants, and the community,” the ruling stated. “But nonetheless, his good intentions and actions do not excuse his failure to comply with the Code of Judicial Conduct and the Rules of Professional Conduct. It found that Hooverâs casual attitude toward defendants and improper application of the law led to violations of defendantsâ liberties and hindered the administration of justice.”
Anyone with active cases that had been on Hoover’s docket can call the Clerk of Courts office at 330-564-4174 with questions about how their judicial matters will proceed.
This story will be updated.
This article originally appeared on Akron Beacon Journal: Ohio Supreme Court removes Stow Municipal Judge Kim Hoover from bench
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