Summary

Judge Stephen Yekel, 74, died by suicide in his courtroom on his last day in office after losing a re-election bid.

He was found Tuesday morning at Effingham County State Courthouse, with investigators believing the incident occurred late Monday or early Tuesday.

Yekel, appointed in 2022, had recently attempted to resign but was denied by Governor Brian Kemp.

He was also facing a wrongful termination lawsuit from a former court employee.

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Yekel was appointed to the state court in 2022. He recently attempted to resign from his position, but was denied by Georgia Governor Brian Kemp, according to WJCL.

    I don’t understand how that is legal. You can force someone to keep a job whether they want to or not?

  • chemical_cutthroat@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    He attempted to resign, but was denied. Then he lost reelection. So, this isn’t a “I don’t have anything to live for” situation. It’s a “I don’t want to live with what I’ve done” type thing.

  • danekrae@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    re-election bid

    En elected judge? That sounds like the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard of. Could someone explain to a European how that works? Do they at least have to qualify for election in some ways?

    • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Lot of derision but not much explanation as to how this strange system came to be.

      Many state constitutions in the US were written in the 18th and 19th centuries. The key differences relevant here to this discussion were that during these times, suffrage was far more restricted, and communities were far more sparsely populated and isolated.

      Prior to the 20th century, suffrage was not universal and generally was restricted to wealthy white men of status, who, as a consequence of their socioeconomic standing, also tended to be more educated and thus better suited to rationally judge the qualifications of office-seekers. A consequence of universal suffrage is that the education level of the average voter goes down.

      Most Europeans severely underestimate how few people lived in these states and across how much land they occupied. The US typically granted statehood to its territories when they reached the mid to high five digits in population. The majority of Western states are the same size as the largest European countries. Let me use California as an illustrative example. Its statehood was granted in 1850 and it had a population of 92,597. So just imagine essentially a group of people fewer in number than a single small European city trying to run a piece of territory the size of Germany (California is actually bigger than Germany by 69,000 km²).

      What happens in such a scenario is that communities become very isolated and insular. They get used to running their own affairs since basically any model of centralised government is going to fail when your population density is 0.2 people per km².

      Understand that aside from tightly-knit indigenous communities (who were branded as “savages” and categorically excluded from participation in so-called “civilised” society) this was literally unsettled land. Empty plains, dry desert, and wild forest for hundreds of kilometres around where there was no law but those of physics.

      In these isolated communities, you still need to fill the required leadership roles, but you run into the issue where nobody is particularly qualified to these offices and further still, the townsfolk don’t really want to just elect a single person to fill all the other offices by appointments. Rather the best way to fill these offices is by election where the community can get together and decide collectively who is best qualified for office. So how it would go is that everyone entitled to suffrage would, every other year, ride their horses into the county seat, which could take hours, and then listen to the candidates’ campaign pitches, vote for whomever they thought was the most qualified for sheriff and county judge, and then go home and never hear from those people again for months on end.

      As a result, when these territories were granted statehood, most delegates to the conventions that wrote the state constitutions saw no reason to deviate from these established methods for picking local office-holders.

      Edit: I realise this also doesn’t explain why these constitutions haven’t been amended to allow for appointed judges in the modern US. The reason is because politics in the US is extremely cutthroat and anyone who proposes such an amendment is taking a rather unnecessary risk with their political career because their political opponents can then attack them for taking away power from the voters in favour of “unelected bureaucrats”.

    • vortic@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      People are giving you somewhat bad information. This may differ in other states, but they do need to have practiced law in Georgia for seven years prior to being allowed to run for election.

      Its a dumb system but not completely unregulated.

      Other states have various methods of selecting judges. In Colorado, the governor appoints them for their first term, then they are subjected to a retention vote every few years. They rarely lose their retention votes.

    • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Not that dumb, they’re people deciding the lives of others so picking them democratically makes sense.

          • ScoopMcPoops@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            Idk if a judge offing himself because he lost his election bid would inspire many copy cats. His life wasn’t ruined, it probably would’ve been if he hadn’t died. But he didn’t want to wait to find out apparently.

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              4 months ago

              He did it in the courtroom, as in, his place of employment. You don’t know what others are going through, and it’s possible people could read this and choose to go out like this at their own job instead of at home or someplace else. Or maybe they’ll see someone who ended it all at the peak and somehow think that means it’s a non-terrible idea.

              Or maybe nothing will happen. I don’t know, what I do know is it’s not cool to make fun of someone who was likely suffering from mental distress/sickness, especially while their family is still grieving. That’s a dick move, even if there’s little chance of copy cats.

              A little empathy goes a long way. What we should take away from this is that mental illness can affect everyone, and we never know what others are going through, so we should always treat others like they’re going through something really hard (and we’ll probably be right more than we’d like to know).

            • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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              4 months ago

              What inspires people is seeing other people mocking a suicide victim and thinking, “see? This is what happens. No one cares if you live or die.”

  • TastehWaffleZ@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    I have a buddy who lives in Effingham county, he said

    “Apparently he was trying to resign to undo the recent election where he lost to the first person to run against him in a while”.

  • werefreeatlast@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    You know some fool somewhere was criminaling just to be judged by this judge. Then this. How can the fool live with himself now?

  • Rhoeri@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    After reading the comments here it’s plain to see that the moral compass of lemmy is directly proportional to how the hive-mind happens to feel about the victim.

    It’s pretty shameful to see so many people salivate while climbing over one another to see who can make the best joke about a man that committed suicide.

    It seems that every day, you all become more and more like Reddit.

    • eskimofry@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Maybe kindess has to be respected. Otherwise if you behave like a monster all your life, you kind of deserve the monstrosity thrown back at you.

      • Rhoeri@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        There’s a mile of broad daylight between cheering a suicide and just not saying anything at all.

        Suicide isn’t something to make fun of. Despite who falls victim to it. I shouldn’t have to explain this to an adult.

        • BigBrainBrett2517@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Lately, I’ve been seriously questioning the number of adults on Lemmy. Undecided if it matters. But I definitely roll my eyes at a few comments and downvotes.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            This thread in particular is starting to scare the fuck out of me. If you look at the modlog, someone got their comment deleted for saying that judges deserve to be raped and murdered.

            Edit: We’ll add the person who responded to me just now implying that forum moderators also deserve to be murdered. But hey, there’s no underlying sickness here or anything.