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State panel accuses Boone Co. prosecutor of hiring boyfriend as assistant, other violations

State Supreme Court
Donnataylor

Boone County Prosecuting Attorney Donna Taylor | Coal Valley News

CHARLESTON – The state Lawyer Disciplinary Board has charged the Boone County Prosecutor with multiple rules violations, including hiring her boyfriend as an assistant prosecutor.

The board, which is part of the Office of Disciplinary Counsel, filed a statement of charges March 9 against Donna Taylor. The statement said a subcommittee will conduct a hearing on the charges in the coming months.

Taylor was elected as Boone County’s first Republican and first female prosecutor in 2020. Soon after, one of the office’s two assistant prosecutors – Jennifer Anderson – resigned. At a December 2020 meeting of the Boone County Commission, Taylor asked to post the position with an annual salary of $80,000. She then hired boyfriend Branden Ledford for the job. Timothy Gibson, the other assistant, notified the state Ethics Commission about the situation.

In Mach 2021, the Ethics Commission ruled Ledford had an unfair advantage and ordered Taylor to terminate his employment. The next day, Gibson told Taylor she should resign based on the ruling. He also sent a letter to the county commission saying she should resign or be impeached.

Taylor then fired Gibson the same day, and Ledford’s employment ended March 15, 2021.

The statement also accuses Taylor of neglecting her duties by not preparing orders in abuse and neglect cases in a timely manner, creating a backlog that resulted in 98 missing orders in cases where hearings had taken place.

An order from former Boone Circuit Judge William Thompson said the backlog had created an “inexcusable delay” and held the cases up “from permanency, to paternity testing not being performed, to the unnecessary delay of dispositional hearings, the requirement of paying for the service of publication for amended petitions that were not filed, among other things.”

The LDB opened a complaint against Taylor for that issue on May 17, 2021, accusing her of violating rules of competence, diligence and fairness to opposing party and counsel. She blamed the delay on staffing issues and COVID-19 quarantines and exposures in the courthouse, but she said she and an assistant prosecutor got everything updated.

A third count accuses Taylor of not issuing timely notices of payment and releases of judgment. It says from January 1, 2022, to November 1, 2022, Taylor only filed one release of judgment despite having 84 that should have been done. As of January 31, 2023, it says there were 15 that had not been filed. The statement says her actions have resulted in needless delays in the cases.

A fourth count says Boone Circuit Judge Stacy Nowicki-Eldridge sent a complaint to the ODC accusing Taylor of making improper requests for the court to take judicial notice, having little knowledge of how to lay foundation for exhibits, seeming unaware of the processes needed to refresh a witness’ recollection, presenting many insufficient indictments, failing to cite proper law to support her arguments in written pleadings, not reviewing files in a timely manner, being unaware of the evidence turned over to her office by law enforcement officers and failing to timely disclose evidence to the defense.

Taylor denied the allegations in her response to the complaint.

In the final count in the statement, Taylor is accused of not contacting law enforcement officers to discuss a case in which she listed them as potential witnesses or prepared them to testify in the trial. It says she also, among other things, improperly marked exhibits in that first-degree murder trial properly.

“Everything that has occurred thus far in the courtroom, I can’t help but come to the conclusion in my mind that the state is either woefully unprepared or is not competent to try this matter,” Nowicki-Eldridge stated on the record in court proceedings.

The judge eventually called for a mistrial because of a COVID outbreak in the courtroom. A few days later, the sister of the murder victim filed a complaint with the ODC saying Taylor was “very unprepared” and had never asked the family anything about her brother or the case in general.

She said she had called Taylor’s office numerous times and never had a call returned. She says the family never was informed of upcoming hearings or even the trial date. She says Taylor even forgot the victim’s name during pre-trial hearings.

Taylor “would never take the time to talk” or answer questions, the sister stated. “She would literally keep walking as we are trying to talk to her.”

“It was like she had no ideas what she was doing,” the sister stated. She “had no idea how to even ask witnesses questions” and “even left her trial notes on the projector screen where the entire courtroom could see them” until the judge advised her of it.

The sister said “Boone County families deserve better … before she destroys many lives and families.”

Taylor was admitted to the State bar in 2017. She previously worked as an assistant prosecutor in Wood County and Kanawha County. She took office in Boone County on December 21, 2020.

Lawyer Disciplinary Board complaint numbers 21-03-186, 22-05-188 and 23-05-029

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