The Texas State Commission on Judicial Conduct has issued a for­mal rep­ri­mand to a sit­ting Burnet County judge who post­ed on Facebook a pho­to of a black mur­der sus­pect accused of killing a police offi­cer with the com­ment, Time for a tree and a rope.” Judge James Oakley (pic­tured), who is white, denied that the com­ment about Otis Tyrone McKane was a race-based ref­er­ence to lynch­ing. My com­ment was intend­ed to reflect my per­son­al feel­ings that this sense­less mur­der of a police offi­cer should qual­i­fy for the death penal­ty. In my mind, the race/​gender of the admit­ted cop killer was not rel­e­vant,” he told the com­mis­sion. That is not how observers of the post saw it: 18 peo­ple filed writ­ten com­plaints to the Commission about Oakley’s com­ment. The rep­ri­mand said, Multiple Complainants also ques­tioned Judge Oakley’s suit­abil­i­ty for judi­cial office, and expressed doubts that he could per­form his duties impar­tial­ly.” Oakley will be required to attend a 30-hour train­ing for new judges and receive 4 hours of racial sen­si­tiv­i­ty train­ing with a men­tor, but will not be removed from office or exclud­ed from pre­sid­ing over any class of cas­es. In its rep­ri­mand, the Commission wrote, During the appear­ance, Judge Oakley made cer­tain state­ments that indi­cat­ed to the Commission that he could ben­e­fit from racial sen­si­tiv­i­ty train­ing with a men­tor­ing judge.” The inci­dent was rem­i­nis­cent of an inci­dent in March in which a white Seminole County, Florida court employ­ee post­ed a com­ment on Facebook that black State Attorney Aramis Ayala should be tarred and feath­ered if not hung from a tree,” for announc­ing that she would not seek the death penal­ty. After an inves­ti­ga­tion into the cir­cum­stances sur­round­ing that post­ing, the clerk resigned his position.

(E. Findell, Judge must under­go sen­si­tiv­i­ty train­ing after tree and a rope’ post,” Austin American-Statesman, May 6, 2017; Texas judge rep­ri­mand­ed for tree and a rope’ post,” Associated Press, May 7, 2017.) See Race.

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