A Kentucky sheriff exchanged phones with a local judge before shooting him dead in his chambers, according to a new report.
District judge Kevin Mullins, 54, was shot dead in his office after a short argument by Letcher County sheriff Mickey Stines, 44, according to police.
A motive for the shooting remains unclear, but video from the judge’s office shows the two men looked at each other’s phones before Stines opened fire, sources told The Mountain Eagle.
Sheriff Stines had entered the courtroom and asked to speak to Mullins privately before they headed to the judge’s office.
After a short conversation, Stines reportedly stood up to lock the door and each man then took their cellphone out and handed it to the other, the local outlet reported.
District judge Kevin Mullins, 54, was shot dead in his office after a short argument by Letcher County sheriff Mickey Stines, 44, according to police
Stines had entered the courtroom and asked to speak to Mullins privately before they headed to the judge’s office
Stines then allegedly drew his weapon, walked around the judge’s desk and shot him repeatedly as Mullins fell to the floor.
The sheriff and the judge had apparently had lunch together with other court employees hours before the killing.
‘We know that it was an argument between the two that led up, but what exactly transpired prior to the shots being fired, that’s still things that we’re trying to get answers to,’ said Kentucky State Police Trooper Matt Gayheart.
Stines, a beloved father of two who was reportedly planning to retire when his term ended, has been charged with first-degree murder.
He was judge Mullins’ bailiff before he became sheriff in 2018.
Stines was previously accused in a lawsuit of failing to investigate claims that one of his deputies had repeatedly sexually assaulted a woman in the same judge’s chambers.
The former inmate, Sabrina Adkins, claims in a federal lawsuit that she could not afford to pay for an ankle monitor and did not want to return to Letcher County Jail.
Deputy Ben Fields then coerced her into performing sexual favors so she could remain under home incarceration, according to a federal lawsuit in 2022.
The sheriff and the judge had apparently had lunch together with other court employees hours before the killing
Letcher County’s judge-executive signed an order closing on Friday the county courthouse where the shooting took place
Sheriff Stines was named as a defendant in the case and was scheduled to make a deposition on Monday – four days before he allegedly murdered the judge.
In 2002, Stines fired Fields, who is currently is serving seven years in prison after pleading guilty to taping the former inmate.
Mullins, who held the judgeship for 15 years, died at the scene, and Stines surrendered without incident.
The fatal shooting sent shock waves through a tight-knit Appalachian town and county seat of government with about 1,700 residents located about 145 miles southeast of Lexington.
Lead county prosecutor Matt Butler described an outpouring of sympathy as he recused himself and his office from investigations in the shooting, citing social and family ties to Mullins.
‘We all know each other here. … Anyone from Letcher County would tell you that Judge Mullins and I married sisters and that we have children who are first cousins but act like siblings,’ Butler said in statement from his office.
Stines, a beloved father of two who was reportedly planning to retire when his term ended, has been charged with first-degree murder
Mullins, who held the judgeship for 15 years, died at the scene
‘For that reason, among others, I have already taken steps to recuse myself and my entire office.’
Letcher County’s judge-executive signed an order closing on Friday the county courthouse where the shooting took place.
Mullins was appointed to serve as a judge in the state’s 47th district under former Governor Steve Beshear in 2009.
He oversaw juvenile matters, city and county ordinances, misdemeanors, traffic offenses, arraignments, felony probable cause hearings, claims involving $2,500 or less, civil cases involving $5,000 or less, voluntary and involuntary mental commitments and domestic violence cases, according to a Letcher County website.
Mullins also gained recognition for his efforts to treat those with drug addiction rather than incarcerate them, starting a program in 2010 that allowed inmates with substance abuse disorders to enroll in inpatient treatment as a condition of pretrial release.
He was previously an assistant commonwealth attorney for nine and a half years, focusing on drug-related offenses.
Stines, meanwhile, was elected sheriff in 2018 and reelected in 2022.
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Read more at DailyMail.co.uk