WHITESBURG, Ky. — Residents of a tiny Appalachian town struggled Friday to cope with a shooting involving two of its most prominent citizens: a judge who was gunned down in his courthouse chambers and a local sheriff charged with his murder.
''It's just so sad. I just hate it,'' said Mike Watts, the Letcher County circuit court clerk. ''Both of them are friends of mine. I've worked with both of them for years.''
It wasn't clear what led to the shooting. The preliminary investigation indicates Letcher County Sheriff Shawn ''Mickey'' Stines shot District Judge Kevin Mullins multiple times following an argument inside the courthouse, according to Kentucky State Police.
Mullins, 54, who held the judgeship for 15 years, died at the scene, and Stines, 43, surrendered without incident. He was charged with one count of first-degree murder.
The fatal shooting stunned the tight-knit town of Whitesburg, the county seat, with a population of about 1,700 people, 145 miles (235 kilometers) southeast of Lexington.
Stines was deposed on Monday in a lawsuit filed by two women, one of whom alleged that a deputy forced her to have sex inside Mullins' chambers for six months in exchange for staying out of jail. The lawsuit accuses the sheriff of ''deliberate indifference in failing to adequately train and supervise'' the deputy.
The now-former deputy sheriff, Ben Fields, pleaded guilty to raping the female prisoner while she was on home incarceration. Fields was sentenced this year to six months in jail and then six and a half years on probation for rape, sodomy, perjury and tampering with a prisoner monitoring device, The Mountain Eagle reported. Three charges related to a second woman were dismissed because she is now dead.
Stines fired Fields, who succeeded him as Mullins' bailiff, for ''conduct unbecoming'' after the lawsuit was filed in 2022, The Courier Journal reported at the time.