LAPEER (AP) — A judge who lost reelection in November while a misconduct case against him was pending will be barred from serving again for six years, the Michigan Supreme Court said Friday.
The misconduct case against Byron Konschuh stemmed from acts that occurred when he was a Lapeer County judge and years earlier when he was a prosecutor.
There was no dispute that Konschuh deposited at least 42 checks totaling more than $1,000 into personal bank accounts when he was prosecutor. The checks were fees owed to the prosecutor’s office by a collections company hired in bad check cases.
Konschuh said he used the money to reimburse a portion of his personal spending on office snacks and other expenses.
Konschuh pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor in 2016, though the case was ultimately dismissed under the plea agreement.
“We conditionally suspend him without pay for a period of six years, with the suspension becoming effective only if (Konschuh) regains judicial office during that period,” the Supreme Court said.
Konschuh was defeated by Mike Hodges, who got 61 percent of the vote last fall.
- Posted June 15, 2021
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Court: Judge who lost race gets 6-year ban for misconduct
headlines Macomb
- Toasting three decades of success
- Volunteers needed for annual Macomb County Point-in-Time Count of homeless population
- Man arraigned on charges after allegedly hitting school safety officer and principal with vehicle
- MDHHS honors Michigan Adoption Day by celebrating newly adoptive families
- Group honors national court leaders
headlines National
- The business of successfully running an in-house department
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Justice Gorsuch writes children’s book about ‘Heroes of 1776’
- Companies use ‘deceitful tactics’ to market harmful ultra-processed products with ‘addictive nature,’ city’s suit alleges
- Lawyer accused of trying to poison her husband
- ‘Lawyers Gone Wild’? Filmmaker criticizes bar as he seeks ethics probe of serial killer’s daughter for alleged lie




