Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

A Texas Judge Is Fighting To Keep His Job After 'Accidentally' Resigning Just Three Months After He Was Elected

A Texas Judge Is Fighting To Keep His Job After 'Accidentally' Resigning Just Three Months After He Was Elected
Judge William "Bill" McLeod/Facebook

Watch your words.


That's the lesson Bill McLeod, a civil court judge in Harris County, Texas, learned after he accidentally triggered his own resignation. McLeod filed a transfer of campaign treasurer appointment with the Texas Ethics Commission declaring he would like to run for the Supreme Court of Texas.

Well, well, well, little did McLeod know but this filing triggered Article 16, Section 65 of the Texas Constitution "which considers such an announcement by anyone holding a county judicial post an automatic resignation," according to The Houston Chronicle.

The report states:

McLeod, who was elected in November, hopes that a different provision of the constitution will help rectify his mistake. Article 16, Section 17 states that a county Commissioners Court is not required to appoint a successor after a county officer resigns, and "may allow the officeholder who resigned…to remain in office" as a holdover. If this happens, McLeod would have to run again in 2020 even though he was elected to a four-year term.

"This is insane," McLeod said Wednesday.

"All of the judges are going, 'You did what? How? We didn't even know (the constitutional provision) existed."

The Harris County attorney's office says that McLeod can sit on the bench in the meantime until commissioners decide to grant him holdover status or appoint a successor.

Despite this snafu, McLeod says he'd happily accept a shortened term if it allows him to keep his seat on the bench:

"It's kind of, like, my punishment."

McLeod does have his fair share of supporters who are hoping he'll be reinstated, though the response has been mixed.







"We need judges like him who really want to make a difference and who take their job seriously," said Karen Taylor, an attorney and McLeod supporter.

"These are not the judges we need to be getting rid of because they ran afoul of some 'gotcha' statute that no one really understands."

A Harris County Commissioners Court will decide McLeod's fate.

Best of luck, sir.

More from Trending

Lil Nas X
Leon Bennett/Getty Images

Lil Nas X Speaks Out In Viral Video After He's Hospitalized For Facial Paralysis

Rapper Lil Nas X spoke out in a video on Instagram after he lost control of the right side of his face, explaining his current struggles with facial paralysis.

He appeared to be in good spirits in a short video posted Monday, seemingly filmed from a hospital bed. In the caption, the two-time Grammy winner—real name Montero Lamar Hill—said he had “lost control of the right side of my face,” but didn’t share any additional details about the cause or nature of the condition.

Keep ReadingShow less
Ralph Fiennes
Chelsea Guglielmino/FilmMagic/Getty Images

Ralph Fiennes Got Absolutely Shredded For His Next Film Role—And Fans Are Impressed

You really have to hand it to method actors: when they commit to a role, it seems like there's nothing they won't do to become the character they're portraying on the screen or stage.

Ralph Fiennes, for example, is no stranger to method acting. Back when he worked on Schindler's List as Amon Goeth, Steven Spielberg commented on his commitment to the part, both studying historical documents and published diary entries and gaining weight for the part.

Keep ReadingShow less
Chris Columbus; Screenshot of Macaulay Culkin and Donald Trump in "Home Alone 2"
Steve Jennings/Getty Images; 20th Century Fox

'Home Alone 2' Director Wishes He Could Cut Trump Cameo—But He Knows What Might Happen If He Did

Home Alone 2: Lost in New York director Chris Columbus says he wishes he could cut President Donald Trump's cameo from the film, though he acknowledges that to do so could force him out of the country.

In a recent interview with the San Francisco Chronicle, director Chris Columbus admitted that Trump’s cameo in Home Alone 2 has turned into something of a “curse"—one he now regrets. Columbus revealed he had considered cutting the scene entirely but ultimately left it in after test audiences responded well to the brief appearance.

Keep ReadingShow less
Mike Johnson
Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images

Mike Johnson Just Tried To Blame Medicaid Cuts On Video Games—And It Didn't Go Over Well

House Speaker Mike Johnson was called out after he erroneously claimed that Medicaid cuts are happening due to "young men" who play video games "all day" instead of going to work.

Medicaid, the joint federal-state program that provides health coverage to low-income Americans, children, pregnant women, and people with disabilities, has long been in the GOP’s crosshairs. Critics within the party argue it discourages work, particularly among younger adults.

Keep ReadingShow less
Bill Hader
Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic for HBO

Bill Hader Reveals How He Got Fired From Movie Theater Job For Getting Back At Girls Who Mocked Him

Getting fired for doing something stupid at a job is almost a rite of passage.

At least Bill Hader's bought him some petty revenge. In a segment of Netflix's Everybody's Live with John Mulaney, Hader recounted the tale of how he once lost his job as ticket-taker at a movie theater in Arizona.

Keep ReadingShow less