Steve Nunn | |
---|---|
Member of the KentuckyHouseofRepresentatives from the 23rd district | |
In office January 1, 1990 –December 31, 2006 | |
Preceded by | Bobby M. Richardson |
Succeeded by | Johnny Bell |
Personal details | |
Born | Glasgow,Barren County Kentucky,U.S. | November 4,1952
Political party | Republican |
Spouse | Tracey L. Damron (divorced) [1] |
Children | 2 |
Parent(s) | Louie B. Nunn Beula Cornelius Aspley Nunn |
Residence | Life imprisonment |
Occupation | Politician |
Stephen Roberts Nunn (born November 4,1952) is an American convicted murderer and former politician who served as the Deputy Secretary of Health and Family Services for the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
From 1990 to 2006,he was a Republican member of the Kentucky House of Representatives from his native Barren County in southern Kentucky. In 2011,Nunn received a life sentence without parole after pleading guilty to the murder of his ex-fiancée.
He is the son of the late Kentucky Governor Louie B. Nunn and First Lady Beula Cornelius Aspley Nunn. [2] According to several witnesses,Nunn was often ridiculed by his father. [3] He graduated from Frankfort High School in 1970,and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from Transylvania University in 1975. He attended the University of Louisville School of Law,but did not graduate. [3] [4]
In 1987,Nunn bought into an insurance company in Glasgow. He later became a physician recruiter and consultant for TJ Samson Hospital. [4]
Nunn was elected to represent the 23rd district in the state's House of Representatives in 1990 by defeating Democrat Danny J. Basil. The district had precincts in Barren and Metcalfe counties. [5] In 1996,the precincts in Metcalfe County would be replaced by precincts in Warren County. [6] He ran unopposed in 1998, [7] 2000, [8] 2002, [9] and 2004. [10]
While in office,Nunn was known as a relative liberal who championed women,children and the disadvantaged. [3] [4] in 1998,he co-sponsored a law making it a death penalty offense for a person named in a domestic violence protective order to kill the person who was protected by the order. [3] He was an advocate for the Kentucky TeleHealth Network which he helped create with the passage of HB-177 and HB-112 in 2000. The network used electronic medical communications systems to help reach patients in rural settings who couldn't travel. [11] [12] In 2001,he was able to pass a bill that gave children in foster care,and former foster care children,the ability to attend state universities in Kentucky for free. [4] In 2005,he was able to pass a pilot program that used $100,000 in Kentucky Department of Medicaid funding to place telemedicine equipment in fourteen schools and fifteen other sites. These sites could connect with clinics and,it was hoped,reduce school time missed for illnesses and avoid costly emergency room visits. [13] [14]
Nunn unsuccessfully sought the Republican gubernatorial nomination in 2003,finishing third to then-United States Representative Ernie Fletcher of Lexington,whom Nunn then supported. Former State Representative Bob Heleringer,then of Eastwood in suburban Jefferson County,ran as the lieutenant governor selection on Nunn's ticket. [15] In the primary,Nunn received 21,167 votes (13.4 percent),but Fletcher led the four-candidate field with 90,912 (57.3 percent). Rebecca Jackson polled 44,084 (27.8 percent) and Virgil Moore polled 2,365 (1.5 percent). Fletcher went on to win the position in the general election by defeating Democrat Attorney General Ben Chandler,the grandson of Happy Chandler. Fletcher was the first Republican to be elected governor of Kentucky since Louie B. Nunn upset Henry Ward in November 1967.
On November 7,2006,after fifteen years as a state representative, [16] Nunn lost his bid for re-election to the Democrat Johnny Bell. Nunn polled 5,572 votes (46.7 percent) to Bell's 6,371 ballots (53.3 percent). [17]
In September 2007,Nunn announced his support of Democratic gubernatorial nominee Steve Beshear,a former lieutenant governor who handily unseated Fletcher in the Republican's bid for re-election. [3] In November 2007 he was appointed to Beshear's transition team. [18] On December 22,2007,Beshear appointed Nunn as deputy secretary of Health and Family Services. [3]
In March 2009,Steve Nunn,56,resigned his state position as deputy secretary for the Health and Family Services Cabinet after having been placed on administrative leave in February as a result of a February 19 assault in Lexington on 29-year-old Amanda Ross,his former fiancée,who had procured a protective order against him for domestic violence. [19]
On September 11,2009,Ross was found shot to death outside of the Opera House Square complex in Lexington. [20] That same day,Nunn was found by police with his wrists slit in Hart County near the grave sites of his parents. [21] He was arrested and taken to a hospital in Bowling Green, [2] where he was in fair condition from the wounds,which were first considered to be self-inflicted. [21] [22] Nunn was charged with six counts of wanton endangerment of a police officer because when authorities arrived to arrest him,they reported that Nunn had fired a .38-caliber handgun. [23]
On September 14,Nunn was taken to the Hart County jail after having been discharged from the hospital. [24] The same day,Nunn was charged by Lexington police with Ross's murder. [25] On September 17,Nunn was transferred to the Fayette County Detention Center. [26] The next day,he pleaded not guilty to the murder charges in Fayette District Court. [27] On November 10,2009,Nunn was indicted on charges of murder and violating a protective order. [28] Prosecutors intended to seek the death penalty, [29] but on June 28,2011,Nunn pleaded guilty in Fayette Circuit Court in Lexington to Ross's murder and received a sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole for the crime. [30] He is currently serving his sentence at the Little Sandy Correctional Complex in Sandy Hook,Kentucky,under Department of Corrections (DOC) ID #246151. [31]
As of November 4,2014,Nunn was eligible to receive his full state pension of $28,210 annually,based on his legislative and executive department service. State law permits pension benefits to former lawmakers unless they commit a crime while in office as a legislator. [32]
Meanwhile,the Ross family filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against Nunn. [33] In August 2013,a Fayette Circuit Judge ordered Steve Nunn to pay Ross's family more than $24 million for killing her outside her Lexington home in 2009. [34]
The judge ruled Nunn to pay $20 million for punitive damages. The judge also commanded Nunn to pay $23,000 for medical costs,$27,000 for funeral costs,$3 million for Ross's future earning potential,along with pain and suffering to Ross and to the estate at one million dollars. [34]
In the months after her daughter's murder,Diana Ross began advocating for the protection of other victims of domestic violence. She wanted to bring more light to domestic-violence,under the title of Amanda's Law. The law was passed in 2010 by the Commonwealth of Kentucky. [35] It increases the use of GPS tracking units to enhance the protection of victims from domestic violence and their past attackers. [35] Diana pointed out the law that passed was not as strong as she advocated for. [20]
It's not effective right now, The judges are not using it yet. And it's my fear that it's going to take another high-profile murder to get the attention.
— Diana Ross, commenting on Amanda's Law. [20]
Judges can invoke the law on a case-by-case basis after a protective order has been violated. [20]
According to the federal Electronic Monitoring Resource Center at Denver University, there are currently 12 states with laws allowing judges to order the wearing of GPS tracking units. The units send an alarm to both the victim and police if the perpetrator enters areas restricted by the protection order. [20] [36]
The investigative television show 20/20 on OWN's episode "Sins of the Son" (Season 3, Episode 52) examines the Steve Nunn case, using the 20/20 story that originally aired September 19, 2013. [37] [38]
Julian Morton Carroll is an American lawyer and politician from the state of Kentucky. A Democrat, he served as the 54th Governor of Kentucky from 1974 to 1979, succeeding Wendell H. Ford, who resigned to accept a seat in the U.S. Senate. He was most recently a member of the Kentucky Senate, representing Anderson, Franklin, Woodford, Gallatin and Owen counties. He was the first Kentucky governor from the state's far-western Jackson Purchase region. The lieutenant governor he served with, Thelma Stovall, was the first woman to be elected Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky.
Ernest Lee Fletcher is an American physician and politician. In 1998, he was elected to the first of three consecutive terms in the United States House of Representatives; he resigned in 2003 after being elected the 60th governor of Kentucky and served until 2007. Prior to his entry into politics, Fletcher was a family practice physician and a Baptist lay minister. He is the second physician to be elected Governor of Kentucky; the first was Luke P. Blackburn in 1879. He is a member of the Republican Party.
Louie Broady Nunn was an American politician who served as the 52nd governor of Kentucky. Elected in 1967, he was the only Republican to hold the office between the end of Simeon Willis's term in 1947 and the election of Ernie Fletcher in 2003.
Frank Daniel Mongiardo is an American physician and politician from the Commonwealth of Kentucky. Mongiardo is a Democrat and was the 54th lieutenant governor of Kentucky from 2007 until 2011. He was a member of the Kentucky State Senate from 2001 to 2007. He also ran for the U.S. Senate in 2004, narrowly losing in the general election to Jim Bunning and again in 2010, losing in the primary election to Jack Conway.
Wallace Glenn Wilkinson was an American businessman and politician from the Commonwealth of Kentucky. From 1987 to 1991, he served as the state's 57th governor. Wilkinson dropped out of college at the University of Kentucky in 1962 to attend to a book retail business he started. The business rapidly became a national success, and Wilkinson re-invested his profits in real estate, farming, transportation, banking, coal, and construction ventures, becoming extremely wealthy. In 1987, he joined a crowded field in the Democratic gubernatorial primary. After running behind two former governors and the sitting lieutenant governor for most of the race, Wilkinson began to climb in the polls after hiring then-unknown campaign consultant James Carville. Wilkinson campaigned on a promise of no new taxes and advocated a state lottery as an alternative means of raising money for the state. Wilkinson surprised most political observers by winning the primary and going on to defeat his Republican challenger in the general election.
WKYT-TV is a television station in Lexington, Kentucky, United States, affiliated with CBS and The CW. The station is owned by Gray Television, and maintains studios and transmitter facilities on Winchester Road near I-75 on the east side of Lexington. In addition to WKYT-TV, Gray owns WYMT-TV in Hazard, Kentucky, a separate CBS affiliate serving eastern Kentucky with its own syndicated programming inventory and local newscasts.
Ernesto Scorsone is a notable LGBT advocate, American lawyer, politician and judge from Kentucky.
Steven Lynn Beshear is an American attorney and politician who served as the 61st governor of Kentucky from 2007 to 2015. He served in the Kentucky House of Representatives from 1974 to 1980, was the state's 44th attorney general from 1980 to 1983, and was the 49th lieutenant governor from 1983 to 1987.
United States gubernatorial elections were held in four states in October and November 2011, with regularly scheduled elections in Kentucky, Mississippi, and Louisiana; and a special election in West Virginia. None of these four governorships changed party hands, with Democratic incumbents Steve Beshear and Earl Ray Tomblin winning in Kentucky and West Virginia, respectively; and Republicans reelecting Bobby Jindal in Louisiana and holding the open seat in Mississippi.
Ryan Francis Quarles is an American Republican politician who has served as Agriculture Commissioner of Kentucky since 2016. He served in the Kentucky House of Representatives from 2011 to 2016.
The 2015 Kentucky gubernatorial election took place on November 3, 2015. Incumbent Democratic Governor Steve Beshear was ineligible to run for a third term due to term limits. Primary elections were held on May 19, 2015. Despite trailing in most pre-election polls, Republican nominee Matt Bevin defeated Democratic nominee Jack Conway by a margin of 52.5% to 43.8% in the general election. Statewide turnout in this election was 30%. With a margin of 8.7%, this election was the closest race of the 2015 gubernatorial election cycle.
Michelle Meier Keller is an American judge and lawyer, who has been a justice of the Kentucky Supreme Court since 2013.
Matthew Griswold Bevin is an American businessman and politician who served as the 62nd governor of Kentucky, from 2015 to 2019. He was the third Republican elected Kentucky governor since World War II, after Ernie Fletcher (2003–2007) and Louie Nunn (1967–1971).
A general election was held in the U.S. state of Kentucky on November 3, 2015. All of Kentucky's executive officers were up for election. Primary elections were held on May 19, 2015.
Andrew Graham Beshear is an American attorney and politician who has served as the 63rd governor of Kentucky since 2019. A member of the Democratic Party, he is the son of Steve Beshear, the 61st governor of Kentucky. Beshear served from 2016 to 2019 as the 50th Attorney General of Kentucky.
Walter Arnold Baker was an American lawyer and politician who served in both houses of the Kentucky General Assembly, in the presidential administration of Ronald Reagan, and on the Kentucky Supreme Court. A graduate of Harvard Law School, Baker also served as a judge advocate general in the Kentucky Air National Guard for 20 years.
Cannabis in Kentucky is illegal for recreational use, but is legal to process for medical use but only if it is 8 ounces or less and was legally purchased in another state. Non-psychoactive CBD oil is also legal in the state, and Kentucky has a lengthy history of cultivating industrial hemp for fiber since 1775.
The 2019 Kentucky gubernatorial election took place on November 5, 2019, to elect the governor and lieutenant governor of Kentucky. The Democratic nominee, Kentucky Attorney General Andy Beshear, defeated Republican incumbent Matt Bevin by just over 5,000 votes, or 0.37%, making this the closest gubernatorial election in Kentucky since 1899 by total votes, and the closest ever by percentage. It was also the closest race of the 2019 gubernatorial election cycle.
The 2019 Kentucky Attorney General election was conducted on November 5. Primary elections occurred on May 21, 2019. The general election was held on November 5, 2019. Incumbent Democratic Attorney General Andy Beshear declined to seek reelection to a second term to instead successfully run for Governor. Republican nominee Daniel Cameron won with 57.8% of the vote. He became the first Republican elected attorney general of Kentucky since Eldon S. Dummit in 1944, and the state's first black attorney general.