Politics & Government

Effort to impeach Lexington judge is nearly unprecedented in Kentucky history

Fayette County Judge Julie Goodman’s attorney, Mitchel Denham sharing information as attorney Robert McBride speaks on her behalf to the impeachment committee in room 131 at the Capitol Annex Building in Frankfort, Ky, on March 16, 2026.
Fayette County Judge Julie Goodman’s attorney, Mitchel Denham sharing information as attorney Robert McBride speaks on her behalf to the impeachment committee in room 131 at the Capitol Annex Building in Frankfort, Ky, on March 16, 2026. tpoullard@herald-leader.com

READ MORE


Judge Julie Goodman impeachment

Former Kentucky state Rep. Killian Timoney filed a petition in January to impeach Fayette Circuit Judge Julie Goodman over her handling of six different cases in Lexington. Goodman and her legal team deny any misconduct, and other legal professionals have raised concerns about the possible precedent an impeachment could set.

Expand All

Kentucky lawmakers’ current effort to remove a Lexington judge from the bench by impeachment is nearly unprecedented in the state’s history.

And in Kentucky’s modern court system, it’s never happened.

Fayette Circuit Judge Julie Muth Goodman faces impeachment after a petition was filed against her in January by a former state representative who is seeking election again.

The impeachment petition was filed in January by Killian Timoney, a former state representative for the 45th District, accusing Goodman of abusing her office. He cited six cases from Goodman’s court he argued constituted misconduct.

In one case, according to the petition, Goodman conducted her own research into a fatal-hit-and-run, overstepping her duties as a judge. According to the petition, Goodman searched for data that showed prosecutors charged Black defendants more harshly than other defendants.

In another, a case that determined whether the University of Kentucky had sovereign immunity — a legal doctrine that shields a government body from lawsuits — the petition and supporting transcript alleges Goodman said she willingly disobeyed a higher court’s precedent because she didn’t agree with it.

The impeachment proceedings advanced Wednesday when a committee of members of the Kentucky House of Representatives said they would issue a resolution with articles of impeachment.

The case now goes to the full House of Representatives, and if they vote to impeach Goodman, it goes to the Kentucky Senate.

If the effort is successful, it would mark the first time in Kentucky’s modern history a judge has been removed via impeachment.

It’s been more than 100 years since state lawmakers have even tried such a maneuver.

Previous impeachments

In Kentucky’s modern court system, a sitting judge has never been removed from the bench through impeachment.

There have been only two instances of a judge being impeached or recommended for impeachment, and they both happened more than a century ago.

The first was in 1806, when appellate judge Benjamin Sebastian was impeached for receiving a foreign pension and involvement in a conspiracy for Kentucky to secede from the U.S., according to documents Goodman filed with the committee.

Although Sebastian was impeached, he would not technically be considered a judge by the current Kentucky Constitution.

In 1916, McCreary County Judge J.E. Williams had an impeachment petition filed against him by local residents for unlawful acts related to public funds. The Kentucky House of Representatives filed more than 20 articles of impeachment against Williams. However, he was not removed from office because the Senate did not take up the vote to do so.

Since Kentucky’s modern system was created as part of the 1975 judicial article that unified the court system, lawmakers have impeached two state officials, though neither was a judge — one was Kentucky Agriculture Commissioner Ward “Butch” Burnette in 1991 and former Rowan County Commonwealth’s Attorney Ronnie Goldy.

Burnette, whose article of impeachment said his actions resulted in “a theft of funds belonging to the Commonwealth of Kentucky,” resigned from office hours before his Senate trial was set to begin. The Senate terminated the impeachment proceedings, according to a 1991 Legislative Research Commission report.

Goldy was unanimously convicted by the Senate in 2023 for using his position in exchange sexual favors. Goldy resigned from office as articles of impeachment were being brought against him in the House of Representatives. He was criminally convicted in February 2024 of wire fraud and bribery.

Prior to Goldy, the last person to be convicted by the Kentucky Senate was James ‘Honest Dick’ Tate, the state treasurer, in 1888. Tate stole about $200,000 in state money and fled Kentucky. He was tried and convicted in absentia.

Separation of powers

In addition to the unprecedented nature of Goodman’s impeachment proceedings, many legal officials say they blur the lines of separation of powers.

More than 70 Kentucky lawyers signed a letter to the impeachment committee arguing the procedures could be a constitutional infringement on separation of powers between government branches.

“The issue is not a left vs. right, Republican vs. Democrat, or prosecution vs. defense issue,” the 11-page letter reads. “Indeed, (it) is much larger. Separation of powers, equal branches of government, and judicial independence are cornerstones of the constitutional democracy that we enjoy as Americans.

They also voiced concerns about whether the impeachment proceedings were for alleged illegal acts, or because some of Goodman’s rulings were unpopular.

Goodman and her lawyers asked the same question when they filed a request for an emergency injunction in Franklin Circuit Court. They also argued the public impeachment proceedings violated Goodman’s due process rights as a citizen.

A state judge did not halt the proceedings as Goodman requested, and the case remains active.

Former Kentucky Attorney General Fred Cowan on Wednesday joined the chorus of lawyers arguing the effort violated the rule of law — in an op-ed in the Herald-Leader, Cowan called the impeachment proceedings a “dangerous misstep” that threatens to undermine the independence of judges and the Kentucky Constitution.

Current Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman has been mostly quiet about the impeachment proceedings against Goodman, though he played a pivotal role in challenging some of her individual rulings.

On several occasions in recent years, he intervened in cases over which Goodman presided, and many of those cases were mentioned directly in Timoney’s appeal for impeachment.

Coleman’s office has said only that it did not help Timoney write his petition.

Editor’s note: This story has been updated with additional information.

This story was originally published March 18, 2026 at 4:03 PM.

Taylor Six
Lexington Herald-Leader
Taylor Six is the criminal justice reporter at the Herald-Leader. She was born and raised in Lexington attending Lafayette High School. She graduated from Eastern Kentucky University in 2018 with a degree in journalism. She previously worked as the government reporter for the Richmond Register.
Get one year of unlimited digital access for $159.99
#ReadLocal

Only 44¢ per day

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Judge Julie Goodman impeachment

Former Kentucky state Rep. Killian Timoney filed a petition in January to impeach Fayette Circuit Judge Julie Goodman over her handling of six different cases in Lexington. Goodman and her legal team deny any misconduct, and other legal professionals have raised concerns about the possible precedent an impeachment could set.