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home : headlines : headlines July 29, 2010

2/14/2009 1:05:00 AM Email this articlePrint this article 
Roger Bowling
Bowling to return to bench after drug charges

ROSE COOPER
County Editor

Clinton County Juvenile Court Magistrate Roger Bowling will soon be back on the bench.

Bowling, 58, who was charged Dec. 9 with two misdemeanor charges of possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia, appeared Jan. 23 in Hillsboro Municipal Court where the case was transferred after Clinton County Municipal Court Judge Chad L. Carey stepped aside. Judge David McKenna, of Hillsboro Municipal Court, and Prosecutor Fred Beery, brought the case against Bowling.

A spokesperson in the Clinton County Municipal Court said the possession of drug paraphernalia was dismissed with prejudice under a plea agreement. For the possession of marijuana charge, the court ordered a $158 bond forfeiture.

A Wilmington resident, Bowling was charged after Wilmington police executed a search warrant at his home for illegal narcotics. Police detectives found marijuana, marijuana seeds and stems, pipes with residue, rolling papers and burnt marijuana cigarettes, according to a media release from the Wilmington Police Department.

At the time the charges were filed, police said anonymous tips led to a three-month investigation. During the investigation, detectives “developed probable cause,” said police, prompting the issuance of the search warrant.

After he was charged, Bowling was removed from the bench and initially placed on paid administrative leave, according to Clinton County Juvenile Court Administrator David Hockaday.

Clinton County Probate Judge Allen Gano said Bowling was later placed on leave without pay.

Judge Gano said Bowling has gone through the steps required under the county’s drug policy. “The drug policy urges us to take steps to rehabilitate,” he said.

Bowling began rehabilitation “on his own initiative,” Gano said. “He was taking the steps that fit into the county policy. We followed that from the beginning. I’m pleased with the way he has dealt with it. I’m satisfied at the sincerity of his efforts. As the county policy would have us do, he will get a second chance,” the judge said.

There was never an indication in any of Bowling’s work performance there was a problem, Gano said.

Bowling is expected to return to the bench at the end of February or beginning of March. “This is the right thing to do under the circumstances,” Gano said. “After a good deal of consideration and discussion with him, it was an appropriate decision. He’s done the rehabilitation and I’m satisfied he will be able to perform.”

Gano said the magistrate’s decisions are always reviewed by the judge.

Bowling has served as a Clinton County magistrate for more than 10 years.

As juvenile court magistrate, Bowling oversees a number of juvenile cases, most of them traffic offenses, said Hockaday. Bowling also handles a variety of other cases, including juvenile misdemeanor drug cases.





Reader Comments


Posted: Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Article comment by: anon

I honestly hope the first poster and the third are kidding.

His job performance was NEVER affected, does he also beat his wife? No. He does his job, and well. Would we be sending him to jail if he was an alcoholic? No, no one would even care about this if he was.

This is why marijuana laws need to be changed. No one has died from pot, EVER. As for the third poster who says its a hypocracy, would you be saying that if he murdered someone? "How dare he sentence people for murder when he did it himself!" ...no, i don't think so. His job is to sentence others on behalf of the law, and that he was doing.

To the first poster, "how is anyone going to take him seriously?" Well, how about our laws are not even taken seriously. Pot is illegal because of scare tactics, look up the history of pot. Get informed, you are passing judgement on people who don't deserve it. I'm glad you are into that whole forgiveness thing. And were you really comparing him smoking marijuana in his own home to him robbing a bank? Do you see how scare tactics have gotten to you? As for the message he is sending, well, I guess the message is that pot is not harmful and you can still be 100% competent in his job, even as a pot smoker.



Amen for allowing him back.


Posted: Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Article comment by: Mark Wical

Allowing Mr. Bowling to "return to the bench" is both absurd and ridiculous. How many people has he passed judgement on,and all the while breaking the law himself? For him to get off with only a $158.oo fine... are you kidding me. I am sure Mr. Bowling is sorry that he got caught, not necessarily for what he did. How is anyone going to take him seriously now? They can't. No matter how much he "rehablitates" himself, he is never going to be looked at as trustworthy again. He has broken a sacred trust that takes many years to build and only seconds to break... forever. If he chooses to continue his road to recovery, and work with kids, let him do volunteer work, but to allow him to now continue to pass judgement on to someone else is just utter nonsense. I am all about forgiving, but you don't let someone rob a bank and them make them the head teller. Our kids watch us closely in all situations. What message do you think it will send if Mr. Bowling gets a slap on the wrist (not much of a slap) and then continues as magistrate?
Not a good one. Forgiveness is one thing, but using common sense and accountability is the message we should be sending.


Posted: Monday, February 16, 2009
Article comment by: JOhn Davis

LOL, he should return, a little pot never hurt anyone!

RT
www.anon-tools.us.tc


Posted: Monday, February 16, 2009
Article comment by: Allen McDaid

If there was any individual ever sentenced under this judge for possession of marijuana or paraphernalia (of any type) the sentence should be overturned. Having a judge willing to sentence an individual for anything that they themselves do is a complete hypocrisy. Not to mention a form of double standard that is unconscionable in our judicial system.

Posted: Saturday, February 14, 2009
Article comment by: lisa jackson

wow guess he might as well get off everyone else does!!!!!!!

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