California Judge Still Receiving Taxpayer-Funded Six-Figure Salary While Sitting in Jail on Murder Charges, Court Records Reveal

By @eliizabethurban
Judge Jeffrey Ferguson
Jeffrey Ferguson, a superior court judge in Orange County, has been charged with murder after he allegedly shot and killed his wife in August 2023. Anaheim Police Department

A California judge awaiting murder charges has still been receiving his I-funded six-figure salary, according to court records.

Jeffrey Ferguson, a superior court judge in Orange County, made more than $220,000 from his salary in 2023. On top of this, he also received more than $22,000 in benefits, according to records obtained by the Orange County Register.

Ferguson has pleaded not guilty after he was accused of shooting and killing his wife, Sheryl Ferguson, in front of their son on Aug. 3, 2023. His attorney denied that the shooting was intentional, referring to it instead as "a terribly unfortunate accidental discharge," as reported by the East Bay Times.

Prosecutors said that Ferguson's son alleged that his father was drunk at the time of the incident, and that his parents had gotten into an argument before his father reportedly pulled out a gun and shot his mother, as reported by Fox News.

If a judge is accused of a felony, they are "disqualified from acting as a judge," however this "comes without loss of a salary," according to the California Constitution, as reported by the Register. The judge would be suspended without pay if he is convicted of the crime.

Ferguson was initially released on bail, but is now back in jail after he allegedly lied about consuming alcohol, which was a condition of his release. Another judge has since doubled Ferguson's bail to $2 million, and if he posts it, he will be barred from any restaurant or store that sells alcohol, the Times reported.

Originally reported by Latin Times.

Tags
California, Judge, Murder
Join the Discussion
More True Crime
The US Treasury building in Washington, DC

Five Members of 'La Linea' Cartel Sanctioned By Department of the Treasury For Fentanyl Trafficking

Harvey Weinstein Makes First Court Appearance Since Prison Cancer Diagnosis

Harvey Weinstein Prosecutors Reveal List of New Evidence Handed Over to His Attorneys Ahead of Trial

Dustin Kjersem

Montana Authorities Arrest Suspect in Murder So Gruesome It Was Originally Mistaken for Bear Attack

Robert Roberson and Attorney General Ken Paxton

Texas Attorney General Dug Up Dropped Sexual Abuse Charges to Make Case For Death Row inmate's Execution After Last-Minute Intervention

Real Time Analytics