Utah Supreme Court Justice Diana Hagen resigned her seat on Friday amid allegations that she had an affair with an attorney involved in a contentious state court case.”Today, Gov. Cox received a letter of resignation from Utah Supreme Court Justice Diana Hagen. The resignation is effective immediately,” read a statement from Gov. Spencer Cox, R-Utah. “The governor appreciates Justice Hagen’s years of service to the state of Utah.”
Hagen’s resignation followed Cox and state legislative leaders announcing an investigation into allegations of the affair. The state’s Judicial Conduct Commission previously described as “speculative, overstated, and misleading,” according to the Salt Lake Tribune.
The case at issue was a 2024 matter in which Hagen struck down the state legislature’s amendment to the state Constitution that would have let lawmakers repeal ballot initiatives. The attorney representing the plaintiffs in the case was the man with whom she allegedly maintained an inappropriate relationship.
Hagen’s resignation opens the door for Cox to appoint a replacement, and potentially shift the ideological makeup of the court, which forced a change to the state’s congressional districts to allow a Demcoratic-leaning seat.
Ben Whedon is the Chief Political Correspondent at Just the News. Follow him on X.
Trending
- Supercarrier USS Gerald R. Ford to serve as floating nuclear power plant for land bases, Pentagon confirms
- IRS considers citizenship question on tax forms amid immigration enforcement push
- The Home Front: When the calorie becomes the last honest currency
- An island facing ECONOMIC COLLAPSE: Russia pledges to support Cuba despite a U.S. “sanctions noose”
- Iran’s Phoenix: The Military Industrial Resurrection That Washington Cannot Stop
- EU and U.S. launch strategic stockpile to break China’s rare earth stranglehold
- OpenAI Model Solves 80-Year-Old Geometry Problem, Researchers Say
- Beyond the plate: How whole-food PLANT PROTEINS influence blood sugar and fullness