Sunday, June 17, 2007

The Ridgeley, W.Va., mayoral election

Just when I was beginning to get nostalgic for colorful (if regrettable) Alabama politics, along comes the 2007 mayoral election in Ridgeley, W.Va., just across the river from nearby Cumberland, Md. Here's the story thus far, as covered by the Cumberland Times-News.

A month before he hoped to be re-elected, two-term incumbent Mayor Mitchell Reeves was arrested on a charge of driving without a license. He said he just forgot to renew it when it expired years ago.

A month later, on the Friday before the Tuesday election, Reeves was arrested again, on fraud charges, and this time was sent to jail. He was charged with loading a trailer with personal belongings in an attempt to hide them from his creditors and from the county officials who planned to sell them to satisfy a $200,000 lien against Reeves.

From the jail, the mayor allegedly called Ridgeley Police Chief Mike Miller and told him to bring him a manila envelope the mayor had stashed in a filing cabinet at town hall. With the help of town clerk Melinda Liller, the chief found the envelope, which he said contained $6,800 in cash.

Instead of delivering the cash to the jailed mayor, the chief said he made some phone calls soliciting legal advice, and decided the cash -- like all the mayor's property -- was the county's and not the mayor's until the lien was satisfied. So he handed it over to the magistrate instead.

All that happened Friday. On Sunday, during a phone call he allegedly placed from jail to Councilwoman Faye Lemley at city hall, the mayor fired both the police chief and the clerk, apparently for not bringing him the $6,800.

"I came down and opened up the file cabinet," the ex-clerk told the Cumberland Times-News. "That's why I was fired."

"The mayor has been acting above the law for years," the ex-chief told the Times-News. "He never did have a West Virginia license."

That Tuesday, Reeves was still sitting in jail when the citizens of Ridgeley went to the polls and voted 5-to-1 for Reeves' opponent, veterinarian Richard Lechliter, a member of the Town Council. Lechliter got 185 votes to Reeves' 34.

One of the likely anti-Reeves voters was Mae Schartiger, who came to the polls on her 100th birthday. Schartiger, who said the first vote she ever cast was for Herbert Hoover, voted this time around to restore respectability to her hometown, she told the Times-News.

Also voted in was Liller, the fired clerk, who was elected town recorder.

Voted out, meanwhile, was Councilwoman Lemley, despite her diligence in reporting to city hall on a Sunday to receive vengeful instructions from a jailed mayor.

The mayor-elect pledged to give both the chief and the clerk their jobs back and to clean up city hall.

While all this was going on, I happened to be reading, and hugely enjoying, They Love a Man in the Country: Saints and Sinners in the South by Billy Bowles and Remer Tyson, a 1989 collection of colorful anecdotes about mid-century politicians and other power brokers. If there's ever a sequel, someone should interview Mitchell Reeves, soon to be ex-mayor of Ridgeley, W.Va.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

"The mayor has been acting above the law for years," the ex-chief told the Times-News. "He never did have a West Virginia license."

So why didn't the ex-chief (now reinstated) ever do anything about Mr. Reeves lack of license? Surely he saw him driving all around town?

Mr. Miller shouldn't be police chief if he can't uphold the law ALL the time!!

Oy, the stories I could tell about Mr. Reeves...and, I should mention, these are stories the Cumberland, Md newspaper knew about, as I personally emailed a former reporter there several years ago about Mr. Reeves driving without a license, and nothing came about it.

Southern politics and bedfellows, indeed!

Anonymous said...

Oh, I would LOVE to hear more stories about Mr. Reeves, whose name I have banned from my presence for the last 15 years. Certainly, there are some members of the community which used to own the late lamented Buffalo Gap Camp for the Cultural Arts (Capon Bridge, WV) who are neither surprised by nor crying over Mitchell's present troubles ...

Anonymous said...

So why didn't the ex-chief (now reinstated) ever do anything about Mr. Reeves lack of license? Surely he saw him driving all around town?

Mr. Miller shouldn't be police chief if he can't uphold the law ALL the time!!

you know the statement "you dont poop where you eat". Why would the police chief arrest the mayor. Thats just asking for his job to be over. Upholding the law and asking to be fired are totally different. I believe that the chief did the right thing about handing over the envelope