Former Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice agrees to license suspension due to alleged election-review misconduct
Judiciary
Former Wisconsin Supreme Court justice agrees to license suspension for alleged election-review misconduct
April 11, 2025, 11:00 am CDT
Former Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman, an investigator hired by Republicans to look into President Donald Trump’s 2020 election loss, refused to answer questions from Circuit Court Judge Frank Remington while on the stand in 2022. (Amber Arnold/Wisconsin State Journal via AP, File)
Former Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Michael J. Gableman has agreed to the suspension of his law license to resolve an ethics complaint that stems from his investigation of the 2020 election for the Wisconsin State Assembly.
Gableman and the Wisconsin Office of Lawyer Regulation agreed a three-year suspension of Gableman’s law license is an appropriate sanction in a stipulation signed on April 7 and filed with the Wisconsin Supreme Court. The court must approve the suspension.
The stipulation acknowledges that Gableman can’t successfully defend against the misconduct allegations.
The Associated Press, Reuters and the Washington Post have coverage. Law Forward had filed a grievance against Gableman, according to a press release.
Gableman’s $2.3 million election review did not find significant fraud, according to past reporting by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
The ethics complaint accused Gableman of failing to tell a legislative committee about cooperation by the cities of Madison and Green Bay in Wisconsin and falsely stating in court documents that the cities’ mayors had failed to appear for depositions without justification.
He was also accused of criticizing a judge instead of responding to questions during a court hearing on a group’s public-records request in Dane County, Wisconsin. He claimed that Judge Frank Remington had “abandoned his role as a impartial magistrate” and said later, “You want me in jail, Judge Remington?” I’m not gonna be railroaded.”
“With this deal,” said Jeff Mandell, president and general counsel of Law Forward, “Gableman stipulates that he misled courts, lied in public meetings, and violated government transparency laws.”
Gableman served on the Wisconsin Supreme Court from 2008 to 2018. The Wisconsin Supreme Court was home to Gableman from 2008 to 2018.
Send a letter to an editor, send a tip or update on a story, or report a mistake.