Steve Nunn

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Steve Nunn bigraphy, stories - Kentucky politician

Steve Nunn : biography

November 4, 1952 –

Stephen Rob Nunn, known as Steve Nunn (born November 4, 1952, in Glasgow, Kentucky) is the former Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services for the Commonwealth of Kentucky and a convicted murderer. From 1980 to 2006, he was a Republican member of the Kentucky House of Representatives from his native Barren County in southern Kentucky. In 2011, Nunn received a life sentence after pleading guilty to the murder of his ex-fiancée. He is the son of the late Kentucky Governor Louie B. Nunn and First Lady Beula Cornelius Aspley Nunn.

Murder of ex-fiancée

In March 2009, Steve Nunn resigned his state position after having been placed on administrative leave in February as a result of a February 19 assault in Lexington of Amanda Ross, his former fiancée, who had procured a protective order against him for domestic violence.

On September 11, 2009, Ross was found shot to death in the parking lot of the Opera House Square complex in Lexington. That same day, Nunn was found by police with his wrists slit in Hart County near the gravesites of his parents. He was arrested and taken to a hospital in Bowling Green in fair condition from the wounds, first considered as possibly self-inflicted. Nunn was charged with six counts of wanton endangerment of a police officer because when authorities arrived to arrest him, they reported that Nunn had fired a .38-caliber handgun. On September 14, Nunn was taken to the Hart County jail after having been discharged from the hospital. The same day, Nunn was charged by Lexington police with Ross’s murder. On September 17, Nunn was transferred to the Fayette County Detention Center. The next day, he pleaded not guilty to the murder charges in Fayette District Court. On November 10, 2009, Nunn was indicted on charges of murder and violating a protective order. Prosecutors intended to seek the death penalty, Charles Gazaway, WAVE News. April 6, 2010 but on June 28, 2011, Nunn pleaded guilty in Fayette Circuit Court in Lexington to Ross’s murder and received a life sentence for the crime.http://www.courier-journal.com/article/20110628/NEWS01/306280062/Steve-Nunn-pleads-guilty-murder-gets-life-sentence?odyssey=nav%7Chead

When he turns sixty-two on November 4, 2014, Nunn is eligible to receive his full state pension of $28,210 annually, based on his legislative and executive department service. State law permits pension benefits to former lawmakers unless they commit a crime while in office as a legislator. Meanwhile, the Ross family filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against Nunn.

Political career

Nunn unsuccessfully sought the Republican gubernatorial nomination in 2003, finishing third to then-United States Representative Ernie Fletcher of Lexington, whom Nunn then supported. Former State Representative Bob Heleringer of Eastwood in Jefferson County, ran as the lieutenant governor selection on Nunn’s ticket. In the primary, Nunn received 21,167 votes (13.4 percent), but Fletcher led the three-candidate field with 90,912 (57.3 percent). Rebecca Jackson polled 44,084 (27.8 percent). Fletcher went on to win the position in the general election by defeating Democrat Attorney General Ben Chandler. Fletcher was the first Republican to be elected governor of Kentucky since Louie B. Nunn upset Henry Ward in November 1967.

On November 7, 2006, after fifteen years as a state representative, Nunn lost his bid for re-election to the Democrat Johnny Bell. Nunn polled 5,572 votes (46.7 percent) to Bell’s 6,371 ballots (53.3 percent).

In September 2007, Nunn announced his support of Democratic gubernatorial nominee Steve Beshear, a former lieutenant governor who handily unseated Fletcher in his bid for re-election. On December 22, 2007, Beshear appointed Nunn as deputy secretary of Health and Family Services.