Jim Guy Tucker

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Jim Guy Tucker

In office
December 12, 1992 – July 15, 1996
Lieutenant(s) Mike Huckabee (1993 - 1996)
Preceded by Bill Clinton
Succeeded by Mike Huckabee

Born June 13 1943 (1943-06-13) (age 65)
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Political party Democratic
Spouse Betty Tucker
Profession attorney

James "Jim" Guy Tucker, Jr. (born June 13 1943) is a former governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, and a member of the United States House of Representatives from Arkansas.

Tucker resigned the governorship on July 16, 1996, after his conviction for fraud during the Whitewater scandal although the conviction was not directly related to that investigation of Bill and Hillary Clinton's real estate and related business dealings.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Tucker was born in Oklahoma City. He attended public schools in Little Rock. He received a bachelor of arts degree from Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1963.

[edit] Early adulthood

Tucker served in the United States Marine Corps Reserve in 1964, but was discharged for medical reasons (chronic ulcers) after finishing at the top of the first phase of his officer candidate training class at Camp Upshur, Quantico, Virginia. In early 1965, Tucker found passage to southeast Asia by tramp steamer from San Francisco and entered South Vietnam as an accredited freelance war correspondent. With one brief sojourn home, he remained in the war zone through 1967, personally participating in a number of engagements. Late that year, he published Arkansas Men at War, a compendium of interviews with troops from the state he had followed into combat. The book received generally favorable reviews.

Following a brief stint as an assistant professor of U.S. history at the American University in Beirut, Lebanon, Tucker returned to the University of Arkansas Law School in 1968 as a second year student, graduated, and was admitted to the bar that same year.

[edit] Law career

Tucker practiced as a junior associate with the Rose Law Firm, from which he ran for Prosecuting Attorney in 1970. He served as prosecutor for the Sixth Judicial District of Arkansas 1971–1972. In that office, he oversaw the prosecution of more than 1,000 backlogged felony cases inherited from previous administrations. He won convictions in a several cases considered by local wags as "impossible" successfully to prosecute, including one kidnapping. Twelve "guest" judges were temporarily reassinged from other circuits by the state supreme court at Tucker's request to clear the arrearages. He was appointed by the Governor to the Arkansas Criminal Code Revision Commission and served 1973–1975, during which time he was credited with spearheading the group's broad revision of the state's criminal laws. An investigation into police corruption he began was stymied by a county grand jury appointed by a circuit judge who was a political ally of the chief of police. However, the following year a federal grand jury, building on Tucker's work, issued a scathing report which led to a shake-up of the department and the resignation of the chief, senior detectives and complicitous city officials.

[edit] Political career

Tucker was elected Arkansas attorney general in November 1972. He easily defeated the Republican nominee Edwin Bethune, then of Searcy in White County, and later Tucker's successor as U.S. representative from the Little Rock-based Second Congressional District. Tucker served two two-year terms as attorney general, 19731977. He was a delegate to the 1972 Democratic National Convention. Running from his post as attorney general, Tucker was elected as a Democrat to the Ninety-fifth Congress and served one term, 3 January 19773 January 1979. He relinquished the seat to wage an unsuccessful campaign for the United States Senate in 1978. He was defeated by the sitting governor, David Pryor. In the same election, Bill Clinton, who had replaced Tucker in 1977 as attorney general, was elected governor, thus eclipsing Tucker as the state's political "fair haired boy".

Tucker resumed the practice of law. A consistent intra-party rival of Clinton's, he was defeated by Clinton when both sought the Democratic nomination for governor in 1982 following Clinton's defeat by Republican Frank White in 1980. Eight years later, Tucker announced his intention to run for the governor's office again against Clinton, who was seeking a fifth term. However, he withdrew from the gubernatorial primary and ran instead for the post of lieutenant governor. He recognized that Clinton had his eyes on the presidency and might not serve a full term. He succeeded to the governorship upon Clinton's resignation on 12 December 1992.

[edit] Conviction

Tucker won election in 1994 against the Republican Sheffield Nelson but was convicted of one count of conspiracy and one count of mail fraud in 1996 as part of Kenneth Starr's investigation of the Whitewater scandal. Tucker was tried with fellow defendants James B. McDougal and his wife Susan McDougal, the prosecution conducted primarily by OIC prosecutor Ray Jahn. Tucker chose not to testify in his own defense upon the advice of his attorney.

[edit] Resignation

Arkansas law prohibits convicted felons from serving as governor and, as a consequence, Tucker resigned. As his successor, Lieutenant Governor Mike Huckabee, a Republican, was preparing to be sworn in, Tucker rescinded his resignation[1] on several grounds, including his appeal because a juror on his trial was married to a man whose cocaine possession conviction Tucker had twice refused to commute. Furthermore, this juror was the niece of local activist Robert "Say" McIntosh, who had demonstrated against Tucker during the trial. He also contended, and an appellate court later agreed, that one of the statutes he allegedly violated was no longer operable. Arguing that his conviction was thus tainted, and that the Arkansas constitution was vague about his status as a convicted felon until his appeals had been exhausted, Tucker initially reversed his decision to resign, but at the very last minute followed through with it under the threat of impeachment by the legislature which had convened to witness Huckabee's swearing in.

[edit] Health problems

Tucker, whose liver problems were seriously debilitating him and threatened his life (he had nearly died from gastro-intestinal bleeding in 1994, and had steadily worsened since), received a lenient sentence of four years' probation and house detention in part because of his poor health. In 1997, Tucker received a liver transplant at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.


[edit] Trivia

Governor Tucker was mentioned in the last words of Robert Wayne Snell, a murderer executed in Arkansas on April 19, 1995:

Governor Tucker, look over your shoulder; justice is coming. I wouldn't trade places with you or any of your cronies. Hell has victories. I am at peace[1]

[edit] References and external links

Preceded by
Ray Thornton (D)
Attorney General of Arkansas

James Guy Tucker, Jr., (D)
1973–1977

Succeeded by
William Jefferson "Bill" Clinton (D)
Preceded by
Wilbur Daigh Mills (D)
Member of the United States House of Representatives from the Second District of Arkansas

James Guy Tucker, Jr., (D)
1977–1979

Succeeded by
Edwin Ruthvin Bethune, Jr., (R)
Preceded by
Winston Bryant (D)
Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas

James Guy Tucker, Jr., (D)
1991–1992

Succeeded by
Mike Huckabee (R)
Preceded by
William Jefferson "Bill" Clinton (D)
Governor of Arkansas

James Guy Tucker, Jr., (D)
1992–1996

Succeeded by
Mike Huckabee (R)

[edit] References

fi:Jim Guy Tucker
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