State Supreme Court Won’t Rule in Virgil Smith Ballot Case Before Election

Smith is running for Detroit City Council despite a plea deal that said he couldn’t run for office for five years.

Virgil Smith yard sign Green Acres 8.25.17-jn

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The Michigan Supreme Court has agreed to decide whether prosecutors can force elected lawmakers to give up their seats as part of a plea deal.

But that decision won’t come in time to determine whether a former state senator should be removed from the November ballot.

Former state Sen. Virgil Smith (D-Detroit) agreed to quit his job and not run for anything else for five years. It was part of a plea deal reached after he shot at his ex-wife’s car.

Smith had already resigned from the Senate when a judge threw out that part of the bargain, saying it violates separation of powers. So, Smith filed to run for the Detroit City Council. 

Click here for more of WDET’s coverage of Virgil Smith’s court case and candidacy for Detroit City Council

The prosecutor appealed that ruling all the way up the state Supreme Court, and asked for a decision before the deadline for printing ballots. The court said no, which means arguments in the case won’t come before November. And that likely means no decision on whether Smith is eligible to run until after the election.

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