In a case that continues to expose the deep-seated corruption and moral decay festering within certain American institutions, two new witnesses have bravely come forward with shocking allegations against the late Letcher County District Judge Kevin Mullins. This is the same judge who was assassinated by the county’s own Sheriff, Mickey Stines, in an act that now appears less like a simple murder and more like a violent eruption of a long-suppressed scandal.
While the liberal media often rushes to canonize public figures upon their death, these firsthand accounts reveal a predator who weaponized his judicial power, exploiting the vulnerable for carnal pleasures and demonstrating a level of depravity that conservative voters have long associated with a corrupt and unaccountable ruling class.
The testimony of Tya Adams is a gut-wrenching indictment of the environment Mullins cultivated. Her account is not one of a simple affair but of systematic manipulation and abuse of power beginning when she was young. Adams detailed how Mullins, then an Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney, initiated a sexual relationship under the guise of a professional lesson. “I gave him oral with my shirt pulled down, and whenever we were done, he threw money in my face and told me to clean myself up and reminded me that I knew better than to tell my sister,” Adams told NewsNation.
This grotesque act of degradation, followed by introductions to his circle for “sex parties, performed shows, and had sex with them for money,” paints a picture of a man who viewed women as commodities. Adams’s poignant clarification that it was “consensual” but that her youth was “used against us to destroy our lives later…with the legal system…CPS…systematically removing your whole life…piece by piece,” exposes the horrifying long-term consequences of such power imbalances—a cycle of dependency and destruction that the left consistently ignores until it fits a narrative.
Further corroborating the culture of corruption, former deputy jailer Sarah Davis described the local jail as a “brothel,” where inmates were traded for contraband and favors. Davis’s claim that supervisors would “sign out inmates and bring them home to engage in sexual favors” suggests a conspiracy of silence and participation that reached far beyond Mullins alone.
Her belief that Sheriff Stines’s violent act was perhaps motivated by a desire to protect others or expose the corruption adds a complex layer to the tragedy, suggesting a broken system where justice could not be attained through the proper channels. This is precisely the kind of institutional rot that President Donald Trump has vowed to drain from the swamp. It underscores the critical need for strong, law-and-order leadership that supports law enforcement officials who stand against evil, rather than the liberal agenda that often seeks to dismantle the very institutions that can root out such malfeasance.
As the legal proceedings for Sheriff Stines continue, with defense attorneys seeking a $50,000 bond and prosecutors arguing that capital offenses are ineligible for bail, the nation watches. This case is a microcosm of a much larger battle for the soul of America—a battle between the decent, hardworking citizens who believe in justice and accountability, and a corrupt elite protected by a complicit media. President Trump’s unwavering support for the brave men and women of law enforcement and his commitment to cleaning up corruption stands in stark contrast to the silence and obfuscation often offered by his opponents.
h/t: Steadfast and Loyal
Leave a Comment