It looks like Justice Elliott “Spike” Maynard filed for re-election to the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals. That took some balls.
When he filed the paperwork to run, he told a reporter:
There are two seats, so I can’t have them both
That’s a little misleading.
First, people aren’t concerned about whether Spike has both of the seats up for election; they’re concerned about Massey Energy CEO Don Blankenship buying both seats and assuring himself a solid majority. Second, Spike is acknowledged by most members of the bar as the brains of the Big Three on the Supreme; by owning Spike, that gives Blankenship some pull with Justice Robin Davis, and a lot of pull with Court sycophant Brent Benjamin.
Spike’s facing public humiliation in any campaign, because all eyes are going to be focused on the photos taken of him vacationing with Blankenship on the French Riviera. As Tom Searls said in his article, “Maynard was considered practically a shoo-in for a second term before the pictures became public.” Now, he’s friggin public enemy number one for the other Democratic candidates.
Spike’s probably going to be facing a criminal investigation too. This trip to Monaco has been a rumor for a long time now — and until the photos surfaced, I just assumed it would be one more thing Spike got away with.
But the story is now going around that Maynard didn’t pay for most of the trip, and gambled in the casinos of Monte Carlo with cash from Blankenship.
Wait . . . didn’t Spike promise us that he’d produce receipts showing he paid for the whole trip?
Why yes, he did! In a Court press release that rivaled Nixon’s “Checker’s Speech,” or better yet, Nixon’s “People have got to know whether or not their President is a crook. Well, I’m not a crook. I’ve earned everything I’ve got” Speech, Maynard said:
I want to be crystal clear that in the noted trip I paid my own way, paid for my travel expenses, paid my own hotel expenses out of my own pocket. I have receipts and records to prove it.
Here we are two weeks later and what has Maynard produced?
Absolutely nothing. In writing, at least.
But in a hard-hitting journalistic endeavor that rivals Fox News, The State Journal got Spike to give an exclusive interview where he said he paid for the entire trip to Europe in one shot. He didn’t actually show anyone the receipt. But he claims the entire trip — the plane tickets, hotel, rental car, etc. — was paid for on his American Express card, through Expedia:
I need to be crystal clear about this: On this trip, I paid my own way. It was booked as an Expedia package, and it was charged to my American Express, and I paid the bill,” he said. “I paid for my own entertainment and my rental car.”
I’m not sure about you, but my bullshit meter just pegged off the scale.

Exactly how do you get a receipt for chips at a European casino? Particularly if those chips are purchased by someone else? Hmmm?
Now, hark back to what started this catastrophe for Spike’s re-election campaign. And keep thinking, “where are the receipts?”
In the original motion to disqualify Spike filed in the Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal case, the plaintiffs noted that Spike was seen having dinner with Blankenship three weeks before the Court’s original opinion was issued on November 21, 2007. Who paid for that dinner? Does Spike have a receipt showing he paid? I’ll bet not.
Remember back in October 2004 when Spike was seen having dinner with Blankenship at the pricey Chophouse Restaurant in downtown Charleston? Or any of the other times he’s been seen hanging out with Blankenship, like at Justice Benjamin’s election-night celebration?
Spike initially tried to act like he barely knew Blankenship. But the new tactic is to diffuse the subject by admitting he is friends, has always been friends, with Blankenship. Spike didn’t have to tell you, because “everyone” was supposed to know it. And if you didn’t know that fact, that’s your fault.
But in all this, what’s missing? Yeah, the receipts.
Everybody who knows Spike know that he’s smart. He’s selfish as hell, but he’s smart.
And he can figure out that having someone with business before the Court should either be avoided, or he should be avoiding that someone’s business before the Court. Period.
And then there’s that business of the law, which says:
No official . . . may knowingly accept any gift, directly or indirectly, from a lobbyist or from any person whom the official or employee knows or has reason to know:
(C) Has financial interests which may be substantially and materially affected, in a manner distinguishable from the public generally, by the performance or nonperformance of his or her official duties.
So, c’mon Spike, where are all those receipts?