No evidence of affair between New Bedford judge and prosecutor, court finds

Anonymous letters claimed a judge threw cases in favor of a prosecutor he was seeing romantically. A court-appointed investigator found no evidence to support the allegations

Douglas Darnbrough was the presiding judge at the New Bedford District Court before he resigned.
Douglas Darnbrough was the presiding judge at the New Bedford District Court before he resigned.
File: Ben Berke/Ocean State Media
Share
Douglas Darnbrough was the presiding judge at the New Bedford District Court before he resigned.
Douglas Darnbrough was the presiding judge at the New Bedford District Court before he resigned.
File: Ben Berke/Ocean State Media
No evidence of affair between New Bedford judge and prosecutor, court finds
Copy

Rumors that a New Bedford judge had a sexual relationship with a prosecutor while trying her cases have been dismissed as not credible by an investigator after an inquiry ordered by Massachusetts’ highest court.

The investigation explored allegations raised in a flurry of salacious letters that swept through Massachusetts’ court system in fall 2023. The letters, penned by an anonymous sender, accused the New Bedford District Court’s presiding judge, Douglas Darnbrough, of assigning himself to his alleged lover’s criminal cases, and throwing cases in her favor.

In a report unsealed on Thursday, Special Master Ernest Sarason said Darnbrough and the prosecutor, Bristol County Assistant District Attorney Karlyn Butler, “did not engage in a romantic, emotional, sexual, or otherwise inappropriate relationship,” and that Darnbrough “did not exhibit bias or favoritism” towards her.

The release of the report finally offers some answers after years of courthouse speculation about what, if anything, really occurred.

The anonymous letters have since sparked appeals cases, and Darnbrough stopped working as a judge in New Bedford almost immediately after their appearance. A court spokesperson, Jennifer Donahue, initially said that Darnbrough was on vacation. He soon resigned, citing health problems.

Douglas Darnbrough, formerly presiding judge of New Bedford District Court, sits in the John Adams Courthouse in Boston in 2025.
Douglas Darnbrough, formerly presiding judge of New Bedford District Court, sits in the John Adams Courthouse in Boston in 2025.
Ben Berke/Ocean State Media

During his absence, the special master’s report revealed that Darnbrough was secretly facing discipline for “unprofessional conduct that allowed for the perception of impropriety.”

Lower court investigators found that Darnbrough drank with Butler several times at bars in group settings, including her surprise birthday party, and admitted to deleting any text messages they may have exchanged.

The special master noted that the lower court investigator “regretted not asking to look at ADA Butler’s phone” during the initial investigation. Butler handed her phone in as part of the higher court’s investigation more than a year after Darnbrough did.

Ultimately, neither the lower court’s investigation nor the higher court’s inquiry more than a year later turned up any evidence of a romantic or sexual relationship.

The Bristol County District Attorney’s Office and the Committee for Public Counsel Services, the state’s public defender agency, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

In various filings, the district attorney’s office has argued the anonymous letters were lies concocted by a “harasser” seeking to sabotage Butler’s career.

James McKenna, whose client Gerson Pascual-Santana appealed a conviction Butler secured in Darnbrough’s courtroom, said the case is not over yet.

In Thursday’s hearing before Justice Serge Georges Jr., McKenna argued the constraints of the special master’s inquiry prevented him from examining the details of Darnbrough’s resignation, the discrepancies between data obtained from the phones of Darnbrough and Butler, and their testimony before the special master.

McKenna said he plans to file an additional motion for discovery in the New Bedford District Court. His appeal to the Supreme Judicial Court requesting a new trial for Pascual-Santana will remain pending while that plays out, he said.

Darnbrough, who cited health problems in his resignation letter, continues to appear in court in Bristol County as a defense attorney now. His lawyer did not respond to a request for comment.

An attorney for Karlyn Butler declined to comment.

An experiment in participatory budgeting — a process where voters directly decide how to spend public money — got off to a promising start in Providence, until the entire staff working on the project was suddenly laid off
Why a prosperous nation struggles to feed hungry people
Massachusetts acquisitions drag down bottom line as federal funding cuts loom
Wednesday, Apr 1 from 6-7 p.m.
An outpouring of appreciation for the state’s longest-serving lawmaker
The Rams are making their first appearance at the Big Dance since 1996 on Saturday