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In a recent incident that captured the attention of many, a judge in the Detroit area expressed frustration when a woman joined a court hearing through a video call, seemingly while driving. The courtroom drama unfolded during a virtual session presided over by Judge Michael K. McNally in the Woodhaven District Court this past Monday.
Kimberly Carroll was scheduled to appear before Judge McNally, as reported by Fox 2 Detroit. The session was intended to address a motion by Attorney Brian Groen, who was advocating for a default judgment against Carroll amounting to $1,921.85. The legal proceedings took an unexpected turn when Carroll joined the Zoom hearing.
Just as Judge McNally was on the verge of granting the default judgment, a court clerk informed him about an unidentified iPhone attempting to access the Zoom session. The Detroit Free Press later confirmed that the device belonged to Carroll, who was trying to join the call.
Upon realizing that Carroll was the person attempting to connect, Judge McNally instructed her to activate her camera and ensure her name was displayed correctly on her account. Carroll’s explanation for her delayed appearance added another layer to the unfolding situation.
Court officials then realized it was Carroll trying to join the call, at which point McNally told her to turn her camera on and to ensure she had her name listed on her account.
The defendant then apparently tried to justify her late arrival to the hearing.
‘I was sitting in some room or something and then I didn’t know I was just staring at myself. I’m sorry,’ she said.
When she then turned on her camera, Carroll could be seen sitting on the left side of a vehicle, apparently driving it.
‘You cannot be driving ma’am,’ McNally then told her. ‘What are you doing?’
Kimberly Carroll signed into a court hearing in Michigan on Monday apparently driving a vehicle
Judge Michael K McNally told the defendant she could not be driving during the hearing
Carroll then claimed she was the passenger in the vehicle, claiming she was ‘going out of town for a family member’ and would get her ‘driver’ to pull over.
But McNally, who is the longest-serving judge of Michigan’s 33rd District Court, was not buying into her story.
‘Am I crazy, or does it not look like you’re driving that car?’ he asked the defendant, who then doubled down on her claims she is a passenger.
At that point, the judge could be seen leaning in closer to view Carroll’s stream.
‘What side of the car are you on?’ he decided to ask her, to which she responded that she was on the left side, which would be the side with the steering wheel.
‘How would you be on the left-hand side if you’re a passenger in the front seat? Am I missing something?’ McNally asked.
The question seemed to fluster Carroll, who then seemed to try to change her answer.
‘Left-hand, right-hand side,’ she quickly corrected herself. ‘I’m sorry, I’ve been sitting in a room. I don’t know.’
Yet McNally continued his questioning – noting that the seatbelt appeared to be coming out of the driver’s side.
Carroll, who had joined the Zoom hearing late, insisted to the judge she was the passenger in the vehicle
McNally could be seen in the taped hearing growing more frustrated with Carroll, whom he accused of ‘lying’ to him
‘Now you’re lying to me, right?’ he asked Carroll, who proceeded to triple down on her claim that she was just the passenger.
Apparently growing more frustrated with Carroll’s answers, the judge then demanded to see the driver, but Carroll told him to wait a second and that she would need to get the driver’s permission to be on camera.
But McNally wasn’t deterred, as he began demanding to see the driver at that very moment.
Instead, Carroll could be seen exiting the vehicle, with a window clearly behind her, indicating she was sitting in the front seat.
‘Do you think I’m that stupid?’ the judge then asks her, as he announced he was ending the hearing and would agree to enter the default judgment.
He explained that he would not hear cases from ‘people driving or sitting in cars,’ and asked the court clerk to write down that Carroll ‘was not available at the time and then was driving a car and telling the court she was not.’
When Carroll then reentered the vehicle, she seemed to argue that she signed into the hearing at the proper time.
‘You got an attitude with you, I’ll tell you that,’ McNally responded. ‘You got an attitude. Good luck to you.’
Carroll has since released a statement saying she takes responsibility ‘for my mistake.’
After McNally demanded to see the driver, Carroll got out of the vehicle
‘Appearing on a Zoom court hearing while I was driving was poor judgment and I regret that decision,’ she said. ‘I panicked in the moment and made the wrong call instead of pulling over or asking to reschedule.
‘For that I am truly sorry.
‘At the same time, I believe what has happened since then has gone far beyond addressing a mistake,’ Carroll continued, claiming: ‘A brief moment of poor judgment has turned into a viral spectacle that is affecting my reputation, my family and my ability to move forward with my life.
‘I respect the court and the rule of law, but I also believe in fairness and proportionality,’ she said. ‘The question I’m left asking is whether this situation needed to become a public example at the expense of someone’s livelihood and dignity.
‘I am human. I made a mistake, I own that mistake and I am willing to accept the consequences,’ Carroll concluded.
‘But I hope people will also consider whether the response has been about accountability, or about turning a moment into something far bigger than it needed to be.’
The incident comes two years after Corey Harris signed into a court hearing in Ann Arbor to answer to charges stemming from a traffic stop months earlier
He was said to have a suspended license – leading Judge Cedric Simpson to express disbelief over his signing into the hearing behind the wheel
This is not the first time a Michigander got in trouble for driving during a Zoom court hearing.
In 2024, Corey Harris called into a court hearing in Ann Arbor to answer to charges stemming from a traffic stop months earlier.
He was said to have a suspended license at the time – leading Judge Cedric Simpson to express disbelief over his signing into such a hearing behind the wheel.
But it was later revealed Harris wasn’t driving on a suspended license – he never even had one.
‘He has never had a license, ever!’ Simpson said. ‘And [he] has never had a license in any of the other 49 states or commonwealths that make up this country.’
The judge went on to explain how Harris had his driving privileges suspended, not his license, and also had a non-driving state ID.