Fall 2017 County Lines

Page 36

AAC

BOARD PROFILE

Saline County coroner joins AAC board

S

Story and Photo by Holland Doran AAC Communications Coordinator

aline County Coroner Kevin Cleghorn knew he was going to be a singer at the age of 3, when he sang his first solo in church. Investigating death was not his plan. Hindsight is 20/20, though. He grew up in Sheridan and moved to Bryant when he was 9. He graduated from Bryant High School in 1988, and then pursued a music degree at Henderson State University. However, a crippling case of pneumonia forced him to take a leave from school in his sophomore year. While working at Timber Ridge Near Restorative Ranch, he witnessed a 16-year-old boy have a seizure. He felt helpless. “I vowed that would never happen to me again,” he said. “From then on, I determined I didn’t want to go back to my music major because that’s not where I was headed.” He went instead to Emergency Medical Technician (EMT) school and served as a paramedic in Saline County for more than 22 years. A career as a coroner never crossed Cleghorn’s mind until 36

2011, when he decided to assist his friend and former Saline County Coroner Will Bearden. Bearden groomed Cleghorn for the chief deputy coroner job by bringing him on as a part-time deputy coroner. But Cleghorn had no ambition to pursue the deputy coroner position. It wasn’t until his father, Rodney Cleghorn, passed that he entertained the idea. “My dad told me this could very easily not just be a job opportunity, but a career changer for you,” he said. “It could be a huge step in the direction that God wants you to go. Right after he gave me those words of advice, my dad passed away.” Bearden was one of the first people at Cleghorn’s side after his father passed away. “Will taught me that day what the office of the coroner really is because now I was on that side of it,” he said. Cleghorn accepted the chief deputy coroner job a week later. In 2013, Cleghorn ran for Saline County coroner and won by a landslide in the 2014 election. He took office in 2015. Cleghorn has finally found a passion as coroner. “Working on an ambulance was great, and I was able to help many, many people over the course of my 30 years,” he said. “But what I do as a coroner goes with them for the rest of their life. There’s very little I can do for the deceased, but what I do is for the family. If I can ease that pain just a little bit like Will Bearden did for me, then I will have succeeded.” Cleghorn was elected president of the Arkansas Coroners’ Association in December 2016, succeeding Faulkner County Coroner Patrick Moore, who passed away in September. “I was dumbfounded, very honored and very humbled that the association saw something in me, that they entrusted the education program and legislation team under my care,” he said. Cleghorn wears many other hats. He is a nationally licensed forensic death investigator, a state-licensed paramedic and a national registered paramedic. He is director of the South Central Region of the Infant and Child Death Review Committee and a member of the Arkansas Coroners’ Association’s inaugural Education Development Committee. He’s new to the Association of Arkansas Counties (AAC) board of directors. In the past, the Coroners’ Association had one representative on the AAC board. But since the Coroners’ Association has become a more active group, the AAC membership amended the AAC bylaws to allow the Coroners’ Association to have two representatives on the board. Cleghorn serves alongside Pulaski County Coroner Gerone Hobbs. “I’m very honored that I’m in this position,” Cleghorn said. “There are some amazing people working behind the scenes for the counties and the state of Arkansas, and now I get to be a part of that elite.” Cleghorn still sings semi-professionally with his brothers, Raymond and Damon, in the gospel music group the Cleghorn Brothers. He also enjoys spending as much time as possible with his wife of 11 years, Kelly, and their sons — 22-yearold twins, Kyle and Cole, and 10-year-old Gabriel. COUNTY LINES, FALL 2017


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

AAC Staff Profile: Mary Edwards

2min
pages 52-53

Treasurers meet in Logan County

1min
page 51

Judges hold Fall meeting in Sebastian County

1min
page 50

Logan County hosts county clerks

1min
page 49

Roads seminar covers payment assessment, road solutions

1min
page 46

More than 100 gather for jail law seminar

1min
page 48

Circuit clerks talk e-filing, swear in slate of officers

1min
page 47

AAC seminar focuses on public speaking

1min
page 45

Assessors elect new executive board

1min
page 43

Coroners cover crime scene photography

1min
page 44

Reconstruction of courthouse facade was ’tricky’

3min
page 42

Bradley County Courthouse towers above

3min
pages 40-41

AAC Board Profile: Saline County Coroner Kevin Cleghorn

3min
page 36

AAC Profile: Sheriffs’ Association Director Scott Bradley

5min
pages 38-39

AAC Board Profile: Stone County Assessor Heather Stevens

3min
page 37

Over 100 counties lining up to sue big pharma

7min
pages 34-35

President’s opioid commission issues recommendations

2min
page 33

President declares a public health emergency

2min
page 32

Arkansas at front line of U.S. opioid epidemic

7min
pages 30-31

AAC forms Opioid Task Force

4min
pages 28-29

The Opioid Epidemic in Arkansas

1min
page 27

Counties receive Digital Transformation Awards

7min
pages 24-26

Savings Times 2

3min
pages 22-23

Attorney General Opinions

4min
pages 12-13

Seems to Me

10min
pages 19-21

Governmental Affairs

4min
page 17

Research Corner

10min
pages 14-16

Legal Corner

4min
page 18

From the Director’s Desk

8min
pages 7-8

From the Governor

3min
page 11

President’s Perspective

4min
pages 9-10
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.