MUSKEGON, Mich. – Two weeks after winning the August primary, judicial candidate Jason Kolkema appeared to viciously whip his girlfriend with a belt during an argument in his western Michigan apartment, presumably unaware that nearby witnesses were recording the scene.

When he noticed the onlookers from his window, the 51-year-old lawyer flashed them the peace sign, and has since claimed the video isn’t what it seems: He was striking a chair with his belt, not his girlfriend, the woman and his lawyer have maintained.

But the video triggered criminal charges – and a tsunami of public outrage in the city of  Muskegon, which borders Lake Michigan and is about 40 miles northwest of Grand Rapids.

In a scandalous judicial election that has stirred much debate in western Michigan, the topic of domestic violence has taken center stage as women’s rights activists fight to keep Kolkema off the bench, arguing he isn’t fit to be judge, especially in cases involving battered women and vulnerable children.

‘We saw what we saw’

Kolkema, arraigned Sept. 19 on domestic violence charges, has a history of losing his temper, behaving violently around women and children – including spitting on a 12-year-old girl – and has violated court orders, lied about his relationship with his client-girlfriend, battled an Adderall addiction and failed to pay child support, according to a decade’s worth of court and police records reviewed by the Free Press, part of the USA TODAY Network, and interviews with multiple people tied to him and his girlfriend.

“I cannot imagine a victim sitting in front of a ‘Jason Kolkema’ and asking him to protect her from an assailant,” said Heather Fry, a Muskegon mother, domestic abuse survivor and longtime victim’s advocate who has sat with scores of victims in court seeking personal protection orders.

“I’m sorry. We saw what we saw. The video is very damning,” Fry said. “It was a violent act meant to instill fear.”

Kolkema has declined numerous requests for comment, though has addressed the video briefly on his Facebook page, stating:

“I understand that the optics are bad. I understand the anger and disappointment, especially from the people who voted for me and supported me … All of the facts will be revealed in due time,” Kolkema wrote. He was responding to a Facebook commenter who wrote: “We don’t support abusers in my community.”

This frame capture from a video shows Jason Kolkema allegedly whipping his girlfriend with a belt during an argument in his downtown Muskegon apartment,

Spitting. Shoving. Slapping.

On his campaign website, Kolkema portrays himself as a proud Muskegon native and accomplished lawyer who learned “compassion, empathy and the importance of service to the community” from his homemaker mother.

Court and police records tell a different story.

Two days before the belt incident, Kolkema allegedly spit on his girlfriend’s 12-year-old daughter as she slept in his apartment with her mom, despite a court order that prohibited him from being around the girl. He allegedly spewed toothpaste on the girl and her mother, and then threw water on them because he was angry about a previous fight, according to Ottawa County court records. The next day, he allegedly threw a Gatorade bottle at his girlfriend and her daughter but missed and hit a lamp.

Three months earlier, Fruitport police got a call from Kolkema’s girlfriend saying, “my boyfriend just slapped me.” When police arrived, Kolkema told an officer his girlfriend “gets like this when she is drunk … and makes things up.” The girlfriend then recanted and refused to cooperate. No charges were filed.

A billboard for Jason Kolkema sits along Whitehall Road Thursday, Oct. 6, 2022, in North Muskegon.

In 2013, Kolkema’s ex-wife filed a domestic assault complaint with the Fruitport police, alleging that Kolkema shoved her in the back and knocked her to the ground during an argument that occurred while she was picking up her children from his parents’ house. “(She) advised that her daughter was visibly upset and crying, because she had seen Jason act like this in the past,” the police report states. Kolkema was uncooperative, became “defensive” and refused to answer questions without an attorney. No charges were filed due to a lack of witnesses who could “substantiate the alleged assault.”