A family court judge in Kentucky has been suspended with pay over allegations that she had sex with aides and took part in other ethics violations.

Kenton County Judge Dawn Gentry was suspended by the state’s Judicial Conduct Commission on Monday after nine ethics violations were levied against her last month, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer.

“You have engaged in a pattern of conduct that constitutes misconduct in office and violates the Code of Judicial Conduct,” the commission found. “Any of the Counts described below, on their own, constitute sufficient grounds for disciplinary action. But examined as a whole, the allegations in this Notice demonstrate a pattern of misconduct in office.”

One of the allegations was that she asked her case specialist, Meredith Smith, to resign and hired Stephen Penrose, a former church pastor who also played the bass guitar in a band with Gentry called South of Cincy. Investigators found that Gentry gave Penrose $10,000 more per year than Smith.

“You hired Stephen Penrose because you were engaged in a personal relationship with him, not on the basis of merit,” investigators alleged.

Additionally, the report found that Gentry and Penrose had sexual relations with Gentry’s secretary, Laura Aubrey, in the courthouse office during work hours.

Some of the alleged ethics violations involve her 2018 reelection campaign. Gentry, a Republican, was appointed by former Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin in 2016. The Judicial Conduct Commission found that she tried to coerce attorneys on a panel to help abused children into donating the maximum amount of money to her campaign.

She is also accused of appointing an attorney, Delana Sanders, to her panel in exchange for the political support of Sanders’s husband, Kenton County Commonwealth Attorney Rob Sanders.

Investigators claim that when Gentry didn’t get her way, she would retaliate. According to the report, among those facing retaliation, which involved moving hearing dates for their cases, were attorneys who didn’t support her political campaign.

Gentry has denied most of the charges levied against her, including having a three-way inside the courthouse office. The commission can choose how to sanction her with punishments that vary in degree from a reprimand to a removal from office.