The arrest of former Clallam County Drug Court Coordinator Johnny Watts during an armed police standoff earlier this week—and his subsequent connection to a massive Kitsap County fentanyl ring—has sparked intense public scrutiny of the Clallam County Superior Court.
How does a man with a highly documented, violent criminal record end up entrusted with authority over vulnerable populations in the local drug courts?
Now, hundreds of pages of newly obtained court documents reveal that the warning signs surrounding Watts were even more recent, more violent, and more complicated than initially known.
Court records obtained by the Olympic Herald from Harris County, Texas, show that Watts was arrested in the summer of 2023 and charged with felony domestic violence.
This incident occurred while he was actively employed by Clallam County’s therapeutic courts. His employment appeared to end shortly after the charges were filed.
The Houston Arrest and The Aftermath
In the early morning hours of July 5, 2023, Watts was arrested in Harris County, Texas. According to the criminal complaint, Watts intentionally caused bodily injury to his wife. Magistrate records specify that Watts was “accused of punching [the complainant] in the eye.”
The charge was immediately elevated to a third-degree felony because of Watts’ prior criminal history.
Texas prosecutors cited his May 6, 2003, conviction in Thurston County, Washington, for Domestic Violence Assault against a household member.
The severity of the incident prompted rapid intervention from the Texas courts:
- Emergency Protection: A magistrate issued an emergency protection order prohibiting Watts from coming within 200 feet of the couple’s shared residence in Port Angeles, Washington.
- Mental Health Flag: On the day of his arrest, a Harris County Hearing Officer filed an “Early Identification of Suspected Mental Illness or Intellectual Disability” order. The court found “credible information that may establish reasonable cause to believe” Watts was a person with mental illness, ordering an immediate clinical interview.
- Strict Bond Conditions: Watts was released on a $10,000 bond, ordered to submit to random urinalysis, and strictly prohibited from possessing a firearm or consuming alcohol and unprescribed drugs.



A Quiet Plea Deal
Despite the severity of the felony allegations and his prior domestic violence conviction, the case was ultimately resolved with a quiet plea bargain.
On March 6, 2024, Watts signed a waiver of a jury trial and pleaded guilty to a reduced Class A Misdemeanor charge of Assault of a Family Member.

A Texas judge accepted the plea, officially entering an affirmative finding of family violence, and sentenced Watts to just six days in the Harris County Jail. Watts was credited with two days served and was issued a formal written admonition barring him from possessing a firearm.

A Crisis of Accountability
The timeline of these Texas charges adds a devastating new layer to the Watts scandal, highlighting a profound failure of oversight within the Clallam County Superior Court system.
Watts’ 2023 arrest occurred while he was actively serving as the Coordinator for Clallam County’s Adult and Juvenile Drug Courts. It appears his employment with Clallam County ended shortly after the Texas incident. However, the exact circumstances of his departure remain shielded from the public.
Did Clallam County court officials immediately suspend him upon learning of the felony arrest and the allegations of punching a family member in the eye? Was he permitted to quietly resign, keeping his violent conduct out of the local spotlight?
More broadly, how was a man with a 2003 domestic violence conviction, severe substance abuse markers, and credible flags for mental instability ever placed in a role requiring the careful, ethical supervision of vulnerable recovering addicts?
The citizens of Clallam County rely on the court system to be the final line of defense for the vulnerable. As the fallout from the recent Kitsap County drug ring bust continues to unfold, the choices made by Clallam County’s judicial leadership suggest that internal loyalties and quiet dismissals have consistently outweighed the public’s right to an ethical, transparent, and accountable judiciary.
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