Background
Ken Ard was born in Pamplico, South Carolina. The son of Jimmy and Margie Ard, Ken graduated Hannah-Pamplico High School and later attended Wofford College in Spartanburg, South Carolina.
Ken Ard was born in Pamplico, South Carolina. The son of Jimmy and Margie Ard, Ken graduated Hannah-Pamplico High School and later attended Wofford College in Spartanburg, South Carolina.
He began working for the family business, Double A Body Builders, while still in high school. The company designs, manufactures and installs custom-built truck bodies. Under their management, the company expanded considerably over the next decade.
lieutenant grew to employ over 100 people, and is now one of the largest of its kind in the Southeastern United States.
Ard was elected to the Florence County Council in 2004.
While there, he focused on fiscal issues and was instrumental in implementing several notable budgetary reforms. He was also active in gaining state funding for much-needed road improvements in Florence County.
Drawing on his business experience, he made the recruitment of major industries to Florence County a central concern. While on the council, Ken worked tirelessly to attract companies like H.J. Heinz Company, Johnson Controls, Monster.com and The Quality, Value, Convenience Network to the area, stimulating considerable economic growth throughout the county.
Also during this time, Florence County was named one of the top five most business-friendly counties in the nation by Site Selection magazine, a national publication covering corporate real estate strategy and area economic development.
He was elected chairman of the Florence County Republican Party in 2009. South Carolina"s previous lieutenant governor, Andre Bauer, ran for governor in 2010, leaving an open race for lieutenant governor. Ard finished first against three other candidates in the Republican primary and ultimately emerged victorious as the Republican nominee for lieutenant governor.
In the general election, Ard faced Democrat Ashley Cooper.
As Lieutenant Governor, he served as President of the South Carolina Senate and oversaw South Carolina" General’ s Office on Aging. In February 2011, reports surfaced that the State Ethics Commission was pursuing an investigation into Ard"s campaign expenditures between the 2010 election and his inauguration the following January.
According to reports, Ard"s campaign purchases included nearly $800 at a woman"s fashion boutique and the paying of a hotel bill in Atlanta at the time the University of Southern California Gamecocks were playing in a Southeastern Conference game there. Ard reportedly also spent over $1000 of campaign funds on meals, coffee, and a birthday dinner for himself.
Currently, Ard is facing 92 ethics charges of which 69 are related to converting campaign funds for personal use and 23 charges of failing to disclose spending.
He submitted his resignation on March 9, 2012. He pled guilty to seven charges related to his ethics violations.