Nalley, 72, pleaded guilty earlier this year to a civil rights violation for ordering a deputy to activate a "stun-cuff" that a defendant appearing before him was wearing around his ankle.
The defendant, who was acting as his own lawyer, was before Nalley in July 2014 for jury selection and had failed to listen to Nalley's orders to stop speaking.
Nalley acknowledged as part of a plea deal "that the use of the stun cuff was objectively unreasonable under the circumstances," and both prosecutors and Nalley's lawyer agreed to recommend a sentence of one year on probation.
Kingali, 27, who is also referred to in court records as Delvon King, called Nalley's actions "torture" and a "very dehumanizing experience" and walked out of the courtroom before Nalley was sentenced.
In 2010, he pleaded guilty to tampering with a vehicle after he deflated the tire of a cleaning woman's car that was parked in a restricted zone at the courthouse.