found a relevant answer at http://www.astro.umd.edu/~miller/teaching/questions/blackholes.html
“black holes can have a charge if they eat up too many protons and not enough electrons (or vice versa). But in practice this is very unusual, since these charges tend to be so evenly balanced in the universe. And then even if the black hole somehow picked up a charge, it would soon be neutralized by producing a strong electric field in the surrounding space and sucking up any nearby charges to compensate. These charged black holes are called “Reissner-Nordstrom black holes” or “Kerr-Newman black holes” if they also happen to be spinning.” -Jeremy Schnittman
found a relevant answer at http://www.astro.umd.edu/~miller/teaching/questions/blackholes.html “black holes can have a charge if they eat up too many protons and not enough electrons (or vice versa). But in practice this is very unusual, since these charges tend to be so evenly balanced in the universe. And then even if the black hole somehow picked up a charge, it would soon be neutralized by producing a strong electric field in the surrounding space and sucking up any nearby charges to compensate. These charged black holes are called “Reissner-Nordstrom black holes” or “Kerr-Newman black holes” if they also happen to be spinning.” -Jeremy Schnittman