- Associated Press - Tuesday, April 10, 2012

PHOENIX (AP) — An Arizona ethics panel on Tuesday moved to disbar Maricopa County’s former top prosecutor for failed corruption investigations he and America’s self-proclaimed toughest sheriff conducted, targeting officials with whom they were having political and legal disputes.

The three-member panel found that former County Attorney Andrew Thomas violated the professional rules of conduct for lawyers in bringing criminal charges against two county officials and a judge in December 2009.

All three cases were dismissed after a judge ruled that Mr. Thomas prosecuted one of the officials for political gain and had a conflict of interest in pressing the case. Other county officials and judges who were at odds with Mr. Thomas and his top ally, Sheriff Joe Arpaio, in disputes also were investigated by the pair but weren’t charged with crimes.

Lawyers pressing the case against Mr. Thomas said officials, judges and attorneys who crossed Mr. Thomas and Sheriff Arpaio in disputes often were targeted for investigations.

Mr. Thomas and Sheriff Arpaio contended they were trying to root out corruption in county government, while the targets of the prosecutions said the cases were trumped up.

The decision marked the first official comment by the state’s legal establishment on the validity of the investigations.

Sheriff Arpaio does not face any punishments in the disciplinary case, but investigations of county officials and judges by the sheriff’s anti-public-corruption squad took center stage at hearings in the Thomas case.

Separate from the attorney disciplinary case, a federal grand jury also has been investigating Sheriff Arpaio’s office on criminal abuse-of-power allegations since at least December 2009 and specifically is examining the investigative work of the sheriff’s anti-public-corruption squad.

At Mr. Thomas’ disciplinary hearing, the sheriff testified in September that he didn’t follow the investigations closely and farmed out those cases to his then-top assistant. The former Arpaio aide testified earlier that some allegations contained in the charges against the judge weren’t in fact crimes.

Mr. Thomas was accused of bringing criminal cases against County Supervisors Don Stapley and Mary Rose Wilcox to embarrass them and filed bribery and obstruction of justice charges against then-Superior Court Judge Gary Donahoe when Mr. Thomas knew the allegations were false.

Lawyers pressing the case against Mr. Thomas also said the charges against Mr. Stapley were barred by the statute of limitations.

Judge Donahoe was charged with bribery after the judge disqualified Mr. Thomas’ office from its investigation into a construction of a court building. The judge was about to hold a hearing on Mr. Thomas’ request to appoint special prosecutors to handle investigations against the officials, but that hearing was called off after the charges were filed against the judge.

Mr. Thomas said the decision to charge the judge had nothing to do with the decisions the judge issued against his office.

During his testimony, Mr. Thomas defended the investigations and said one of his aides had warned that charging Mr. Stapley would hurt him politically, but he brought the charges against the county supervisor because it was the right thing to do.

Mr. Stapley was accused, among other things, of getting mortgage loans under fraudulent pretenses. Ms. Wilcox was accused of voting on contracts involving a group that had given her loans and never filing conflict-of-interest statements.

Mr. Thomas, a Harvard Law School graduate, served as the county’s top prosecutor from more than five years before resigning in April 2010 to run an unsuccessful campaign for state attorney general.

Mr. Thomas was known for confronting illegal immigration, prosecuting metropolitan Phoenix’s “Baseline Killer” and “Serial Shooter” cases and pursuing criminal cases against county officials.

Copyright © 2024 The Washington Times, LLC.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.

Click to Read More and View Comments

Click to Hide