The Phoenix New Times News Blog

County Attorney Andrew Thomas jeopardizes Serial Shooter case, claims Gerald Richard

Thu Apr 17, 2008 at 12:37:47 PM

By Michael Lacey

For an update on this story, read Feathered Bastard.

County Attorney Andrew Thomas must personally appear in court tomorrow to explain why he jeopardized the case against two notorious serial killers. The prosecutor authorized a wiretap of the suspects without a judge's signature.

This isn't the first time Thomas has ignored due process said Gerald Richard, former legal adviser to the Phoenix Police Department who is currently running for Thomas' seat. But the serial killer case may now unravel despite a confession by one of the perps.


todaysmall.jpg

Gerald Richard


Before you dismiss this as campaign posturing by Richard, let me tell you a little something about someone I regard as a stand-up guy, someone who had a ringside seat to the horrifying serial shooter case.

Richard swung by New Times this morning to renew our acquaintance. I first met him in the early '90s. As legal adviser to the cops, he usually had an opposing view of the violence I covered in gang related articles. He never gave an inch when it came to defending a cop.

And as the in-house lawyer in charge of legal oversight of the police department's special team assigned to nail "Serial Shooter" suspects Dale Hausner and Sam Dieteman, Richard, in particular, wanted the killers off the streets and an end to the terror that gripped the Valley over 14 long months in 2005 and 2006.

"We were the ones watching these guys," said Richard of the police. You don't undermine a case like this with shortcuts. "You dot all the i's, cross all the t's."

Instead, Thomas opted for expediency and invoked an emergency statute that allowed the prosecutor to authorize a wiretap without a judge.

The police requested the wiretap. But according to Ken Everett, an attorney representing the shooters, one of Thomas' prosecutors suggested everyone could ignore going to a judge, cite an emergency, and worry about constitutional safeguards later.

Thomas was only too happy to invoke ARS-13-3015.

But Everett asks what judge would have refused to sign a wiretap order at whatever hour of the day if presented with actual evidence about the Serial Shooter case.

According to Everett, the evidence obtained with the wiretap proved critical.

And County Attorney Thomas, who fought in vain against disclosing his role in this sad mess, now brags that he will be happy to discuss under oath his role in nailing the "Serial Shooters."

Unlike County Attorney Thomas, Richard has actually prosecuted felony cases.

"I always told the jury that I represented the state of Arizona, and that included the defendant and the defendant's rights," said Richard.

He is that rare bird that believes in hard time, in the officers that make the cases, and in the civil rights of all caught up in the process. The words are not mere rhetoric to Richard.

After leaving the County Attorney's office, Richard became the Phoenix cop shop's mouthpiece. In that capacity he not only defended policemen, he established 11 distinct citizen advisory boards for gays, blacks, Jews, Muslims, Hispanics and other groups who are both the targets of hate crimes and the victims of aggressive policing. Far from perfect, these boards nonetheless gave meaning to the term 'human rights' in local law enforcement.

Richard had the credibility to establish this sort of outreach into the community without appearing to be a bleeding heart to either patrolmen or detectives. His gang prosecutions had salt; a street banger he put away took out a contract on Richard's life.

Richard is alarmed at the pattern of short cuts taken at the expense of civil liberties he see with Thomas.

"He has virtually eliminated preliminary hearings," noted Richard. "A judge no longer determines probable cause. You are offered a plea agreement and if you decline, you go to a grand jury."

And as readers of this paper well know, County Attorney Andrew Thomas has operated an illegal grand jury proceeding since assuming office, a scandal unearthed when the prosecutor arrested me and my partner, Jim Larkin over our published expose of Thomas' office. After Thomas called a hasty press conference to drop the case against us, Judge Anna Baca ruled that the prosecutor had violated state grand jury statutes.

When Gerald Richard warns that his opponent, incumbent County Attorney Andrew Thomas, has needlessly put the prosecution of the "Serial Shooter" at risk, you need to listen.

With eight dead bodies and 17 others wounded, the courts may yet determine that what Thomas did in executing a search warrant without a judge's signature did not break the law.

"It might be legal," observed Richard, "but it's not right."

Category: News

19 Comments:

Dru says:

Gerald Richard sounds like he'll be good for business. Better than Candyass at least....

D.J. Racist Ryke says:

And May The Force Be With Gerald Richards.

No One Is Above The Law!!

Time To Defeat The Darkside!!

Saban and Richards together will end tyranny!!

For Freedom!!

Phoenix Registered Voter says:

The sooner A.Thomas and J.Arpaio are gone, Phoenix can return to normal. Right now it is a complete mess with these two clowns in office. Saban and Richards are change that is badly needed for Phoenix, and ALL of AZ.

CooperG says:

What a concept: law enforcement officials who believe they represent everyone. I'm sure that thought never crossed Thomas' smug mind.

We do need a two-fer, though. Get rid of Arpaio and Thomas...that will be a day of celebration.

Coz says:

Saban and Richards, a choice that will bring back honesty & integrity and ethic's back to MCSO and the CA's office's.

They both have my families votes !

jimijim says:

I'm so sick of the politics. I'm ready to vote for my neighbor's 3 year old kid, just for some needed change.

Concerned Citizen says:

THIS SAYS ALOT:
"Unlike County Attorney Thomas, Richard has actually prosecuted felony cases."

Yet Thomas brags about 40,000 felonies in one year? How many of those convicted may be innocent or over-sentenced or coerced into a plea? This represents thousands of people who have lost a voice and their right to vote!

Anyone who is processing people through the broken criminal justice system and throwing them into the jails and prisons, ruining lives and destroying families needs to spend a minimum of one month in jail and state prison as part of a reality check. This should be part of CEU job training like all other professionals have to do. When this happens then we will see real reform. Until then, those who profit by the criminal justice system and the mass industrial prison complex that the State of Arizona has become, will keep on putting people like andy thomas in office. The profiteers and career politicians make money off poorly written policies and incompetence.

It's time for change. We'll all VOTE FOR GERALD RICHARD FOR COUNTY ATTORNEY AND DAN SABAN FOR SHERIFF.

Vigilant in AZ says:

GERALD RICHARD STANDS OUT LIKE A LEADER WHO IS NOT AFRAID TO SPEAK UP AND LET THE PUBLIC UNDERSTAND WHAT THE JOB OF COUNTY ATTORNEY SHOULD BE!

GERALD RICHARD HAS MY VOTE!

Thank you Mike Lacey for this outstanding article about someone who can lead and speak up.

Kochise says:

Concerned Citizen--actually, they're have been cases where innocents have been wrongfully imprisoned under the darkness of Andrew Thomas`s reign. Based upon recollective memory, the Feathered Bastard did wrote a piece a couple months back, on one case involving a mother who was completely innocent and falsely accused of child endangerment or neglect. Thomas`s refusal to acknowledge her innocence and kept a tight lip about it, for political reasons obviously. Just one of many mistakes these corruptors bypassed....

"WOMEN BEHIND BARS" University of AZ 4/25 says:

Kochise -- now that you've mentioned innocent moms in prison, this might be of interest to you and others.

Arizona women need to come forward for your sisters and know what is being done to women in your state, you could be next -- you are one family incident away from the government taking over your children and your life:

Award-winning independent journalist Silja Talvi is coming to Tucson to call attention to the hard circumstances facing incarcerated women. Her book, Women Behind Bars: The Crisis of Women in the U.S. Prison System, exposes the alarming trend of abuse and injustice in our current system. At a time of skyrocketing imprisonment rates and ever more disruptive consequences, Talvi’s work makes a comprehensive, convincing argument for reform.

You will have TWO chances to hear Silja Talvi speak on Friday, April 25th:
A lunchtime event (12-1pm ) at the University of Arizona Women’s Studies Building, 1443 E. 1st St (between Highland and Cherry) from. You are welcome to bring your own lunch to this event.

The evening event is at the Friend’s Meeting House at 931 N. 5th Ave (between 1st and 2nd Ave.) from 7-9pm.

Both are free and open to the public. Please call (520) 623-9141 or email jcdavis@afsc.org for more information.

Yes, this is the long-awaited rescheduling of Silja’s talk, originally planned for February 2008.

This event is being presented by the American Friends Service Committee and is co-sponsored by the ASUA Women's Resource Center and the Primavera Foundation.

www.justice4courtney.com says:

Kochise -- you mentioned about an innocent mom sitting in prison -- well, this is one innocent mom sitting in prison and with Mother's Day approaching, this tragic story gets sadder. Those is power have little regard for mothers, children and women in general.

Visit her website: justice4courtney

and others

courtney bisbee innocent

justice denied courtney bisbee

truth in justice courtney bisbee

Hope on the horizon says:

"Hope on the horizon for wrongly convicted" for Courtney Bisbee by Linda Bentley, Sonoran News April 16-22, 2008 print edition, Front page story.

"The American Bar Association (ABA) Standards Relating to the Administration of Criminal Justice says PROSECUTORS HAVE A DUTY TO SEEK JUSTICE NOT MERELY TO CONVICT."

"Despite affidavits submitted to the Maricopa County Attorney's Office over a year ago, including one from the accuser's older brother recanting his testimony, citing he was coerced into going along with a story he claims was fabricated by his mother in a sue-to-get-rich scheme, Bisbee remains incarcerated at the Perryville Women's Prison."

And if the evidence is clear and convincing the prosecutor must seek to remedy the conviction."

WE ARE STILL WAITING FOR COUNTY ATTORNEY ANDREW THOMAS TO RESPOND TO THE MANY CALLS, FAXES AND LETTERS THAT HAVE BEEN SENT TO HIM FOR OVER A YEAR.

Vigilant in Maricopa County says:

Unethical or incompetent? That's the question about County Attorney Thomas handling of the wiretapping? If he is allowed to do this then we are all at risk!

Vigilant in Maricopa County says:

An excellent article by Jill Redhage, Tribune on County Attorney Andrew Thomas written over a year ago
February 18, 2007 -- and his cost to the taxpayers and the average person thrown into the AZ criminal justice system. There is no justice.... and the average person can no longer afford to defend themselves.

COUNTY ATTORNEY GETS TOUGH; DEFENDERS GET RICH!

Business for Valley defense attorneys is booming.

Maricopa County Attorney Andrew Thomas has been cracking down on criminals since 2004, and public defenders have scrambled to keep up as prison populations have swelled.

“When Thomas came in, caseloads started going up much more,” said Tempe defense attorney David Cantor.
He said the trend started with former Maricopa County Attorney Rick Romley, but attorneys saw a distinct caseload change with Thomas.

The number of criminal cases filed in Maricopa County Superior Court has risen every year since at least 2001. County prosecutors filed more than 28,000 criminal cases in fiscal year 2000-01. In fiscal year 2005-06, that number exceeded 39,000.

In the wake, some defense attorneys are gaining clients. Others have kept their workloads constant but charge higher fees for their services.

“We charge 50 percent higher fees because we have to go to trial, and trials are expensive,” said Larry Debus, a Phoenix defense attorney.

Debus said his firm grows about 20 percent each year.
“We get more and more business all the time,” he said. “We get more today because when more cases go to trial, more defendants want private attorneys.”

TRIALS ON THE RISE

Defense attorneys blame prosecutors’ undesirable plea agreements for what they feel is a rise in the number of cases going to trial.

“They’re overcharging for felonies that should be misdemeanors,” Cantor said. “Then they plea to the lead charge, but their lead charge is too stiff. This means everything goes to trial.”

Michael Freeman, an attorney with Wolf & Associates, agreed. “Charges are more serious than they were two years ago for the same type of crimes,” he said. “For example, cases that should be charged as simple possession of drugs, or personal possession, are now being charged as possession for sale with a possible mandatory prison sentence.”

In November, Thomas said that for second offenses, he would only approve plea deals requiring a prison sentence. He estimated that would mean an additional 2,600 prison inmates each year, which would cost taxpayers an additional $53 million.

Tempe defense attorney Craig Penrod said more felony DUI cases are going to trial that should be settled with plea deals.

Penrod also said he saw prosecutors charge a man who sexually assaulted an infant the same way they charged stepsiblings who had consensual sex, because of Thomas’ “rote plea agreements.”

Another difficulty is that deadlines for plea agreements have been shorter recently, according to Mesa defense attorney Anthony Bingham.

But statistics indicate that the perceived rise in trials may be imagined.

In fiscal year 2000-01, 825 cases went to trial. That figure was 817 in fiscal year 2005-06, according to the Maricopa County Superior Court.

Prosecutors acknowledged that defendants are having to plea to harsher sentences.

“We offer plea agreements that we feel are fair, taking into account the defendant’s background, prior convictions, victim’s rights and the evidence,” said Barnett Lotstein, spokesman for the county attorney. “But we have no obligation to offer plea agreements.”

BUSY PUBLIC DEFENDERS

Freeman said he can control his caseload as a private attorney, and he hasn’t taken on more cases in recent years.

But he has had more opportunities, he said, “thanks to Mr. Thomas literally swamping all the public defender and court-appointed attorneys by the number of cases that he’s filing.”

Annual reports from the Maricopa County Public Defender’s Office show its caseload rising from 36,637 cases in 2001 to 46,315 in 2005.

By 2005, the office’s caseload warranted more than 286 attorneys, according to industry standards. But the office employed fewer than 234 attorneys, the annual report showed.

“Public defenders for the most part do a great job,” Debus said. “But they have 10 times as many cases as private attorneys. Public defenders have 50 to 100 cases at any given time. I do probably 20 cases in a year.”

Maricopa County Public Defender James Haas’ office did not return calls for comment.

COST OF JUSTICE

More cases mean more prisoners.

The state’s prison population is now almost 35,000. About 60 percent are from the Valley, according to the Council of State Governments Justice System, a nonpartisan organization.

That number could grow by 52 percent to reach 56,660 by 2017, the organization reports, meaning an extra $3 billion for taxpayers.

Jim Austin, a prison system expert, said the state’s gettough attitude on all types of crime, including low-level offenses, is one cause for the rise. He also cited longer sentences.

“Criminal justice is not cost effective,” Lotstein explained. If decisions were made according to cost, he said they’d buy a new car for a victim of car theft instead of prosecute the case.

“It’s really a red herring to think that we should forgo justice to save money. The first priority of the justice system is to protect citizens. What is the cost to the public if a burglar is let back on the streets?” Lotstein asked.
Most defense attorneys don’t thank Thomas for making them richer.

“I would prefer to make less money and have more justice,” said Marc Victor, a Chandler defense attorney and criminal law specialist. Victor said he can charge $15,000 for work that his brother, a defense attorney in Massachusetts, can only charge $2,500.

“Andrew Thomas has been good for business, but bad for justice,” Victor said.

Debus framed the situation differently. “I say he’s a great county attorney,” he said. “We charge higher fees and we get to go to trial more, which is what we do best.”

Coz says:

Don't hold your breath....
The current County Attorneys office could care less about justice.

>>PROSECUTORS HAVE A DUTY TO SEEK JUSTICE NOT MERELY TO CONVICT."

Seeking Justice in Arizona says:

Coz -- that's exactly why we need a change. We will be voting for:

GERALD RICHARD FOR COUNTY ATTORNEY

DAN SABAN FOR SHERIFF

Change can't come soon enough!!

Where's the AZ Bar in all this? says:

On the lawyer comments above - I thought Debus specialized in plea bargains! When has he even won at trial?

Jake says:

I still like Thomas and Arpaio and I will still vote for them! Courageous leaders such as these are protecting us from evil and keeping the rule of law no matter what you fools say.

Concerned Taxpayer says:

Jake you may like the lawless twosome, Joe and his side-kick, but you obviously aren't following their trail of abuse of power and rights violations. Their hateful tactics and rhetoric are inciting more evil, not less. They are chasing down vulnerable people not violent criminals, while dividing the community and putting the public at risk.

Ignorance is bliss and there are too many of you in the state of Arizona -- Thomas and Arpaio count on that!

This election, we'll flip the switch and Vote for true professionals:
GERALD RICHARD FOR COUNTY ATTORNEY AND
DAN SABAN FOR SHERIFF.

Post a comment

Comments may not show up immediately after submission. Please wait a minute after posting a comment for it to appear.




Phoenix New Times Insiders

  • Local food, music and news blasts
  • Free Stuff