After a months-long dispute over control of federal anti-racketeering money, the Pima County Board of Supervisors voted to retain outside counsel to review all future requests from county attorneyβs requests for funds from an anti-racketeering fund.
The decision Tuesday essentially means that Pima County Attorney Barbara LaWall no longer has the ability to solely make decisions regarding her officeβs use of anti-racketeering funds, according to Supervisor Sharon Bronson.
A recent change in state law says the board must review and approve the county attorneyβs requests from the fund, but LaWall previously had the ability to approve requests for her office.
Now, the outside counsel will review the request and make a recommendation to the board as to whether it should approve or deny the funding request. Until Tuesday, Chief Civil Deputy Andrew Flagg acted as counsel for the board, which supervisors say is a conflict of interest, since heβs employed by LaWall.
The boardβs vote came days after LaWall refused to provide information justifying her decision to send 10 members of her officeβs Victim Services Division to Las Vegas to assist victims of the Oct. 1 mass shooting.
On Oct. 11, LaWall requested funds from the county attorneyβs Anti-Racketeering Revolving Fund and told the board the Nevada Attorney Generalβs Office had requested assistance from her office, according to a memo from Pima County Supervisor Chuck Huckelberry.
The money in the account comes from funds seized from individuals accused of crimes under the Racketeer Influence Corruption Organization act, known as RICO, and is meant to be used by for crime-fighting and crime-prevention purposes.
After staffers returned from the trip, LaWall declined to turn over the letter to supervisors.
While LaWall has now provided the board with the request letter from the Nevada attorney general, Bronson said itβs a moot point since the board has already voted to remove LaWallβs office as their legal counsel for RICO expenditures.
On Oct. 17. Huckelberry recommended the board approve the request to use the RICO funds, subject to βitemization of all expensesβ and additional information from LaWall, and the item passed.
On Oct. 30, LaWall sent a memo to Chief Deputy Pima County Administrator Jan Lesher, saying that while the board requested information relating to LaWallβs decision to send the Victim Services staff to assist in Las Vegas, she βrespectfullyβ declined the request to provide information.
In the memo, LaWall said the information the board was asking for is related to her judgments and decisions, βwhich are not subject to board review.β
LaWall attached a memo from Flagg, who also acts as counsel for the supervisors, saying, βThe boardβs authority is limited to determining whether the requested expenditure is authorized by state or federal law.β
The boardβs authority, he said, does not extend to βquestioning the wisdom or necessityβ of the proposed expenditure.
βThe board ... exceeded its authority in requesting and explanation of necessity and documentation regarding the Nevada Attorney Generalβs request for (the county attorneyβs) assistance,β Flagg wrote in the memo.
Days later, Huckelberry sent a memo in response, disagreeing with LaWallβs decision to refuse to share the Nevada AGβs request.
During Tuesdayβs meeting, the board decided to retain outside counsel and is seeking the assistance of J. Arthur Eaves, who has worked with the Maricopa County supervisors for oversight of anti-racketeering expenditures.
Huckelberry recommended that supervisors retain Eaves on a case-by-case basis to review whether the request for RICO funds falls into permissible use.
Although LaWall refused the supervisorsβ request to share documentation of the Nevada request for assistance, days after her refusal, a letter from the attorney general, thanking her for the help, was posted to the county attorneyβs Facebook page, Supervisor Ally Miller pointed out.
βWithholding the information from the Nevada attorney general is really flying in the face of transparency,β Miller said, pointing out that Flagg represents both the county attorney and advises the board, which she said is a conflict of interest.
She also suggested the outside counsel review LaWallβs Oct. 30 memo, in which she refused to justify her decision to send staffers to Las Vegas, saying supervisors deserve documentation for the expense.
LaWallβs memo, Bronson said, essentially claims privilege.
βI donβt understand how this is privileged. We are just asking for facts,β she said. βI think she waived that privilege.
βBecause she canβt have it both ways and tell us that she wonβt disclose and brag about it on Facebook.β
The motion to authorize Huckelberry to hire outside counsel unanimously passed Tuesday. LaWall did not respond to the Starβs request for comment.
On Wednesday, Bronson told the Star she believes that Flagg giving the board legal advice is a conflict of interest, as LaWall is his boss.
βThis whole RICO thing that we are now responsible for, in the end, the buck stops with us,β she said. βIf we donβt get good legal advice or if itβs coming from LaWallβs office, itβs automatically a conflict.β
Bronson also said LaWallβs refusal to produce the Nevada attorney generalβs request letter, noting that the βthank youβ letter was dated the same day as LaWallβs memo refusing to comply with the boardβs request, was βstunning.β
βStunningly bad optics, number one. It alarms me. Iβm concerned,β she said.
The documentation βcertainly lacks any kind of transparency or accountability, in my view,β Bronson said.
βWe still need outside counsel,β she said. βThe ballβs in our court now, and we need some serious, independent oversight.β