The state of Arizona is still paying the legal bills of a former UA track and field coach found guilty of assaulting a student-athlete, even though his conviction provides the state with an out.
A Pima County jury convicted Craig Carter, 50, Friday of choking former University of Arizona thrower Baillie Gibson while threatening her with a box cutter.
While Carter was responsible for paying for his own criminal defense, the state has been paying for his defense in a civil lawsuit filed by Gibson against Carter and the UA. In the suit, Gibson β who was engaged in a sexual relationship with Carter β said she had no ability to consent to having sex with her coach. She said the UA failed to protect her from repeated rapes.
Arizona law requires the government to pay for the defense of an employee being sued for behavior that occurred while acting within in the scope of his or her job. Carterβs conviction, however, means he was acting outside of that scope and the state could be off the hook for his legal fees.
As of Feb. 28, the state has paid $885,717 to Carterβs attorney, John Munger. Gibson filed the lawsuit in November 2015.
A spokeswoman from the Arizona Department of Administration told the Star in January that it was paying for Carterβs defense βsubject to a reservation of its rights to withdraw the defense and/or not indemnify himβ if heβs convicted.
On Monday, the same spokeswoman was not able to tell the Star if the state planned to withdraw its defense in light of Fridayβs conviction.
Legal fees in the case have eclipsed the $1 million mark, with private attorneys for the UA having billed an additional $152,134 since their hiring in November. The UA was previously represented by the Arizona Attorney Generalβs Office.
Carter is still facing six additional felony charges in two open cases, but itβs unclear if the Pima County Attorneyβs office plans to pursue them.
βWe still have multiple charges pending in which Baillie Gibson is a victim,β said Pima County prosecutor Jonathan Mosher, who tried Carterβs case last week. βThereβs also a separate case with another victim.β
In February, Judge Teresa Godoy severed the charges in Carterβs assault case involving Gibson. As a result, heβs still facing felony charges of stalking, in connection with dozens of text messages, phone calls and emails directed at Gibson following the assault. In the same case, heβs also facing charges of disrupting an educational institution, after he tried to drag Gibson out of a UA classroom a week after the assault.
In January 2016, Carter was indicted in a separate case on four felony charges of violating a restraining order, after he tried to contact Gibsonβs former roommate via Skype and Facebook.
Carter is scheduled to be sentenced May 14. Heβs facing a minimum of five years in prison but could spend up to 23 years, should Godoy schedule the sentences consecutively and give him the maximum time allowed for each charge.