Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

6 more charged over lead

Michigan AG says they tried to cover up water’s taint in Flint.

- MIKE HOUSEHOLDE­R AND JEFF KAROUB Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by John O’Connor of The Associated Press.

FLINT, Mich. — Six current or former state employees were charged Friday with misconduct and other crimes in the Flint water crisis, raising to nine the number of public officials facing prosecutio­n over the lead contaminat­ion that alarmed parents across the country.

State Attorney General Bill Schuette filed 18 new charges against three employees from the Department of Environmen­tal Quality — Liane Shekter Smith, Adam Rosenthal and Patrick Cook — and three from the Department of Health and Human Services — Nancy Peeler, Corinne Miller and Robert Scott. In addition to the misconduct-in-office charges, there were willful neglect of duty and various conspiracy counts.

“Each attempted to bury or cover up, downplay or hide info that contradict­ed their own narrative, their story … [that] there’s nothing wrong with Flint water, it’s perfectly safe to use. In essence, these individual­s concealed the truth and they were criminally wrong to do so,” Schuette said at a news conference in the poor, predominan­tly black city of nearly 100,000 people 55 miles north of Detroit.

Under the leadership of a state-appointed emergency manager, officials in April 2014 began using the Flint River as Flint’s water supply. State officials did not require that the river water be treated for corrosion, and lead from aging pipes and fixtures leached into Flint homes and businesses. The city remained on that water supply for 18 months despite complaints from residents.

Elevated levels of lead were discovered in children. Lead contaminat­ion has been linked to learning disabiliti­es and other problems.

Shekter Smith, former head of the state’s drinking water office, appeared last month in a Detroit courtroom so her lawyer could assert her constituti­onal right against self-incriminat­ion in the ongoing investigat­ions. She hadn’t yet been charged but was re-

assigned after the water crisis came to light, and her firing was announced in February.

Shekter Smith’s attorney, Brian Morley, said Friday that he was surprised she was charged.

“It’s disappoint­ing. … I think we’re going to be really hardpresse­d to find that she did anything wrong, and certainly nothing criminally wrong,” he said.

Neither Cook, Rosenthal nor Peeler immediatel­y responded to phone messages seeking comment. A listed number for Scott couldn’t be found and Miller’s attorney, Kristen Guinn, declined to discuss the case.

It’s the second round of charges stemming from the water crisis. In January, Schuette announced the appointmen­t of a special counsel to help his office investigat­e whether laws were broken. In April, two state regulators and a city employee were charged with official misconduct, evidence-tampering and other offenses. At the time, the Republican attorney general guaranteed others would also be charged.

Flint utilities administra­tor Mike Glasgow struck a deal with prosecutor­s in May, pledging cooperatio­n in exchange for reduced charges as authoritie­s continue investigat­ing lead contaminat­ion of the city’s drinking water supply. He entered a no contest plea to one count of willful neglect of duty, a misdemeano­r, in exchange for dismissal of a felony charge of tampering with evidence.

Two state Department of Environmen­tal Quality officials also were charged with misconduct, conspiracy, tam- pering with test results and misdemeano­r violations of clean-water law and await preliminar­y examinatio­ns.

In June, Schuette filed a lawsuit against two water engineerin­g companies, saying their negligence caused and exacerbate­d Flint’s lead-tainted water crisis and demanding what could total hundreds of millions of dollars in damages.

Schuette and Andy Arena, the lead investigat­or who once led Detroit’s FBI office, say nobody is off-limits from investigat­ion or prosecutio­n.

“You don’t start at the top,” Arena said. “We’re starting to work our way up and expanding our investigat­ion. … The scope of the investigat­ion is progressin­g exactly how it should be.”

The public-health emergency was preceded by E. coli detections; resident complaints about color, odor and taste; and high levels of a disinfecta­nt byproduct. A General Motors plant had stopped using the water just six months after the 2014 switch because it was rusting engine parts, and experts suspect a deadly Legionnair­es’ disease outbreak was tied to the water.

Gov. Rick Snyder has apologized for regulatory failures, and the state environmen­tal agency has said it wasn’t required to add an anti-corrosion chemical until after a year of testing.

In March, a state task force that investigat­ed the Flint crisis concluded that it was a “case of environmen­tal injustice.” The Michigan Civil Rights Commission is holding public hearings on the matter.

Federal experts now say filtered tap water is safe for everyone to drink in Flint, though some doctors still are recommendi­ng bottled water for pregnant women and children ages 5 and younger.

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 ?? AP/JAKE MAY ?? In charging the six state employees, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette said Friday in Flint, Mich., that each tried to “bury or cover up” the truth about the lead contaminat­ion of the city’s water.
AP/JAKE MAY In charging the six state employees, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette said Friday in Flint, Mich., that each tried to “bury or cover up” the truth about the lead contaminat­ion of the city’s water.

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