East Bay Times

Court tosses Flint water charges against ex-governor, others

- By Ed White

The Michigan Supreme Court on Tuesday threw out charges against former Gov. Rick Snyder and others in the Flint water scandal, saying a judge sitting as a one-person grand jury had no power to issue indictment­s under rarely used state laws.

It's an astonishin­g defeat for Attorney General Dana Nessel, who took office in 2019, got rid of a special prosecutor and put together a new team to investigat­e whether crimes were committed when lead contaminat­ed Flint's water system in 2014-15.

State laws “authorize a judge to investigat­e, subpoena witnesses, and issue arrest warrants” as a grand juror, the Supreme Court said.

“But they do not authorize the judge to issue indictment­s,” the court said in a 6-0 opinion written by Chief Justice Bridget McCormack.

She called it a “Star Chamber comeback,” a pejorative reference to an oppressive, closed-door style of justice in England in the 17th century.

The challenge was filed by lawyers for former health director Nick Lyon, but the decision also applies to Snyder and others who were indicted. The cases now will return to Genesee County court with requests for dismissal.

“This wasn't even a close case — it was six-zip . ... They couldn't do what they tried to do,” said Lyon attorney Chip Chamberlai­n.

Snyder's legal team described the court's opinion as “unequivoca­l and scathing.”

“These prosecutio­ns of Governor Snyder and the other defendants were never about seeking justice for the citizens of Flint,” Snyder's lawyers said. “Rather, Attorney

General Nessel and her political appointee Solicitor General Fadwa Hammoud staged a self-interested, vindictive, wasteful and politicall­y motivated prosecutio­n.”

Hammoud, however, released a statement, insisting the cases weren't over. There was no immediate response to a request for additional comment.

“The Flint water crisis stands as one of this country's greatest betrayals of citizens by their government,” she said.

The saga began in 2014 when Flint managers appointed by Snyder dropped out of a regional water system and began using the Flint River to save money while a new pipeline to Lake Huron was under constructi­on. State regulators insisted the river water didn't need to be treated to reduce its corrosive qualities. But that was a ruinous decision: Lead released from old pipes flowed for 18 months in the majority-Black city.

The Michigan Civil Rights Commission said it was the result of systemic racism, doubting that the water switch and the brush-off of complaints would have occurred in a white, prosperous community.

Snyder, a Republican, has long acknowledg­ed that his administra­tion failed in Flint, calling it a crisis born from a “breakdown in state government.”

Prosecutor­s in Michigan typically file charges after a police investigat­ion. A one-judge grand jury is extremely rare and is mostly used to protect witnesses, especially in violent crimes, who can testify in private.

“It seems that the power of a judge conducting an inquiry to issue an indictment was simply an unchalleng­ed assumption, until now,” the Supreme Court said Tuesday.

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