Morning Sun

Flint water criminal cases moving slowly in court

- By Ed White

A year after unpreceden­ted charges against a former Michigan governor, the Flint water prosecutio­n of Rick Snyder and eight others is moving slowly, bogged down by disputes over millions of documents and even whether some cases were filed in the proper court.

Snyder, a Republican, is charged with willful neglect of duty arising from decisions to switch Flint’s water supply to the Flint River in 2014-15 without treating it to reduce the corrosive effect on aging urban pipes. Lead contaminat­ed the system, a disastrous result in the majority Black community.

Snyder’s name was the biggest in the indictment­s announced by the attorney general’s office in January 2021, although he’s facing misdemeano­rs while other senior members from his administra­tion are dealing with more serious charges.

Indeed, former Michigan health director Nick Lyon is charged with involuntar­y manslaught­er, related to nine Flint-area deaths blamed on Legionnair­es’ disease during the water switch. Some experts have pointed to bacteria in the river water for the outbreak.

Lyon and his lawyers were returning to court Wednesday to argue he didn’t owe a “personal duty” to individual citizens, under Michigan law, and that his case should be dismissed.

“Mr. Lyon was a public administra­tor, not a health expert, and scores of qualified individual­s at the state and local levels were investigat­ing and responding to the outbreak at his direction,” lawyers said in a court filing.

Prosecutor­s insist Lyon can be held criminally responsibl­e because he knew about a rise in Legionnair­es’ cases long before it was publicly announced and he could have done more. Dr. Eden Wells, who was Michigan’s chief medical executive, faces the same charges.

A statewide group that represents local health department­s is taking Lyon’s side, although Judge Elizabeth Kelly turned down a request to add its voice to the case.

“Inventing criminal responsibi­lity for public officials” will discourage people from serving in government, the group said, not make the public safer.

Snyder, who led the state for eight years until 2019, is the first current or former Michigan governor to be charged with crimes related to their time in office.

He has acknowledg­ed that the Flint water switch, pushed by city managers whom he appointed, and subsequent lead contaminat­ion were tragic, but he has denied any personal wrongdoing.

Snyder’s legal team has attacked the case on several fronts, starting with location. Defense attorneys claim he can’t be charged in a Flint court with neglect of duty when Snyder worked miles away in Ingham County. That argument so far has failed, though an appeal is pending.

Prosecutor­s, meanwhile, have lost key court decisions involving documents that were seized from state offices during the investigat­ion.

Search warrants apparently swept up records that include confidenti­al communicat­ions involving lawyers during the Snyder administra­tion, including Flint water issues and even the Detroit bankruptcy.

Kelly recently ordered the attorney general’s office to set up an independen­t team to comb through records that could violate attorney-client privilege. Assistant Attorney General Christophe­r Kessel warned that it could cost $48 million and take a few years.

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