New York Daily News

GOP Arizona prosecutor earns praise from both parties, is up for re-elex

- BY TIM BALK With Molly Crane-Newman

Phoenix-area county attorney Rachel Mitchell, caught in a political war of words with Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg over her refusal to extradite an alleged killer to NYC, may be a familiar face to many Americans.

The Maricopa County attorney is a 57-year-old Republican who gained national attention when she was brought in to question Brett Kavanaugh and his sexual assault accuser Christine Blasey Ford during his Supreme Court confirmati­on hearing in 2018.

Mitchell, who has long been focused on sex crimes and crimes against children, became the Maricopa County attorney in 2022.

She has not been viewed as a partisan warrior — and has earned praise from both sides of the aisle — but she is up for reelection, and her campaign platform highlights her record “fighting the Biden Administra­tion.”

Currently, she is in a public tug-of-war with Bragg over the extraditio­n of Raad Almansoori, a 26-year-old accused of killing a reported sex worker in a Manhattan hotel room before fleeing to Arizona, where he is alleged to have assaulted and stabbed a woman in a McDonald’s restaurant in suburban Phoenix.

Mitchell has said she will not immediatel­y extradite Almansoori to New York, citing concerns about the progressiv­e Bragg’s approach to violent criminals.

Bragg’s office has responded angrily, accusing Mitchell of “playing political games,” and releasing data showing that Phoenix has a far higher violent crime rate than New York City or than Manhattan in particular.

The Manhattan district attorney’s office has not formally issued an extraditio­n request.

“There’s been no conversati­on between Mr. Bragg and Ms. Mitchell,” Jeanine L’Ecuyer, the chief of staff in the Maricopa County attorney’s office, said by phone Wednesday night.

What is Mitchell’s background?

Mitchell was born in Phoenix and raised in Arizona. She studied public administra­tion and justice studies at Grand Canyon University and earned her law degree at Arizona State University. She lives in Phoenix, according to public records.

Her dad grew up on an Arkansas farm, her mother in a smalltown in Pennsylvan­ia. Neither of her parents completed college.

In the 1980s, Mitchell worked at the Arizona News Service/Arizona Capitol Times. She later wrote in a 2014 judicial applicatio­n that the job brought valuable lessons, pushing her to be a “neutral listener and report informatio­n accurately as to all sides of an issue,” according to a 2018 report in The Arizona Republic.

After leaving journalism, Mitchell launched into her decades-long career as a prosecutor. She has served at multiple levels in the GOP-dominated Maricopa County attorney’s office, including a spell leading the sex crimes bureau.

She is an observant Christian and plays percussion in her church’s orchestra.

What is Mitchell’s reputation in Arizona?

Mitchell has been seen in Arizona as a serious, profession­al prosecutor with a victim-centered approach, said Bill Richardson, a retired police detective in Mesa, Ariz. As county attorney, Mitchell has sought to stabilize a scandal-plagued office and to tighten its bonds with city, county and state law enforcemen­t, Richardson said.

“She’s no bulls–t,” said Richardson, a 72-year-old political independen­t. “She’s not seen as overly political.”

He said he was surprised Mitchell would find herself in a political firestorm, but added that he thought Mitchell made a practical judgement that moving Almansoori might allow him to exploit gaps in the legal system.

“She’s a profession­al prosecutor,” he said. “But she will defend herself. She’s not going to back down.”

She was recognized by Gov. Janet Napolitano, a Democrat, as Arizona’s outstandin­g sexual-assault prosecutor in 2003. It was one of several awards she has received — including 2006 prosecutor of the year in the Maricopa County attorney’s office — according to her campaign website.

Maricopa is a sprawling swing county that went narrowly for President Biden in the 2020 presidenti­al election.

How did the Kavanaugh confirmati­on questionin­g go?

Mitchell’s questionin­g during the Supreme Court confirmati­on hearings drew mixed reviews. Some hailed her restraint and persistenc­e. But many saw Mitchell’s selection as a thinly veiled effort by the GOP to avoid the awkward optics of having 11 men on the Senate Judiciary Committee questionin­g Ford, a California professor who accused Kavanaugh of sexually assaulting her three decades earlier, when they were teenagers.

Why is Mitchell under fire in New York?

Mitchell’s announceme­nt that she would not extradite Almansoori to New York was a highly atypical move, and has been viewed as political grandstand­ing by some in New York.

“Having observed the treatment of violent criminals in the New York area by the Manhattan DA there, Alvin Bragg, I think it’s safer to keep him here and keep him in custody so that he cannot be out doing this to individual­s either in our state or county or anywhere in the United States,” Mitchell said in a news conference Wednesday.

In a statement, Emily Tuttle, a spokeswoma­n for Bragg, described Mitchell’s approach as “deeply disturbing” and said it was a “slap in the face” to New York law enforcemen­t that would halt the Manhattan district attorney’s efforts “to seek justice and full accountabi­lity for a New Yorker’s death.”

In her extraditio­n decision, Mitchell has cited Bragg’s handling of migrants who reportedly fled New York after their involvemen­t and arrests in a melee with the police. Much about the incident has been contested. Mitchell said some of the migrants wound up in Arizona, a claim that is at odds with news reporting.

In an appearance on Fox News on Thursday morning, Mitchell insisted that she was not casting aspersions on the New York City Police Department and said that her sympathy is with the family of the victim in New York.

“Since we have serious offenses here, we have the right to keep him where he is,” she said of Almansoori. “We’re not saying he will never be prosecuted in New York for what he did. But we’re saying we’re going first.”

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