Royal Oak Tribune

Ex-prosecutor charged with misconduct in assault case

- By Eric Baerren ebaerren@medianewsg­roup.com @ebaerren on Twitter

The assistant attorney general who prosecuted a high-profile rape case in Isabella County will face two charges of misconduct in office

hris Becker, Kent County prosecutor, announced Thursday afternoon that he plans to file the two five-year felony charges sometime soon against Brian Kolodziej for his conduct prosecutin­g Ian Elliott in the Rachel Wilson case.

Elliott was accused of raping Wilson at his apartment shortly after the two met at The Cabin on Aug. 31, 2016.

Becker spoke in the vaguest terms about what specifical­ly Kolodziej did, and said he didn’t know when formal charges would be filed. He did say that the case will go through the same Isabella County courts where first the county and then the state prosecuted Elliott.

Less than a month after after Elliott pleaded guilty to one count of third-degree criminal sexual conduct on Aug. 3, 2019, Kolodziej abruptly resigned from the office of the attorney general amid revelation­s that he had a sexual relationsh­ip with Wilson.

Attorney General Dana Nessel, at a press conference, said she’d give him a simple choice: Quit or be fired. She also launched an internal investigat­ion and asked the state police to investigat­e Kolodziej’s conduct.

Nessel’s office declined to release a copy of the investigat­ion Thursday, citing the ongoing criminal prosecutio­n.

Kent County is prosecutin­g the case because Kolodziej prosecuted cases for as an assistant attorney general in Oakland and Wayne counties. He prosecuted sex crime cases for the Macomb County Prosecutor’s Office right before joining the Office of the Attorney General in September 2018.

Kolodziej charged Elliott with two counts of CSC-3 and one count of assault with intent to commit sexual assault. He charged him with one count of CSC-3 involving a second woman who came forward to testify at Elliott’s preliminar­y exam in February 2019.

Elliott was incarcerat­ed for approximat­ely 11 months, starting in prison. After a plea deal was hatched between Nessel and Joe Barberi, Elliott’s attorney, the charge was reduced to fourth- degree criminal sexual conduct, a misdemeano­r, and he finished his sentence at the Isabella County Jail.

The case was originally handled by the Isabella County Prosecutor’s Office, which took it through the preliminar­y exam, where it was bound over for trial in late winter, 2018. On Thursday, Barberi described the bind over as based on thin premises.

In the spring, then-interim County Prosecutor Robert Holmes dropped the charges.

Wilson took her story to Central Michigan LIFE, which published a victim account story in early October 2018 in which Wilson said the case was mishandled.

On Halloween, then-Attorney General Bill Schuette announced his office would take up the case. Kolodziej, who’d recently joined the case from the Macomb County Prosecutor’s Office, was assigned.

At first, Kolodziej tried to get the county’s charges reinstated so he could just proceed to trial. Barberi objected, but at the case’s first hearing, every Isabella County judge recused themselves from the case. That included then- Circuit Court Judge Paul Chamberlai­n, who retired at the end of July, 2019, and was replaced by current- Circuit Court Judge Sara Spencer-Noggle.

A visiting judge ruled in Barberi’s favor, and new charges were filed shortly before Christmas, 2018.

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Brian Kolodziej, when he was an assistant attorney general, stands next to Rachel Wilson on Aug. 2 as Wilson read her victim impact statement before Isabella County Chief Judge Eric Janes in Mount Pleasant.
MEDIANEWS GROUP PHOTO . Brian Kolodziej, when he was an assistant attorney general, stands next to Rachel Wilson on Aug. 2 as Wilson read her victim impact statement before Isabella County Chief Judge Eric Janes in Mount Pleasant.

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