The Commercial Appeal

Mulroy, Weirich to faceoff for Shelby County DAG

- Katherine Burgess Katherine Burgess covers county government and religion. She can be reached at katherine.burgess@commercial­appeal.com, 901-529-2799 or followed on Twitter @kathsburge­ss.

Attorney and University of Memphis Professor Steve Mulroy will face incumbent Shelby County District Attorney General Amy Weirich in August, after Mulroy defeated his two Democratic opponents in Tuesday's primary.

Weirich, a Republican, went unchalleng­ed in her primary and has strong support both from Republican­s and from moderate Democrats like Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland who emphasize tough-on-crime policies.

Appointed to the role of Shelby County District Attorney General by then-gov. Bill Haslam in 2011, Weirich easily won election in 2012 and reelection to a full eight-year term in 2014.

Mulroy has previously held elected office, as Shelby County Commission­er from 2006 to 2014. He has been on the law faculty at the University of Memphis since 2000, teaching constituti­onal law, criminal law, criminal procedure, civil rights and election law, according to the school's website. He is a former civil rights lawyer for the U.S. Justice Department and a former federal prosecutor.

He tried a number of voting rights cases which went to the Supreme Court, multi-million dollar lending discrimina­tion and redlining cases, and bench and jury criminal cases before federal district courts and U.S. Circuit appellate courts, according to his biography at the University of Memphis' website.

“I'm really glad this part is over with and I'm looking forward to a robust general election campaign," Mulroy said. "We can't keep doing things the way we've been doing them. It's time for a change. (The voters) need to keep an open mind about new approaches that have been proven to work in other cities to make the system fairer and also bend the curb on violent crime.”

During his campaign, Mulroy portrayed himself as an opposing force to Weirich, someone who would focus on violent crime and enact progressiv­e policies and programs like bail reform and a conviction review unit. He has also advocated for diversity in the district attorney's office, holding a press conference during the primary to blast

Weirich's office for a lack of diversity among assistant district attorneys and often pointing out the disproport­ionate impact of juvenile transfers to adult court on Black youth.

More on Amy Weirich

The first woman to hold the role of district attorney general in Shelby

County, Weirich had previously been deputy district attorney — also the first woman in that job. Before that, she was chief prosecutor of the gang and narcotics prosecutio­n unit and division leader for the special prosecutio­n unit in criminal court. She joined the district attorney's office in 1991 as a courtroom prosecutor, working her way up the ranks.

Her time in office has included advocacy for "truth in sentencing" laws, which would require certain offenders to serve the entirety of their sentences rather than receiving parole for good behavior, and establishi­ng vertical prosecutio­n, a system that allows for one prosecutor and team to work with a case from start to finish.

After Mulroy's win, Weirich said she wanted to commend his Democratic opponents Linda Harris and Janika White for their "strong campaigns."

"Professor Mulroy on the other hand has run one of the most dishonest campaigns we've seen in Shelby County in a while. He's lied about my record, he's lied about this office and, most importantl­y, he's lied about what his intentions are if he's elected as district attorney," Weirich said, adding that Mulroy wants to defund law enforcemen­t and advocates the "freeing of all violent criminals from jail."

More on Steve Mulroy

Mulroy has said that he wants to focus prosecutio­n on violent crime, shifting the focus of prosecutio­n away from victimless crimes such as drug possession and prostituti­on. He has not advocated releasing violent criminals from jail.

Despite strong support from many in Shelby County, Weirich's years in office have been shadowed by misconduct, some of which date back to her time as a prosecutor on the high-profile Noura Jackson case, for which she received a private reprimand. Jackson's second-degree murder conviction was thrown out, with Jackson entering an Alford plea on a reduced charge of voluntary manslaught­er in 2015.

Other criticism is ongoing, as with the case of transfers of juvenile youth to adult court, with the Department of Justice blasting Shelby County in for transferri­ng more youth to adult court than any other county in Tennessee, with a disproport­ionate number of them being Black.

And, Weirich's office has become known around the nation for failing to turn over evidence to the defense, in the Jackson trial, for a document not being handed over in Pamela Moses' voter registrati­on trial (Weirich's office said it was the Tennessee Department of Correction­s that failed to turn over the document), and for an envelope with unknown contents found in the Vern Braswell case.

That record of misconduct has been used by Mulroy to attack Weirich in the primary, and is likely to become even heightened rhetoric leading up to the general election even as Weirich is expected to portray Mulroy as soft on crime and out of touch with Memphians impacted by violence.

 ?? LUCAS FINTONE/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Steve Mulroy, right, will face incumbent Shelby County District Attorney General Amy Weirich in the August election after winning Tuesday’s Democratic primary against two opponents.
LUCAS FINTONE/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Steve Mulroy, right, will face incumbent Shelby County District Attorney General Amy Weirich in the August election after winning Tuesday’s Democratic primary against two opponents.
 ?? COMMERCIAL APPEAL JOE RONDONE/THE ?? Linda Harris lost Tuesday’s Democratic primary to be Shelby County District Attorney General.
COMMERCIAL APPEAL JOE RONDONE/THE Linda Harris lost Tuesday’s Democratic primary to be Shelby County District Attorney General.

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