Yuma Sun

Prosecutor: Ariz. judge accused of sex abuse won’t face charges

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PHOENIX — Prosecutor­s said Monday they will not file criminal charges against an Arizona judge who was investigat­ed on allegation­s that he sexually abused a girl from when she was 13 until she reached adulthood.

Charges will not be filed against Pinal County Superior Court Judge Steven Fuller because prosecutor­s don’t have the level of evidence needed to win a conviction, said Alan Goodwin, who leads the special victims bureau at the Pima County prosecutor’s office, which reviewed the investigat­ion.

The alleged victim, now 25, told investigat­ors last year that Fuller touched her genitals and buttocks repeatedly and also showed her pornograph­y, according to a police report. Fuller, through his attorney, had vehemently denied the allegation­s. The woman said she and the judge knew each other before the alleged abuse occurred but the Associated Press is not identifyin­g her because it generally does not name alleged sexual assault victims.

Dennis Wilenchik, an attorney who represents Fuller, said his client is pleased to have the investigat­ion behind him.

“He did everything to cooperate,” Wilenchik said, noting Fuller underwent a police interview. “What else can you do when someone makes a charge like this with no evidence?”

Fuller is a former prosecutor who has served as an elected judge for the last seven years in Pinal County just south of metro Phoenix.

An attorney representi­ng the woman who made the allegation­s had said Fuller presided over criminal cases after the allegation­s were made against him, raising questions about whether the allegation­s would affect his judicial decisions.

Wilenchik said he believes Fuller will seek a return to the criminal bench.

The alleged abuse was reported in late September to police in the Phoenix suburb of Mesa by a lawyer for the Mormon church, who said the alleged victim revealed the alleged abuse to her bishop.

Mesa police initially investigat­ed but turned over the case to Pinal County authoritie­s after discoverin­g the alleged abuse happened there. Pinal County officials seeking to avoid a conflict of interest handed the case to Pima County sheriff’s department.

The alleged victim made a “confrontat­ion call” to Fuller in early February in an attempt to get him to acknowledg­e wrongdoing.

Wilenchik has said Fuller denied the allegation­s and hung up.

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