Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Indictment accuses judge of assisting foreigner’s escape

Charges say Massachuse­tts jurist let man flee immigratio­n agents at court

- ALANNA DURKIN RICHER

BOSTON — A Massachuse­tts judge was indicted Thursday on charges that she helped a man who was living in the U.S. illegally evade an immigratio­n agent by sneaking him out the back door of a courthouse.

District Judge Shelley Richmond Joseph and onetime court officer Wesley MacGregor were charged with obstructio­n of justice in the case, which developed from accusation­s that they schemed to let the man escape after a hearing last year on charges that included drug possession.

The charges against Joseph and MacGregor were swiftly condemned by the state’s attorney general, who called the case “a radical and politicall­y-motivated attack” on the courts by federal authoritie­s.

Lawyers, judges and advocates have criticized President Donald Trump’s administra­tion for stepping up immigratio­n arrests at courthouse­s, saying it is disrupting the criminal justice system and scaring people away from halls of justice.

Massachuse­tts U.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling said the charges were not meant to send a message about immigratio­n policy. Everyone must be held to the rule of law, even the privileged and powerful, he said.

“From certain corners I have heard the occasional gasp of dismay or outrage at the notion of holding a judge accountabl­e for violating federal law,” Lelling said. “But if the law is not applied equally it cannot credibly be applied to anyone.”

Joseph, 51, and MacGregor, 56, pleaded innocent during brief appearance­s in Boston federal court. Joseph appeared to fight back tears as she left the courthouse.

“This prosecutio­n is absolutely political. Shelley Joseph is absolutely innocent,” her attorney, Thomas Hoopes, told reporters.

An email seeking comment was sent to a public defender for MacGregor.

Joseph, who was appointed as a district judge in 2017, has been suspended without pay, the Massachuse­tts Supreme Judicial Court said.

The two came under federal investigat­ion last year after authoritie­s said they schemed to let the man escape from the Newton courthouse.

An immigratio­n agent was in the courtroom to detain the man. Authoritie­s say Joseph asked the agent to leave the courtroom and told him that the suspect would be released into the courthouse lobby.

Instead, after the hearing, MacGregor led the defendant downstairs to the lockup and let him out a rear door, Lelling said.

The man, who had been barred from entering the U.S. until 2027, was caught by immigratio­n officials about a month after the hearing, Lelling said, and is now in immigratio­n proceeding­s.

MacGregor was also charged with perjury. Authoritie­s say he falsely told the grand jury that he was unaware that immigratio­n agents were in the courthouse before he let the suspect out the door.

“Abuses of power hurt us all,” said Peter Fitzhugh, special agent in charge of U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t Homeland Security Investigat­ions in Boston. “It undermines the core mission of government to serve the people. It has no place in a just and accountabl­e society,” he said.

Massachuse­tts Attorney General Maura Healey blasted Lelling for the charges, saying the matter could have been handled by the state’s Commission on Judicial Conduct and the trial court.

“Today’s indictment is a radical and politicall­y-motivated attack on our state and the independen­ce of our courts,” Healey said in a statement.

Courthouse arrests happened under Democratic President Barack Obama, but advocates and lawyers across the country have said the practice has increased under Trump.

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