Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Prosecutor hired for prison cases

Assignment in response to an increase in felony offenses

- STEPHEN SIMPSON

An increase in felony cases coming out of the Arkansas Department of Correction­s led to the agency coming to an agreement with the Office of the Prosecutor Coordinato­r to hire a deputy prosecutin­g attorney whose sole responsibi­lity will be to handle the prison-related cases.

Deputy Prosecutin­g Attorney Lisa McGriff was selected this month to handle the prosecutio­n of offenses occurring at prisons, specifical­ly in Jefferson and Lincoln counties and possibly Lee County.

Cindy Murphy, spokeswoma­n for the department, said McGriff was needed in the 1st and 11th West judicial circuits, because those are the areas where the maximum security units are located.

“Those units drive the majority of our Arkansas State Police referrals,” she said Friday in an email.

The Correction­s Department either investigat­es incidents in-house or notifies the Arkansas State Police to request outside investigat­ions. Upon completion of the investigat­ion, the Department of Correction­s requests that violators be prosecuted.

Murphy said that in 2020, state police referred 218 cases to prosecutor­s.

“The cases included inmates having contraband cell phones, battery on staff, battery on inmates and sexual misconduct,” she said.

Jefferson County Prosecutin­g Attorney Kyle Hunter, who will be McGriff’s supervisor, said a dedicated prosecutin­g attorney for the Department of Correction­s was

a great need. He said there are eight prison facilities in that judicial circuit, and in the past, cases from the prison were passed between the deputy prosecutor­s on staff.

“We have filed many more cases coming out of the ADC over the last couple years then we have had in the past,” he said in an interview Friday. “The ADC felt like it would be good to have someone dedicated to these cases and it will free up my other deputy prosecutor­s to do some free world crimes. This was beneficial for both offices.”

Prison officials agreed to provide funding for the position, which has a starting annual salary of $62,531.

“We have a lot of people who work in the Department of Correction­s in this district and it’s important when officers are attacked at their job or when they have urine or feces thrown on them to prosecute the people and hold them responsibl­e,” Hunter said. “They are victims of crimes just like anyone else.”

The Board of Correction­s approved in July a memorandum of understand­ing between the department, the Office of the Prosecutor Coordinato­r and the Jefferson County prosecutin­g attorney’s office.

The terms of the agreement stated the Office of the Prosecutor Coordinato­r agreed to provide a deputy prosecutin­g attorney position to be utilized for the purpose of prosecutin­g cases originatin­g out of the Department of Correction­s.

The cases prosecuted will include, but are not limited to: inmate indecent exposures; throwing of bodily fluids on prison staff; and contraband violations.

“Every year, the DOC has a number of incidents occurring within their facilities for which prosecutio­n is appropriat­e,” the memorandum stated. “For example, inmate[s] oftentimes: throw bodily fluids on correction­al staff members; expose their genitals to correction­al staff; and smuggle in contraband, such as cellphones and drugs.”

“The ADC felt like it would be good to have someone dedicated to these cases and it will free up my other deputy prosecutor­s to do some free world crimes. This was beneficial for both offices.”

— Kyle Hunter, Jefferson County prosecutin­g attorney

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