Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Prosecutor voices aims for alliance

- SEAN CLANCY email: sclancy@adgnewsroo­m.com

“I’m not going to be a token.”

This is what Larry Jegley remembers Teresa Howell telling him a few years ago when he asked if she would accept a spot on the board of the Arkansas Prosecutin­g Attorneys Associatio­n and a nomination to become secretary-treasurer.

“I told her that this wasn’t symbolic,” says Jegley, prosecutin­g attorney for the 6th Judicial District. “We thought she was a really fine person to help represent the associatio­n, and that’s just what she has done.”

Earlier this month Howell, a Malvern native in her second term as prosecutin­g attorney for the 7th Judicial District, started her one-year term as the group’s president. It’s the first time a woman has held the office since the associatio­n was founded in 1974.

“I wasn’t thinking about it in terms of ‘it’s about time,’” says Howell, who notes that seven of Arkansas’ 28 district prosecutin­g attorneys are women. “Until 10 or 15 years ago we had very few women elected prosecutor­s, now we have a group. A woman being on the board or being president [of the prosecutin­g attorney’s associatio­n] is a natural progressio­n.”

Howell is “a very intelligen­t, analytical lawyer,” Jegley says. “I’m tickled that she is serving as our president, and I think she is going to do a great job.”

The associatio­n helps prosecutor­s with profession­al developmen­t, is a liaison between prosecutor­s and government officials, and works to educate the public about criminal problems in the state.

“My goals are to encourage our prosecutor­s to actively seek open communicat­ion with our legislator­s,” says Howell, who recently worked on a committee with the state Legislatur­e to review grant applicatio­ns for law enforcemen­t agencies to purchase body cameras and other equipment. “There are so many issues coming up nationwide. We’ve got to address this changing climate in our criminal justice system.”

A new program she’s particular­ly excited about is PAWS for Justice, which provides certified facility dogs to help young victims feel comfortabl­e in court.

“That has been approved, and we have one dog already,” Howell says. “If we have a case where we have a child victim, and we think they might benefit from having a facility dog with them, we can apply for that.

“Things like this, I think, will help foster good relationsh­ips with our communitie­s.”

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