Adel鈥檚 Hidden Agenda: 老澳门开奖结果 Exposes Maricopa Prosecutor鈥檚 Hypocrisy
In 2018, we did a simple but radical thing: asked a prosecutor to tell us how their office runs. Through an Arizona Public Records Request, we sought basic public information from the Maricopa County Attorney鈥檚 Office (MCAO), like who is prosecuted, which crimes are charged, and how long people are sent to prison. We also sought general office policies governing prosecutions in the county.
This is fairly basic stuff, and the public has a right to know how the largest and most powerful prosecuting agency in Arizona operates. Yet MCAO, like many prosecutors鈥 offices nationwide, has operated for years as a black box, fighting any attempt at transparency. Because of this entrenched culture of secrecy, MCAO ignored our Public Records Request for almost a year. So we did another radical thing that rarely happens to prosecutors: .
And now ! In fact, not only were we able to obtain almost all the records we asked for, MCAO is also going to pay us $24,000 for the time and resources it took to force them to comply with the law 鈥 and be transparent with their own community.
It didn鈥檛 have to be this way. When Maricopa County Attorney Allister Adel was first appointed to the office, she promised to be more transparent than her predecessor Bill Montgomery, stating 鈥渋f we are doing our job right, we have nothing to hide.鈥 But behind the scenes, throughout the course of the litigation, she was fighting just as hard as Montgomery to hide her operations from the public. This included withholding almost all her office polices, her approach to the death penalty, and even routine data about prosecutions. During one hearing, when pressed on why they would need to keep information about the death penalty secret from the voting public, Adel鈥檚 lawyer bluntly argued, 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter if the voter would want to know that.鈥 Doesn鈥檛 sound like an office with nothing to hide, does it?
Adel has recently taken some steps toward better transparency, creating a 鈥渄ata dashboard鈥 and posting office policies online. But let鈥檚 be clear: these steps would not have been taken had we not sued. Adel鈥檚 lawyers fought us tooth and nail to keep this information secret, and only posted it after multiple rulings in our favor.
Moreover, these late-breaking steps do not achieve real transparency; instead they present only the information and data Adel wants the public to see. For example, her data dashboard conflates all drug crimes into a single category, hiding the fact that her office prosecutes simple drug possession more than any other crime. These prosecutions waste taxpayer dollars, fail to increase public safety, and fill our jails and prisons with people who need treatment, not incarceration鈥攑articularly with a pandemic raging inside Maricopa detention facilities.
The dashboard also buries horrendous racial disparities coming out of the MCAO. What Adel or her dashboard won鈥檛 tell you is that MCAO prosecutors are more likely to dismiss cases鈥攐r never file them at all鈥攁gainst white people than people of any other race.
Percent of Cases Dismissed by Race/Ethnicity | |
White | 11.2% |
Black | 10.6% |
Asian, Indigenous, and Other* | 8.6% |
Hispanic* | 8.4% |
significantly differs from white people at the a=.05 level.
Data from 老澳门开奖结果 of AZ's report:
鈥淭he Racial Divide of Prosecutions in the Maricopa County Attorney鈥檚 Office.鈥
Black and Hispanic people prosecuted by MCAO spend significantly more time incarcerated than white people. Hispanic people are sentenced to significantly longer jail and prison sentences than their white and Black counterparts when prosecuted for simple marijuana possession. At the same time, Black people consistently receive longer prison, jail, and probation sentences than white or Hispanic people for the personal possession of drug paraphernalia. And when ordered to pay a fine, often requested by Adel鈥檚 office, Hispanic people pay significantly higher fines than white people.
Average Jail + Prison Sentence in Days | Standard Deviation | |
White | 775 | 1,127 |
All Others | 775 | 1,237 |
Hispanic* | 990 | 1,620 |
Black* | 1,004 | 1,492 |
Data from 老澳门开奖结果 of AZ's report:
鈥淭he Racial Divide of Prosecutions in the Maricopa County Attorney鈥檚 Office.鈥
Just as concerning, the records we obtained mocked those with mental health conditions,calling them 鈥渃razy鈥 and painting them as liars and obstacles to winning a conviction 鈥 not as human beings worthy of respect.
These troubling findings 鈥 and the racial disparities we detail 鈥 would not have been made public without over two years of litigation against MCAO. Yet this is precisely the type of data that the public needs to know to make an informed decision in November when asked to elect the next County Attorney.
The public shouldn鈥檛 have to rely on lawsuits to learn what their elected officials are doing. The public deserves nothing less than a County Attorney who will publicly commit to:
路 Posting all office policies and prosecution guidelines online, so the public can see how the office says it operates;
路 Posting statistical data on all prosecutions online, so the public can see how the office actually operates;
路 Posting disaggregated data on race and gender online, so the public can see the disparities that exist in our criminal legal system;
路 Making all of the underlying data available to analysts and the public.
The public deserves these commitments, so in November voters can elect a County Attorney who is doing their job right, with nothing to hide.
The 老澳门开奖结果 of Arizona does not endorse or oppose candidates. Learn about the Maricopa County Attorney candidates鈥 policy positions at .