Judges: WINSTON BRYANT, Attorney General
Filed Date: 4/26/1995
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The Honorable Brad W. Butler Prosecuting Attorney Nineteenth Judicial District Benton County Courthouse 100 Northeast A Street Bentonville, Arkansas 72712
Dear Mr. Butler:
This is in response to your request for an opinion on the following question:
Can the City Attorney for Bentonville, Arkansas, who has received a Deputy's Commission from my office encompassing the 19th Judicial District, ethically provide legal representation to criminal defendants in Circuit Court within the 19 Judicial District?
As noted in your request, the defendant in any such proceeding would be prosecuted by you or a deputy prosecutor from your office.
With limited exceptions not applicable here,1 deputy prosecutors2 are not by statute prohibited from engaging in the private practice of law or limited in the scope of their practices. In my opinion, however, a deputy prosecutor is ethically prohibited from representing defendants in criminal proceedings within the judicial district served by him.3
In Op. Att'y Gen.
Your request appears to address a substantially similar situation inasmuch as the prosecutor (or in this case the deputy prosecutor) might argue justification of the representation based upon the fact that he does not prosecute cases in the court in which it is proposed that he represent defendants in criminal proceedings. I assume from the language of your request that the deputy prosecutor whose actions are at issue prosecutes criminal matters only before the municipal court of the city of which he is city attorney.
It is my opinion that any distinction between the situation here and the one addressed in Op. Att'y Gen.
My conclusion is supported by American Bar Association Standards for Criminal Justice — Prosecution Function Standards, Standard 3-1.3(b) (3d Ed. 1993), which provides that "[a] prosecutor should not represent a defendant in criminal proceedings in a jurisdiction where he or she is also employed as a prosecutor." While the Standards do not have the force of law within Arkansas, they are cited by the Supreme Court of Arkansas from time to time as authority. See, e.g., Furr v. State,
The foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve, was prepared by Assistant Attorney General J. Madison Barker.
Sincerely,
WINSTON BRYANT Attorney General
WB:JMB/cyh