Kim Gardner Circuit Attorney For St. Louis Is Suing The City For Racism

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Prosecutor Sues Her Own City Under a Law Passed to Fight the K.K.K.
Kimberly Gardner, the top prosecutor in St. Louis, who is under investigation herself, is accusing city officials of a “racially motivated conspiracy” to stop her from doing her job.

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Kimberly Gardner, the state circuit attorney for St. Louis, is the first
African-American to hold that position in her city’s history.Credit...Christopher Smith for The New York Times


A battle between St. Louis’s first African-American prosecutor and the city’s largely white legal establishment escalated on Monday, with the prosecutor suing her opponents under a little-used federal law passed in the wake of the Civil War to stem violence by the Ku Klux Klan.

Kimberly Gardner, the St. Louis circuit attorney, accused city officials, the local police union and a special prosecutor who is investigating her of a “racially-motivated conspiracy to deny the civil rights of racial minorities by obstructing a government official’s efforts to ensure equal justice under law for all.”

Her lawsuit, filed in Federal District Court in St. Louis, follows what she describes as a coordinated campaign to block her efforts to crack down on police corruption and misconduct, and to institute much-needed changes in the city’s criminal justice system.

She is in effect asking for a federal judge to step inside the workings of the city and the local court system to stop her civil rights from being violated under the Constitution and an 1871 law commonly called the Ku Klux Klan Act, which criminalized efforts to re-enslave African-Americans.

More recently, the law has been wielded in a lawsuit against the promoters of the 2017 white power rally in Charlottesville, Va., accusing them of a conspiracy to commit violence against a racial minority.

Ms. Gardner has been at war with much of the St. Louis police force and the local legal establishment since she was elected in 2016, two years after nearby Ferguson, Mo., erupted in protest over a killing by a police officer. The St. Louis police force is mistrusted by many in the African-American community, which makes up half the city’s population.

She took several steps to make the Police Department more accountable, including creating a list of more than 50 officers who could not bring cases for prosecution to her office because of concerns over their credibility. She also indicted the state’s governor at the time, Eric Greitens, who had been a rising star in national Republican politics.

The business manager of the local police union, Jeff Roorda, has called for Ms. Gardner’s indictment, and he recently went on a radio show to suggest that she be removed from office “by force or by choice.” In a statement, the union called Ms. Gardner’s lawsuit “frivolous, desperate and pathetic” and characterized her decision to file it as “the last act of a desperate woman.”

Jacob Long, a spokesman for the St. Louis mayor’s office, said: “The city of St. Louis vehemently denies what it considers to be meritless allegations levied against it by Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner. The city fully expects to be vindicated.”

Ms. Gardner is being pursued by a special prosecutor, Jerry Carmody, who began investigating her in 2018 after Mr. Greitens’s lawyers accused her of allowing the perjury of a former F.B.I. agent whom she hired to investigate the governor. Ms. Gardner has said that she did nothing wrong, and that she corrected the former agent’s errors as soon as she learned about them. She later dismissed the case against Mr. Greitens.

In an interview, Ms. Gardner said the lawsuit was about making sure she was allowed to implement the platform she was elected on.

“We’re not going to let fear and injustice stop the reforms that are needed,” Ms. Gardner said. “This is also about the continuing attacks on progressive prosecutors, not just in St. Louis, but around this country.”

Mr. Carmody has said that his investigation of Ms. Gardner is continuing, which she has described as a way to limit her effectiveness by keeping a cloud of uncertainty over her future.

As evidence of a conspiracy against her, Ms. Gardner’s lawsuit notes that one of Mr. Greitens’s chief defense lawyers is a longtime friend of Mr. Carmody, creating what she called a conflict of interest that made him an improper choice to investigate her. He was appointed by a state judge at the request of the city’s police force after a complaint was filed by the governor’s legal team. Mr. Carmody did not return a call seeking comment on the lawsuit.

Peter Joy, a law professor at Washington University in St. Louis, said that although the Ku Klux Klan Act dates to the 19th century, it has been employed more recently, including during the Civil Rights era to try to stop Southern sheriffs from blocking African-Americans from voting.

But proving a violation in St. Louis would require a significant amount of evidence, he said. “It’s a pretty high bar to clear.”
 
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The corporate main strem media be recruiting top notch bed wenches. If only I can confine myself to that limited faux bubble environment, I might have a chance. I am too radical now, and they would be unemployed for even acknowledging me.

These black female demon prosecutors wanted to chase after Trump to please Masta Biden, instead of handing it off to a white prosecutor; now you have to deal with the consequences. Just so Hillary can say Trump has been indicted 91 times and not talk about issues that would expose Democrats as frauds.

They tried to come at after me with some bullshit.
 
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St. Louis prosecutor spent weeks away from office while in nursing school, audit finds​

Story by SUMMER BALLENTINE
• 13h • 2 min read

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — St. Louis’ embattled former Democratic prosecutor Kim Gardner spent the equivalent of seven weeks in nursing school classes during business hours, according to a scathing report released Tuesday by the state auditor.

Republican Auditor Scott Fitzpatrick's review also found widespread staff turnover, misuse of public funds and a significant drop in cases filed, referred and closed before Gardner resigned under fire in 2023.

“In my view, the driving force was Kim Gardner’s failure to make her job as circuit attorney her top priority,” Fitzpatrick told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

The audit found Gardner spent “34.5 working days, or approximately 7 weeks” doing nursing school coursework at Saint Louis University during business hours.

Gardner told auditors that she was pursuing a family nurse practitioner post-master’s certificate “to improve the office and bring mental health awareness” to the office.

The Associated Press left phone and email messages with lawyers for Gardner on Tuesday.

Other issues cited in the audit include more than $58,000 in public funds spent on flowers, a disc jockey, car detailing, an office picnic, a chili cookout and Gardner's personal legal expenses.

Getting information from the office while Gardner was in charge was difficult, according to auditors. Employees denied or delayed audit requests for two years until subpoenaed, and “full access to documents, personnel, and the office itself was only given after the new administration took over,” according to the audit report.

Criticism of Gardner is not new.

At the time of her resignation, she was targeted for removal by Missouri Republican Attorney General Andrew Bailey. And GOP lawmakers were considering a bill allowing the Republican governor to appoint a special prosecutor to handle violent crimes, effectively removing the bulk of Gardner’s responsibilities.

Gardner was part of a movement of progressive prosecutors who sought diversion to mental health treatment or drug abuse treatment for low-level crimes, pledged to hold police more accountable, and sought to free incarcerated people who were wrongfully convicted.

Republican leaders often criticized Gardner for a low homicide conviction rate, among other concerns. She frequently butted heads with police and conservatives.

In 2018, Gardner charged former Gov. Eric Greitens, then a rising star in GOP politics, with felony invasion of privacy, accusing him of taking a compromising photo of a woman during an affair. The charge was eventually dropped. Greitens resigned in June 2018.

Scrutiny of the case led to the conviction of Gardner’s investigator, and Gardner received a written reprimand from the Missouri Supreme Court for how her office handled documents in the case.

Gardner got into more trouble after she directed her employees to issue checks to pay off a $5,004 fine related to that case, although she wasn’t entitled to the additional compensation. She agreed to repay the money with her own funds to avoid federal prosecution.
 
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