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News (Media Awareness Project) - US KY: County Prosecutor Fired
Title:US KY: County Prosecutor Fired
Published On:2004-06-20
Source:News-Enterprise, The (KY)
Fetched On:2008-01-18 07:27:42
COUNTY PROSECUTOR FIRED

A Hardin County prosecutor caught in videotaped tryst with a drug case
defendant was fired Friday.

Bob Stevens, who had been on paid leave since May 25, was told his
inappropriate contact with Erica French was the reason for his termination
in a letter from Hardin County Commonwealth's Attorney Chris Shaw.

French, who had pleaded guilty in March to several drug charges, was
sentenced to five years probation last week.

Shaw said Saturday he initially chose to place Stevens on paid leave
instead of firing him immediately because he hadn't seen the tape or other
evidence, and the investigation into the incident had just begun.

Shaw said part of his hesitation in firing Stevens right away stemmed from
his distrust of French's former attorney and mastermind behind the
videotaping, Kenneth Daniels.

"I couldn't take the man at his word," Shaw said.

He said he decided to wait and see what was revealed by the Special
Investigation Unit of the Kentucky State Police out of Frankfort. The
investigation is still open and no criminal action on Stevens' part have
been found, Shaw said.

Investigators at Kentucky State Police headquarters in Frankfort could not
be reached for comment.

Shaw said even though the investigation was still open, he was no longer
comfortable waiting for the results.

He mailed Stevens a letter Friday that reads in part, "... It is my belief
that contact of any type with a defendant, but most certainly that of a
sexual nature, is not in keeping with the requirements of an assistant
commonwealth's attorney in this office ..."

Stevens would not comment when reached on Saturday, referring questions to
his attorney, Dwight Preston.

Attorneys for French's co-defendants, Billie Joe Strader and Earl Weiman,
want cop-ies of the tape. They success-fully argued before Hardin County
Circuit Court Judge Janet Coleman last week that the tape might contain
discussion of their case.

A hearing Thursday in which a copy of the tape was played in court revealed
it had little to no audio on it. Coleman has ordered another hearing for
this Thursday to see if the original tape can be found.

Shaw said despite the loss of Stevens and having another prosecutor soon to
go on maternity leave, his office would soldier on.

"We still have a job to do and we're going to do it," he said.
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