A Missouri prosecutor wants a judge to toss out the state attorney general’s unusual attempt to oust her from her elected position.
St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kimberly Gardner, who is accused of office mismanagement and lax law enforcement, on April 11 filed a motion to dismiss Attorney General Andrew Bailey’s petition asking a judge to remove her from office.
Gardner’s motion to dismiss was filed in advance of an April 18 hearing, the first scheduled in the case since Bailey filed it on Feb. 23. The Epoch Times has requested a copy of the filing. The Missouri court’s website contains only descriptions of the documents filed in the case.
Outrage Over Teen Double Amputation
Democrat Gardner has publicly accused Bailey, a Republican, of a politically motivated attack against her. But Bailey denies that. He cites his legal obligation to hold Gardner responsible for performing mandated duties.On Feb. 18, Janae Edmondson of Smyrna, Tenn., was visiting St. Louis to participate in a volleyball tournament. She was walking along a downtown sidewalk with her parents when a speeding vehicle caused a crash, pinning her legs. She is now a double amputee. Police say Janae’s father helped save her life by using waist belts as tourniquets to stop the bleeding from her mangled legs.
Daniel Riley, 21, the driver accused of causing the crash that hurt Janae, is an armed robbery suspect who remained free despite violating his house arrest order dozens of times, Bailey said. Bailey argues that Riley would have been locked up if Gardner had done her duty to enforce laws.
Gardner Denies Fault
Gardner, in a news conference after Bailey announced his attempt to oust her, denied fault in the circumstances that led to Janae’s injuries.She asserts that judges either ignored or refused her staff’s requests to take action against Riley. Gardner also contested that allegation in a March 14 court filing, in which she denied all of the claims Bailey made in his petition.
Gardner, a former member of the Missouri House of Representatives, has been hailed for her attempts to reform police despite being in politically hostile territory in Republican-dominant Missouri.
“The goal is not defunding the police but restoring trust between the police and the policed, a partnership that fosters the solving of crimes,” Soros wrote at the time. He asserted that data showed “no connection between the election of reform-minded prosecutors and local crime rates.”