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Collin DA John Roach, foes ready for his retirement
DMN - Collin DA John Roach, foes ready for his retirement
October 5, 2010
By ED HOUSEWRIGHT /The Dallas Morning News
Collin County District Attorney John Roach says he's looking forward to his retirement at year's end.
Some defense attorneys say they are too. They've become increasingly vocal in criticizing Roach as arrogant, autocratic and demeaning of defense attorneys.
"He doesn't seem to shy away from personally attacking anyone who dares to criticize him," said Mitch Nolte, a former chief felony prosecutor under Roach.
He and other attorneys began speaking out because of Roach's yearlong investigation of state District Judge Suzanne Wooten, who was elected in 2008. The inquiry is believed to involve campaign finance issues. Roach defends the investigation but won't comment on its substance.
"It's a witch hunt, and there's no witch," said Sharon Curtis, president of the Collin County Criminal Defense Lawyers Association.
Roach has received both criticism and praise in his eight years as district attorney.
He received the Lone Star Prosecutor Award from the Texas District & County Attorneys Association in 2008. The group honored Roach for "his courage and discretion in prosecuting – or choosing not to prosecute – several cases."
Roach's office has won a number of high-profile convictions. Last year, for instance, Raul Cortez was sentenced to death after being convicted of fatally shooting four people during a 2004 McKinney? home burglary. It was the worst mass murder in Collin County history.
Roach, an Air Force veteran, runs his office in a formal, regimented way. He addresses all his employees by "Mr.," "Ms." or "Mrs." Employees call him "Judge Roach" in recognition of his two decades as a district and appellate judge.
Roach requires male prosecutors to wear a suit or sport coat with a tie. Women can't wear "unreasonably short skirts or dresses or sexually provocative clothing," according to a 40-page office manual.
"I have some pretty set ideas about the way things ought to be," Roach acknowledges.
He has often riled county commissioners who set his office budget.
For instance, commissioners opposed his plan in January to spend $25,000 on high-powered rifles, shotguns, helmets and shields to equip a courthouse security team consisted of his investigators.
The money would have come from an asset forfeiture fund that Roach alone controls.
"It's my money," Roach said at the time. "I can spend it for anything my office requires, in my opinion."
Roach, 64, staunchly defends some policies that defense attorneys attack. For instance, he won't allow some defendants to plead guilty before a judge. Instead, Roach insists on trying the case.
"We're hard-nosed prosecutors," Roach said. "A lot of defense attorneys, not just here, want a DA who will roll over for them."
The repartee between Roach and defense attorneys won't last much longer. He decided not to seek re-election in the spring primary and his last day in office will be Dec. 31. In November, voters will decide his successor: Republican Greg Willis or Democrat Rafael De La Garza.
Roach plans to pursue his hobbies of swimming, scuba diving, skiing and firearm sports.
He won't rule out another run for public office, although he has no job in mind.
"Nobody holding office currently needs to be quaking in their boots," Roach said.
3 comments
Actually, below is the title of the Oct 5th article:
"Feud escalates between Collin County District Attorney John Roach, state District Judge Suzanne Wooten"
Roach refuses any indictments from the Thursday grand jury, presumedly including his own.
Schulte says Roach is just scared
We actually posted two articles from the Dallas Morning News this evening, both with today's publication date, including "Feud escalates..." and "Collin DA John Roach, foes ready for retirement." We hope you have the opportunity to enjoy both articles featuring the outgoing DA.
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