Prosecutors declined to criminally charge an Assistant U.S. Attorney found to have “lacked candor” about publicly exposing their genitals and sexually assaulting a civilian on a date.
The DOJ Inspector General’s Office announced Monday that its investigation had determined the unnamed Assistant U.S. Attorney exposed their genitals in a public place and forced the civilian to touch them, violating state law and federal off-duty conduct rules. The attorney was found to have “lacked candor in discussing this incident” with the office, but criminal prosecution was declined, it said. …
[Aaaaand …. — Ed]
The DOJ inspector general found an assistant US attorney exposed his or her genitals on a date and committed sexual assault.
"Criminal prosecution…was declined."
The prosecutor appears to still have a job. https://t.co/gQeGfNCnbn pic.twitter.com/KesKDb4dmd
— Chuck Ross (@ChuckRossDC) September 12, 2022
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