HONOLULU — Honolulu’s second-highest-ranking prosecutor is taking a leave of absence after receiving a subject letter linked to an ongoing federal corruption investigation.
HONOLULU — Honolulu’s second-highest-ranking prosecutor is taking a leave of absence after receiving a subject letter linked to an ongoing federal corruption investigation.
The grand jury investigation has already resulted in corruption-related charges against a retired Honolulu police chief and his wife, a former deputy prosecutor. Current and former police officers are also charged.
First Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Chasid Sapolu released a statement through his lawyer Thursday saying he is not a target of the investigation and has done nothing wrong.
He says he intends to cooperate with the investigation and looks forward to returning when it’s resolved.
Ken Lawson, who teaches criminal law at University of Hawaii’s law school, says a subject letter informs you that U.S. authorities believe you have information regarding criminal activity under investigation.
This should be headline news and it would be great if the hawaii island papers ran the whole article that was in honolulu paper. We already know there is corruption in honolulu when they refuse to charge hawaii police department retired lieutenant with stealing drugs from the hilo evidence room, coke, hash, dabs, who knows what else. Mitch roth said he wiuld do an audit of evidence room to see what else is missing. He never did and the perp/s walk free while courts refuse to dismiss cases where evidence stolen by police.