Pubdate: Wed, 16 Nov 2005 Source: Benton Courier, The (AR) Copyright: 2005 Benton Courier Contact: http://www.bentoncourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1223 Author: Lynda Hollenbeck RACKETEERING, EXTORTION AMONG CHARGES AGAINST EX-PROSECTUOR Former Saline County Prosecutor Dan Harmon was convicted in June 1997 of one count of racketeering, three counts of conspiring to commit extortion and one count of conspiring to possess and distribute marijuana. He was recently released after eight years in federal prison and will live in a halfway house for several months. The racketeering charge alleged that Harmon used his 7th Judicial District prosecuting attorney's office - his jurisdiction included Saline, Grant and Hot Spring counties - as an illegal crime organization to obtain money and drugs. Harmon was acquitted of additional charges, including one count of witness tampering, one count of retaliation against an informant, two counts of possession with the intent to distribute drugs and a fourth count of extortion. He served as prosecuting attorney for the 7th Judicial District until he resigned in July 1996 as part of a plea agreement in state court. Prosecutors were aided by many witnesses who were either charged with or convicted of crimes. The witnesses included Harmon co-defendants Holly DuVall (Harmon's former wife) and John Steward, who each pleaded to charges and testified against Harmon. In the possession with the intent to distribute marijuana charge, the jury decided that Harmon participated in and benefited from the sale of 117 pounds of marijuana that was found during a traffic stop. The driver, who was included in the federal indictment against Harmon, was freed after the traffic stop. The three extortion convictions had Harmon taking money from individuals caught with drugs in exchange for forgetting about prosecution. The final extortion charge on which he was convicted had Harmon taking $10,000 in exchange for allowing an Indiana resident to leave the state without being prosecuted after being found with drugs during a traffic stop. In order to convict on the racketeering charge, the jury had to find that Harmon used his prosecuting attorney's office to commit at least two of the acts outlined in the other 10 charges in the indictment. Harmon pleaded guilty to two misdemeanor charges connected to an attack on Saline County sheriff's deputies and no contest to a third misdemeanor related to an assault on Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reporter Rodney Bowers. Charges related to an alleged attack on DuVall were dropped. When his trial ended, Harmon claimed, as he did prior to the trial, that he was not guilty of the charges. He was sentenced initially to 97 months in federal prison. An additional 37 months were added later on convictions for possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine, attempting to distribute methamphetamine and two counts of using a telephone to commit a drug offense. All of the charges stemmed from a trip Harmon made to his girlfriend's Conway apartment complex while he had been ordered to home detention in Saline County. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth