Friday, March 27, 2009

Judge Herman Thomas Faces Several Charges Including Kidnapping


MOBILE, Ala.

Herman Thomas, while a Mobile County circuit judge, checked male inmates out of Metro Jail to exert control over them and force them into sexual activity, according to indictments released today.

About 1½ years after stepping down from the bench, Thomas was arrested today outside the same jail on charges of kidnapping, sodomy, extortion, sex abuse and ethics violations.

A special grand jury met for three weeks this month and returned 57 felony charges against Thomas. The indictment lists nine alleged victims, each of them current or former inmates.

"These are very serious charges," some carrying up to life in prison, said District Attorney John Tyson Jr. Thomas was taken into custody outside the jail as his attorney, Robert "Cowboy Bob" Clark, held an afternoon news conference amid reports of an impending arrest.

Clark suggested his client's indictment was motivated by racism.

"This is racism at its very finest. We ought to be proud we elected those bastards," said Clark in an apparent reference to Tyson and former Thomas colleagues on the bench.

As Clark was speaking, an investigator with the District Attorney's Office quietly walked up to Thomas, tapped him on the shoulder, whispered something to him and then accompanied Thomas -- without placing him in handcuffs -- to the jail 10 feet away.

There, Thomas was photographed and booked, with bail set at $287,500, according to the jail log. He was later released.

Each of Thomas' alleged victims at one time faced charges in Mobile County Circuit Court, according to online court records. The allegations against them ranged from criminal mischief to murder.

One of the inmates went before Thomas on multiple occasions over the years for several felony charges. He was eventually sent to prison for a short time, but Thomas ordered him released early.

Finally, he ended up sentenced in federal court and later released. He has since been accused of murder and attempted murder.

According to Friday's grand jury allegations, Thomas "knowingly" subjected the young men "to sexual contact, by forcible compulsion."

Thomas' resignation came in the face of a pending trial before Alabama's Court of the Judiciary, where he was charged with dozens of ethical violations.

Tyson said Clark's accusations that Thomas' troubles stem from racism at Government Plaza are "absolute nonsense."

Nicki Patterson, the chief assistant district attorney, later pointed out that all the alleged victims are black. Thomas is black.

Tyson said his investigation is not over and that the special grand jury could be called back into session at any time.

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