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3 years for Louisiana ex-prosecutor accused of seeking sex for leniency

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Danelle Keim, who was a key witness in the case against former St. Charles Parish District Attorney Harry Morel before she died of a drug overdose in 2013, posed with her son Tyler in an undated family photo.

NEW ORLEANS » A former Louisiana prosecutor was sentenced today to three years for obstructing justice, though prosecutors accused him of soliciting sex from women in exchange for favorable treatment.

Seventy-three-year-old Harry Morel was sentenced in federal district court. The judge also gave him a $20,000 fine.

Judge Kurt Engelhardt announced the sentence prior to asking whether anyone wanted to speak on Morel’s behalf, saying no statements would have made a difference in the sentence.

Engelhardt also said Morel would be on supervised released for a year once he is released from prison. The judge said he would leave it up to the Federal Bureau of Prisons to determine where Morel will serve the time.

Morel was district attorney for 33 years in St. Charles Parish, about 20 miles west of New Orleans.

At a news conference when his plea agreement was announced in April, prosecutors and investigators called him a sexual predator. But he was never charged with a sexual crime.

U.S. Attorney Kenneth Polite said that was because time limits had passed on some crimes, and prosecutors faced both significant problems with evidence and victims whose personal histories might lead jurors to doubt them.

And a key witness was dead.

Defense attorney Ralph Capitelli has accused prosecutors of a smear campaign to influence sentencing.

The FBI began investigating Morel in April 2010, after a woman accused of drunken driving called 911 and accused him of sexually assaulting her at her home.

Agents wired Danelle Keim for video. Authorities say one video shows him coming to Keim’s house with two bottles of wine, discussing her case, and then starting to grope her.

But Keim died of a drug overdose in 2013, less than 24 hours after The Times-Picayune newspaper reported that the FBI was investigating whether Morel had been trading leniency for sex with defendants or their relatives.

Morel’s guilty plea admitted to telling Keim to destroy photographic evidence of their meetings.

Keim’s sister, Tessie Keim, spoke in the hall outside the courtroom today and said she had conflicting feelings about the three-year sentence.

Tessie Keim said justice was not served because Morel “didn’t get charged with what he should have been.”

“We’re just excited that he got anything. We’re very happy the judge gave him the full sentence.”

She praised Engelhardt, saying, “He at least abides by the law … And sticks to his vows.”

But she said her family also is excited that he got any prison time and is happy that the judge gave him the maximum.

Engelhardt repeated several times that he couldn’t give Morel more than three years.

The decision wasn’t difficult, he said.

“It is difficult to imagine justification for less than the maximum.”

4 responses to “3 years for Louisiana ex-prosecutor accused of seeking sex for leniency”

  1. cojef says:

    Victim’s death by overdose sounds suspicious?

    • Keonigohan says:

      Another Clintonian end you say???

    • kimo says:

      Yes, and the writer seems to suggest the same: “But [Danelle] Keim died of a drug overdose in 2013, less than 24 hours after The Times-Picayune newspaper reported that the FBI was investigating whether Morel had been trading leniency for sex with defendants or their relatives.” Hopefully they’ll dig deeper into her death.

  2. oiwi808 says:

    same reason nobody wants to charge hiLIARy.

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