Arizona county assessor charged in adoption fraud case

Arizona county assessor charged in adoption fraud case

PHOENIX (AP) —

The Latest on an Arizona county official accused of human smuggling in an adoption fraud scheme (all times local):

1:38 p.m.

Officials in three states say they will not try to undo or interfere with dozens of adoptions done as part of a human smuggling scheme that led to charges against an Arizona county assessor.

Prosecutors in Arizona, Utah and Arkansas said Wednesday that they consider the adoptive parents to be victims in the scheme along with the biological mothers who were brought from the Marshall Islands to the U.S. to give birth and hand over their babies.

Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich said the focus of the case is on the abuse of the system by Maricopa County Assessor Paul Petersen.

Authorities say Petersen has for years run an adoption law practice in Mesa.

Petersen’s attorney, Matthew Long, defended his client’s actions during a Tuesday court hearing in Phoenix as “proper business practices” and said they disagreed with the allegations.

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10:18 a.m.

The assessor of Arizona’s most populous county has been indicted in an adoption fraud case, accused of arranging for dozens of pregnant women from the Marshall Islands to come to the U.S. to give their children up for adoption, according to an Arizona court filing.

Utah also has charged Maricopa County Assessor Paul Petersen with 11 felony counts, including human smuggling, sale of a child and communications fraud. News conferences are scheduled Wednesday morning in both Phoenix and Salt Lake City on the cases.

A call and email sent to Petersen’s attorney seeking comment were not immediately returned.

The Utah attorney general’s office says more than 40 pregnant women were transported to Utah during the past three years as part of the scheme.

“While Mr. Petersen is entitled to a presumption of innocence, our investigation uncovered evidence that he has committed horrible crimes,” Utah Attorney General Sean D. Reyes said in a statement. “Petersen’s illegal adoption scheme exploited highly vulnerable groups in two countries — the birth mothers and families in the Marshall Islands and the adoptive parents here in Utah.”

Petersen has for years run an adoption law practice in Mesa, Arizona, that involves bringing women from the Marshall Islands to the U.S. to give birth, The Arizona Republic reported. Their babies are then adopted by U.S. parents, authorities said. Petersen charged $40,000 per adoption, according to his website.

Petersen illegally obtained services from Arizona’s Medicaid system for the women by falsely claiming they are Arizona residents, the indictment said. He also violated U.S. law prohibiting citizens of the Marshall Islands from traveling to the U.S. for adoption, according to the indictment filed in Maricopa County Superior Court.

Lynwood Jennet was also named in the indictment. Additional information about Jennet was not immediately available.

Petersen is in his second term as assessor following a special election victory in 2014 and re-election in 2016. He served nearly eight years as the assessor’s office representative to the Arizona Legislature and as the agency’s public information officer.

An investigation last year by the Hawaii news website Honolulu Civil Beat questioned the legality of adoptions Petersen administers through his work as a private adoption attorney.