Assistant Attorney General - First Degree Felony Review Prosecutor
The Justice Division of the Utah Attorney General's Office has an immediate opening for an experienced prosecuting attorney to conduct first-degree felony de novo reviews pursuant to 2019’s general legislative session bill HB 281, Utah Code Ann. § 67-6-1(2)(b).
HB 281 grants the Attorney General the authority to conduct a de novo review in any case involving a 1st degree felony if the county or district attorney declines to file criminal charges or fails to timely screen a case for criminal charges after a request for a screening from a law enforcement agency.
Applicants must work well as a member of a team. Successful applicant will work closely with AG investigators and, when appropriate, subject matter experts in what is commonly referred to as a Multidisciplinary Team or MDT. Applicants should clearly describe their criminal law and jury trial experience in their cover letter. This position requires excellent written and oral advocacy skills and the ability to try both jury and bench trials. Prosecution experience, including sex crimes prosecutions, preferred. Strong preference for applicants with a minimum of 3 years of sex crimes prosecution experience.
Salary is dependent on the applicant's Utah State Bar admission date. The successful applicant must be a member of the Utah State Bar prior to beginning employment. Travel is required as incumbents will need to represent the State of Utah in criminal and other legal proceedings throughout the State.
(includes knowledge, skills, and abilities required upon entry into position and trainable after entry into position)
-
agency and/or organizational program(s)
-
communicate information and ideas clearly, and concisely, in writing; read and understand information presented in writing
-
read, interpret and apply laws, rules, regulations, policies and/or procedures
-
speak clearly, concisely and effectively; listen to, and understand, information and ideas as presented verbally
-
legal processes and procedures
-
applicable laws, rules, regulations and/or policies and procedures
-
criminal justice laws
-
rules of ethics and civility
-
understand and apply case and statutory law
-
evaluate information against a set of standards
-
use logic to analyze or identify underlying principles, reasons, or facts associated with information or data to draw conclusions
-
laws, legal codes, precedents, government regulations, executive orders, the democratic political process, and legislative history
-
perform legal research using case law and appropriate techniques
-
laws governing access to public and private records (Government Records Access and Management Act)
-
make a decision or solve a problem by using logic to identify key facts, explore alternatives, and propose quality solutions
-
deal with people in a manner which shows sensitivity, tact, and professionalism
-
provide consultation and/or expert advice or testimony
-
rules of evidence
-
interpret and apply legal decisions and identify current and emerging trends in interpretation
-
principles, theories, and practices of judicial or administrative law