Two former Utah attorneys general charged with corruption

By Jennifer Dobner SALT LAKE CITY (Reuters) - FBI agents arrested two former Utah attorneys general at their homes on Tuesday and charged them with felonies stemming from a two-year investigation into claims of bribery and corruption, prosecutors said. Republicans John Swallow and Mark Shurtleff are accused of establishing a pay-to-play culture in office, and of taking bribes to look the other way or offer protection when donors to their political campaigns ran into legal trouble. "This has been a complex, nuanced, large investigation and there are multiple players in it," Salt Lake District Attorney Sim Gill said at a news conference. "We have filed what we think are appropriate charges. We could have filed more." Both men deny any wrongdoing. They were booked into Salt Lake County jail and released by midday. "I absolutely maintain my innocence. I look forward to being able to confront my accusers and to have my day in court," Swallow told reporters outside. Shurtleff conceded he was not "perfect" and said he might have made errors of judgment while in office, but he denied he committed any violation of ethics. "I have never misused or abuse the public trust and I certainly have not violated any of the criminal laws of the state of Utah," he told a news conference. Shurtleff was Utah's attorney general for 12 years, leaving office in 2012. He hand-picked Swallow to serve as his chief deputy and then backed him in the 2012 election to be his successor. Tuesday's arrests in the Salt Lake City suburb of Sandy were carried out by the FBI and Utah's Department of Public Safety. FBI agents searched both homes last month. Shurtleff and Swallow were the subject of a 2013 investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice's Public Integrity Section. That office declined to bring charges but FBI agents who worked on the case are working with Gill and Davis County Attorney Troy Rawlings, who pursued the investigation together. Court papers filed in Salt Lake City's 3rd District Court charge Shurtleff with 10 felonies, including receiving or soliciting bribes, compensation/loan when prohibited, improper use of an employee's position, witness tampering, evidence tampering and obstruction of justice. Among the allegations, prosecutors say Shurtleff dismissed a mortgage fraud lawsuit filed against Bank of America, over the objections of his staff, while he was trying to a get a job with a firm representing the bank. Seven of the charges are second-degree felonies and carry a punishment of up to 15 years in prison. The remaining are third-degree felonies, which are punishable by up to five years. Swallow faces 11 felony and two misdemeanor charges, court papers show, including receiving or soliciting bribes, misuse of public money, obstruction of justice and altering government records. In one incident, prosecutors say, Swallow asked for $120,000 from a Utah businessman facing scores of federal criminal charges, suggesting it might help the man's legal problems. Gill said the investigation remains active and more charges could be brought. (Reporting by Jennifer Dobner; Editing by Daniel Wallis, Bill Trott and Eric Walsh)