NC Superior Court judge arrested on bribe charges

Bywith the Associated Press WTVD logo
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
NC judge arrested on bribery charges
Superior Court Judge Arnold Ogden Jones, II is facing federal corruption charges

RALEIGH (WTVD) -- North Carolina Superior Court Judge Arnold Ogden Jones, II was arrested Wednesday on charges he tried to bribe an FBI officer to gather text messages between two phone numbers in what the judge said was a family matter.

A federal grand jury returned a three-count indictment Tuesday charging Jones with promising and paying a bribe to a public official, promising and paying a gratuity to a public official, and corruptly attempting to influence an official proceeding.

Jones is the Senior Resident Superior Court Judge of District 8-B, which covers Wayne, Lenoir and Greene counties.

He appeared at an initial federal court hearing Wednesday. His only comments were answers to a federal magistrate's questions. The magistrate ordered Jones to surrender his passport and restrict his travel to within the state.

Jones faces a maximum of 37 years in federal prison if convicted of all charges, prosecutors said.

It's illegal for law officers like an FBI agent to demand text or phone information from a phone company without an approved search warrant in an active case.

Jones is the chairman of the North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission, the first state-run agency in the country dedicated to proving a convicted person's innocence. His judicial district covers Wayne, Lenoir and Greene counties.

Jones approached the unnamed FBI officer a month ago and the two met in Goldsboro on Tuesday to exchange $100 for a disk supposedly containing the data, prosecutors said in a statement.

An indictment filed in federal court said Jones wanted copies of text messages between two phones made secretly.

"This involved family so I don't want anyone to know," the indictment quotes Jones as saying.

The FBI officer told Jones he asked a federal magistrate and was approved for a search warrant to get the text messages, the indictment said.

Jones was a private attorney in Goldsboro for 18 years before being elected to the Superior Court in 2008. He earned degrees from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the Wake Forest University law school.

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