Current:Home > MyArkansas’ prison board votes to fire corrections secretary -Wealth Empowerment Zone
Arkansas’ prison board votes to fire corrections secretary
View
Date:2025-04-17 21:33:36
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Arkansas’ Board of Corrections voted 5-2 Wednesday to fire Corrections Secretary Joe Profiri, who has been on suspension for the past four weeks with pay.
The board held a special meeting via teleconference to discuss the status of Profiri’s job, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported. The board could have lifted the suspension, extended it or terminated him.
After a seven-minute discussion, led mostly by board member Lee Watson, the board decided to fire him.
“I think Arkansas deserves better,” Watson said before making the motion to dismiss Profiri.
Chairman Benny Magness, who doesn’t typically vote, voted with the majority Wednesday. He said he would personally call Profiri to deliver the news.
Profiri, who had been appointed to the position by Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders shortly after she took office last year, has been at the center of an ongoing battle between the board and the governor’s office over who controls the department leadership. Wednesday’s decision comes after two months of wrangling between the board and Profiri, who the board has accused of being insubordinate and uncommunicative.
Profiri is named along with Sanders and the Department of Corrections in a lawsuit filed by the board. The lawsuit seeks to ensure that the board maintains its authority to supervise and manage the corrections secretary, as well as the directors of the Department of Corrections’ Division of Correction and Division of Community Correction.
Sanders criticized the board Wednesday night, accusing it of focusing on “pushing lies, political stunts, and power grabs.” She said Profiri would serve as a senior advisor to her in the governor’s office during the litigation.
Pulaski County Circuit Court Judge Patricia James issued a temporary restraining order Dec. 15 barring the enforcement of Act 185 of 2023 and portions of Act 659 of 2023, which the board contends weakens its authority set forth in the Arkansas Constitution. After a hearing last week, James approved a preliminary injunction in the case, which will stay in place until the lawsuit is resolved.
Act 185 would require the secretary of corrections to serve at the pleasure of the governor. Act 659 would, in part, require directors of the Divisions of Correction and Community Correction to serve at the pleasure of the secretary.
Attorney General Tim Griffin, who is representing Profiri and the other defendants in the lawsuit, said he was disappointed by the board’s decision.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- COLA boost for Social Security in 2024 still leaves seniors bleeding. Here's why.
- War took a Gaza doctor's car. Now he uses a bike to get to patients, sometimes carrying it over rubble.
- Child killed, 5 others wounded in Cincinnati shooting
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Live updates | Israeli warplanes hit refugee camps in Gaza while UN agencies call siege an ‘outrage’
- 'It's freedom': Cher on singing, her mother and her first holiday album, 'Christmas'
- 3 cities face a climate dilemma: to build or not to build homes in risky places
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- James Corden heading to SiriusXM with a weekly celebrity talk show
Ranking
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- MTV EMAs 2023 Winners: Taylor Swift, Jung Kook and More
- Luis Diaz appeals for the release of his kidnapped father after scoring for Liverpool
- Teen arrested in Southern California restaurant shooting that injured 4 last month
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- 'Five Nights at Freddy's' repeats at No. 1, Taylor Swift's 'Eras' reaches $231M worldwide
- Cody Dorman, who watched namesake horse win Breeders’ Cup race, dies on trip home
- US regulators to review car-tire chemical deadly to salmon after request from West Coast tribes
Recommendation
A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
Officials in North Carolina declare state of emergency as wildfires burn hundreds of acres
War took a Gaza doctor's car. Now he uses a bike to get to patients, sometimes carrying it over rubble.
Sweltering summer heat took toll on many U.S. farms
Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
US senators seek answers from Army after reservist killed 18 in Maine
Bills' Damar Hamlin launches scholarship honoring medical team that saved his life
An 11-year-old killed in Cincinnati has been identified and police are seeking the shooter