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Ritter formally charged, arraigned on multiple felonies

Morgan Springer
Todd Ritter

Former Grand Traverse County Jail Administrator Todd Ritter was in district court virtually Friday facing four felonies and one misdemeanor. Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel has charged him with embezzlement, larceny, second-degree criminal sexual conduct, misconduct in office and willful neglect of duty.

Ritter’s bond was set at $50,000 and he faces over 30 years in prison if convicted of all charges.

In brief comments to the court, Ritter said he’s currently splitting custody of his two children and has been working for NORA transportation and the U.S. Census Bureau.

“I think that a sexual assault of somebody that is serving a jail sentence under the defendant’s control…is very serious,” Assistant Attorney General Danielle Hagaman-Clark said when asking for the $50k bond.

Credit Max Johnston
Todd Ritter's arraignment over Zoom.

Ritter resigned from his post last year after allegations surfaced that he had explicit relationships with female inmates of the jail. They ranged from taking a former inmate to a hotel room in Lansing at the county’s expense, smoking marijuana with a former inmate and keeping sexually explicit material on his government issued cell phone.

“I am very sorry for letting you down,” Ritter wrote in his resignation letter to County Sheriff Tom Bensley.

Ritter was arrested at his home Thursday by Michigan State Police troopers, according to the Attorney General’s Office. 

“The laws of this state and country do not offer special exemptions for those in positions of power,” Nessel wrote in a statement. “It is my duty to enforce our laws and hold accountable anyone who fails to comply with those rules, regardless of the authority provided to them by their job title.”  

Ritter has another court date tentatively set for September, but magistrate Tammi Rodgers said that’s likely to be pushed back due to the coronavirus pandemic and to give all parties more time to sift through the charges against him.

 

Max came to IPR in 2017 as an environmental intern. In 2018, he returned to the station as a reporter and quickly took on leadership roles as Interim News Director and eventually Assignment Editor. Before joining IPR, Max worked as a news director and reporter at Michigan State University's student radio station WDBM. In 2018, he reported on a Title IX dispute with MSU in his story "Prompt, Thorough and Impartial." His work has also been heard on Michigan Radio, WDBM and WKAR in East Lansing and NPR.