A private investigator in Powell, Wyoming, is accusing two Park County prosecutors of perjury stemming from an error on a bond agreement.  Â
But both prosecutors told Cowboy State Daily the claim is unfounded and defamatory, and the investigator is basing his claim on typical boiler-plate language in legal documents.
Matthew Smith, of Paladin Investigations in Powell, makes the claim in a letter dated Sept. 7 to the governors of Wyoming and Montana, the attorneys general of both states, two county sheriffs and the Wyoming Supreme Court justices, among other authorities. Â
âIt is my opinion based on my investigation that Mr. Brian (sic) A. Skoric and Mr. Jack R. Hatfield II did in-fact conspire for Mr. Brian A. Skoric to knowingly commit perjury,â reads Smithâs letter.
He also claims that Deputy County Attorney Jack Hatfield II and Park County Attorney Bryan Skoric conspired to label a criminal defendant as a fugitive when they knew he had permission to be in Montana during his prosecution. Â
Smith is considering making a citizen's arrest on both prosecutors, he wrote.Â
Smithâs allegations are âcompletely falseâ and applicable court records expose them as such, Hatfield told Cowboy State Daily on Monday, speaking in his personal capacity.Â
Hatfield also said he has filed a stalking order of protection against Smith and is about to launch a $2.5 million defamation lawsuit. Â
WhoopsÂ
Smith had another notice on his website as of Monday, accusing Skoric and Hatfield of tapping his companyâs internet. Â
Once again, the claim was outlined in a letter notifying the authorities. Â
But that was wrong, Smith later admitted, and the investigator posted a correction notice. Â
âThere has been an error made in the previous letter regarding a tap on our internet,â reads a Monday letter by Smith. The agency had found a device named âPaladin Bail Bondsâ on its network and was double-checking the trace. Â
âIf it is found that this is (sic) claim of tap is all in error I will have no problem apologizing to Mr. Brian (sic) A. Skoric and Mr. Jack R. Hatfield,â concludes the letter. Â
But as of publication time Tuesday, both the internet-tapping allegations and its correction were scrubbed from the web page. Â
Because, Alleged BurglarÂ
The documents attached with the letter remaining on the Paladin website track the criminal case of Jerimiah Swanson, a Billings, Montana, man accused of breaking into his motherâs Cody home and stealing cash and pistols last October.Â
Police arrested Swanson in November after he allegedly broke into the home a second time, covered one of its cameras with a blanket and fled the scene in a red minivan with a woman who was in possession of marijuana, according to an evidentiary affidavit in the case. Â
Swansonâs trial is set for next month. Â
A Scrivenerâs ErrorÂ
But Smithâs dispute is not over Swansonâs charges. Itâs over his bond terms. Â
The Cody Circuit Court set Swansonâs bond at $5,000 cash or surety and ordered him not to violate any laws. He was forbidden from leaving Wyoming or Montana, his state of residence, without permission. Â
At Swansonâs arraignment, Park County District Court Judge William Simpson acknowledged without disapproval that Swanson was calling in from Billings, according to a court transcript attached to Smithâs letter. Â
But when Swansonâs case had moved from the lower-level circuit court into Simpsonâs felony-level district court, his bond appeared to change: Simpson checked a box saying that Swanson could not leave Wyoming. Â
A Fresh CrimeÂ
Meanwhile, Swanson was arrested Feb. 16 in Billings while out of jail on his bond for a domestic violence misdemeanor. Â
He pleaded guilty March 8, according to Smithâs documents. That same day, the Yellowstone County Attorney filed a fugitive from justice complaint seeking Swansonâs extradition to Wyoming so that Swanson could answer for his bond violation. Â
Hatfield, the district court judge and others met March 9 in a video conference to discuss their next steps. Â
Swansonâs bonds agent disputed the new bond terms specifying that Swanson could only be in Wyoming. Â
But that was a âscrivenerâs error,â or a mistake in filling out the paperwork, Hatfield told the judge.
âAt the time this Court set bond conditions, I believe all parties knew that Mr. Swanson was in Montana,â said Hatfield. âI think itâs just an inaccurate block check on here.â Â
The FugitiveÂ
Hatfield still considered Swanson to be a fugitive for living outside his bond terms and wanted him back in Wyoming to answer for the violation, the transcript indicates.  Â
It wasnât that Swanson had fled without permission, said Hatfield: It was that he had committed a crime when he promised he wouldnât. Â
âThe State has not alleged that by being in Montana heâs violated bond, but rather that by committing new crimes in Montana he has violated bond,â said Hatfield. Â
Donât Make Me GoÂ
Swanson sat in jail while authorities scrambled to extradite him, according to the documents. Â
He already had signed a Dec. 13 extradition waiver in Wyoming letting authorities send him across state lines to be prosecuted.Â
But the court in Montana wanted him to sign another extradition waiver, the documents indicate. Â
Swanson refused to sign another waiver. Â
Hatfield told Cowboy State Daily on Monday that itâs common for the Montana judiciary to demand its own extradition waivers. Â
âMontana, frequently, even when we present a written waiver of extradition, if the individual in front of the justice court there wonât sign (theirs), Montana refuses to accept (ours),â said Hatfield.  âI canât say I necessarily disagree with them. If they have a pre-signed waiver and the individual is standing in front of them, it seems itâs a repudiation of the waiver if they refuse to sign.â Â
So Skoric applied for a governorâs warrant â a request from Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon to Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte asking Montana to deport Swanson back to Wyoming. Â
âFledâÂ
Skoricâs March 15 application for a governorâs warrant said that Swanson âfled from the State of Wyomingâ and was now refusing to be extradited back to the state to face the case against him. Â
Gov. Mark Gordon on March 30 granted Skoricâs request, signing a governorâs warrant asking Gianforte to give Swanson over to the Park County Sheriff. Â
Hatfield told Cowboy State Daily that governorâs warrant applications consist of stock language that the attorney generalâs office requires. He characterized the phrase âfled from the State of Wyomingâ as boiler-plate language encapsulating any bond violation. Â
Skoric made the same characterization. He also said Smithâs claims are âdefamatory allegationsâ and would âbe dealt with accordingly.â
Judge Says NoÂ
Swanson cried foul, claiming there were no grounds for the governorâs warrant because heâd already signed an extradition waiver in Wyoming, and because he had permission to be in Montana under his bond. Â
He applied for a pre-trial writ of habeas corpus, claiming authorities were holding him illegally. Â
The judge denied that petition. Â
âSwanson argues that he is being illegally detained,â wrote Yellowstone County District Court Judge Donald L. Harris in the July 11 order. âSwanson contends that the Montana warrant was based on inaccurate information ⌠(because it) alleges that Swanson fled from Wyoming and is a fugitive from justice.âÂ
Swanson hadnât fled Wyoming, the defendant argued. Â
Still, the judge denied Swansonâs petition and noted that â according to the bond agreement â Swanson wasnât allowed to leave Wyoming.  Â
Alleged PerjuryÂ
Smith wrote in his letter that Hatfield and Skoric must have deceived the Montana judge into thinking Swanson was on the run so that the judge unjustly denied Swansonâs petition. Â
âMr. Brian (sic) A. Skoric and Mr. Jack R. Hatfield II were in fact duty-bound and oath-bound to inform the (court) that Condition No. 5 was indeed a âscrivenerâs errorâ as stated by Mr. Jack R. Hatfield II in the status hearing,â wrote Smith. Â
Smith claims the two prosecutors kept this information from the judge intentionally. Â
Full Faith And CreditÂ
Hatfield cast this as nonsense.Â
âWe didnât even know there was a habeas corpus hearing or anything,â said Hatfield. âMontana never asked me anything, and I donât think Montana ever asked our office anything.â Â
He said that even if the judge had known about the scrivenerâs error, it would not have changed the outcome of his denying Swansonâs petition. Â
A state receiving a governorâs warrant has two main duties: to ensure the warrant is in the proper form and to confirm that the individual being sought is the same person they have, said Hatfield. Â
He continued, saying the constitutional principle of full faith and credit between the states prevents the state receiving the warrant from scrutinizing the requesting stateâs grounds for prosecution.Â
âOur judges will frequently tell defendants â when they start trying to argue the validity of the case in the other state â our judges will tell them, âThatâs not what weâre dealing with today. You have to address that in that state. Weâre just addressing the warrant,ââ said Hatfield. Â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.




