And so it goes.

Macomb County Prosecutor Eric Smith resigned Monday after 10 criminal indictments, after claiming for many months that we was innocent, a victim of a politically motivated State Police investigation, after grinning and smirking at his initial court appearance last week, and after making the same brand of excuses offered by countless defendants that he had demeaned for years as the county’s top lawman.

Now he’s on the other side of the criminal justice system, facing five counts of embezzlement and fronting a criminal enterprise. With his resignation six days after the indictments, he joins the long list of Macomb public officials destroyed by FBI corruption charges since 2016.

Unlike many others caught in these type of scandals, Smith takes a big, big fall in a promising political career. He was viewed as a rising star in the Michigan Democratic Party and was considered as Gov. Whitmer’s 2018 nominee for attorney general.

Yet, Smith has demonstrated an arrogance, a dismissive attitude toward the local media, while he quietly feathered his nest by allegedly misspending hundreds of thousands of dollars intended for law enforcement purposes.

Some members of the Board of Commissioners tried to protect the prosecutor by claiming any inquiry into his spending of funds from drug dealers and drunken drivers was premature. They said there was no smoking gun.

Still, financial records from $1.8 million of spending from this restricted fund became highly suspect once the copies of checks became public last year.

Parties, TVs and furniture

Evidence showed that Smith had spent hundreds of thousands of dollars not on law enforcement efforts, as state law required, but rather on unspecified credit card purchases, cell phone bills, satellite TV service, furniture and refrigerators for the prosecutor’s staff, and lavish office parties.

In addition, documents show that Smith donated about $100,000 designated for crime-fighting activities to churches, schools and charities, such as the Kiwanis and Goodfellows.

All the money was supposed to be for law enforcement purposes since it was derived through asset forfeitures, which let police and prosecutors to seize cash and property from those arrested on drug offenses, and cars from repeat drunken driving offenders.

Stacks of documents also show irregular expenditures that go far beyond credit cards and phone bills:

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This is an excerpt from a column I wrote for Deadline Detroit.