TBA Law Blog


Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Apr 16, 2026

The state House has passed legislation allowing the Tennessee attorney general (AG) to audit and possibly replace the Shelby County district attorney (DA). The News Herald reports that HB0483/SB0443 gives the AG authority to review how cases are handled, including pretrial release conditions, bail requirements and use of grant money. The AG also is authorized to ask the Tennessee Supreme Court to appoint a replacement if an audit finds the DA declined to prosecute criminal offenses. The state Senate passed the bill today with two amendments. First, it changed the audit to a study, but allowed the AG to request an audit by the state Comptroller's Office if needed. Second, it voted to limit the study to cases from the Memphis Safe Task Force. DA Steve Mulroy has criticized the proposal saying, “The bill targets Shelby County only for unprecedented, intrusive oversight of a locally elected DA by an unelected attorney general, without providing any basis for treating Shelby County differently … The provision allowing the attorney general to seek a temporary replacement of a DA largely repeats language already in Tennessee law and is therefore unnecessary; to the extent it goes further, it is likely unconstitutional.”