United States Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Indiana

01/10/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/10/2025 12:28

James M. Warden, Longest-Serving Assistant U.S. Attorney in the History of the Southern District of Indiana, Retires After Nearly 40 Years of Public Service

Press Release

James M. Warden, Longest-Serving Assistant U.S. Attorney in the History of the Southern District of Indiana, Retires After Nearly 40 Years of Public Service

Friday, January 10, 2025
For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Southern District of Indiana

INDIANAPOLIS- Zachary A. Myers, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Indiana issued the following statement on the retirement of Assistant United States Attorney, James M. Warden.

"Jim Warden is one of the finest and most dedicated public servants I've had the privilege to know. Throughout his career he has demonstrated tremendous commitment to the protecting the public, and holding offenders accountable for the harm they cause in our community," said U.S. Attorney Myers. "Jim took on many of the most complex and serious prosecutions our office handled, working to master technical issues while representing the United States with unfailing civility and wit. Several generations of prosecutors, professional staff, and agents have benefited from his mentorship, wise counsel, and generosity with his time. I wish Jim and his family nothing but the best in his next chapter and am fortunate to call him a friend."

Mr. Warden is a native of Bloomington and began serving as an U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Indiana on May 20, 1985, after being selected by then-U.S. Attorney John D. Tinder. Warden retires as the longest-ever serving attorney in the Office's ninety-seven-year history. His tremendous career spanned seven different Presidentially appointed U.S. Attorneys and twelve Presidentially appointed Attorneys General.

As a federal prosecutor, Warden led investigations and prosecutions of a wide variety of offenses, specializing in prosecution of criminal tax violations, complex frauds, violent crime, and public corruption. Throughout his illustrious career, James Warden has led the Office in prosecuting many 'firsts,' including the office's first money laundering and currency transaction structuring cases.

In 1999, Warden secured the district's first car-jacking conviction. Warden prosecuted numerous bank robbers, including the Curry Brothers, who robbed four Indiana banks in 2008 and stole over a million dollars before being convicted and sent to federal prison-Daniel Curry was sentenced to 90 years after his conviction at trial.

Warden secured major convictions against many public officials, including former Marion County Chief Deputy Prosecutor David Wyser, who accepted a $2,500 bribe in exchange for approving the early release of a convicted killer in 2013. Warden also served for many years as the office's lead prosecutor for criminal offenses arising from the Bureau of Prisons' Federal Correctional Complex in Terre Haute, including murders, assaults against staff, official corruption, and trafficking of weapons and other contraband offenses.

In addition to his accomplishments as a federal prosecutor Warden founded and chaired the Indiana Bank Fraud Working Group for 35 years, led several other financial crime task forces, and mentored and trained many colleagues and investigators along the way.

Warden earned his undergraduate degree from Indiana University-Bloomington in 1974, and his law degree from the Indiana University School of Law-Indianapolis in 1977. He began his legal career as a municipal court public defender in Marion County, before serving for two years as a Deputy Prosecuting Attorney for Hancock County. He served as a Deputy Prosecuting Attorney for Marion County from 1979 until joining the U.S. Attorney's Office, where he held several supervisory and leadership positions, including as lead prosecutor for the white-collar crime unit and grand jury division. Warden proudly and honorably served his country for over thirty years in the United States Navy, rising to the rank of Captain and serving as a military judge.

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Updated January 10, 2025
Topic
Office and Personnel Updates