This office decides who gets charged, what charges are filed, and how aggressively cases are pursued. The 2026 race pits an incumbent with a documented record of evidence non-disclosure against a challenger committed to transparency and accountability. Here are the facts.

George Psoras is a 38-year Carroll County trial attorney (Hampstead, MD) challenging the incumbent. Magna Cum Laude graduate of University of Baltimore School of Law. 2026 Martindale-Hubbell Client Champion Award. Has tried cases in virtually every Maryland court. His platform centers on prosecutorial integrity, community safety, and full Brady Rule compliance. Running with Chief Deputy candidate Joe Murtha — AV Preeminent rated, Super Lawyer, John Adams Award recipient, Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers, who won acquittals in the Linda Tripp case and Freddie Gray Officer Porter case.
Allan Culver Jr. is the sitting State's Attorney seeking re-election. During his time as Acting SA in 2021–2022, all four Carroll County Circuit Court judges banned him from their courtrooms after he failed to disclose credibility concerns about a sheriff's deputy to defense attorneys — a Brady Rule violation. One defendant's conviction was overturned. He opposed two Maryland transparency reform bills. He was declared "cleared" by his own boss — the man he personally endorsed — not by an independent investigation.
Carroll County voters should consider these trends when evaluating candidates for State's Attorney.
Sources: FBI NIBRS Data 2021-2022 · CrimeGrade.org 2025
In 2022, Carroll County's own circuit court judges took the extraordinary step of banning the sitting Acting State's Attorney from their courtrooms. Here are the documented facts.
All four sitting Carroll County Circuit Court judges unanimously announced they would refuse to hear cases involving Culver — an action described as extraordinary and nearly unprecedented.
A man who had pleaded guilty to drug charges was cleared and had his case thrown out after the non-disclosure came to light.
At least four people were held in jail without bond in cases involving the deputy while Culver sat on credibility information he was required to disclose.
Culver did not return multiple requests for comment from the Baltimore Banner or Baltimore Sun. His office referred questions to a senior staff attorney who also did not respond.
"I was hoping that the information in today's hearing would clear things up so I didn't have concerns. If anything, my concerns are magnified."
— Circuit Court Judge Richard R. Titus, May 27, 2022, after hearing sworn testimony about Culver's conduct"Prosecutors are required to seek out misconduct and disclose it, which they egregiously failed to do here."
— Natasha Dartigue, Maryland Public Defender Designate, June 2022Sources: Baltimore Banner (June 6, 2022) · Baltimore Sun (June 15, 2022) · Capital Gazette (October 23, 2023) · Carroll County Board of Elections · Maryland General Assembly testimony archive
The MPRP is a proposed transmission line project by PSEG, a New Jersey-based utility corporation, that would cut a 150-foot-wide, 70-mile path through Baltimore, Carroll, and Frederick Counties. The project has drawn opposition from local officials and property owners.
Has publicly opposed MPRP. States he will fight eminent domain for corporate gain and opposes forced surveyor access to private property without owner consent.
Has not taken a public position on MPRP or the eminent domain concerns facing Carroll County property owners as of the date of this publication.
Sources: Carroll County Board of Commissioners Resolution · WMAR2 News (April 2025) · Baltimore Sun
Two individuals broke into a Carroll County small business. The store owner confronted them and defended his property. The Carroll County State's Attorney's office subsequently charged the store owner with assault.
Community members objected to the prosecution, calling on the office to drop the charges. The office proceeded to trial.
George Psoras represented the store owner as defense counsel. The case was tried before Judge Stansfield in Carroll County Circuit Court.
Voters may consider this case when evaluating each candidate's approach to self-defense, property rights, and prosecutorial discretion.
Source: Carroll County Circuit Court records, Judge Stansfield
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Verify Registration →For deeper documentation of the concerns raised in this guide.
opposeallanculver.com →An independent report compiled from sworn court testimony, judicial orders, legislative records, and published journalism. Published by the Carroll County Small Businesses PAC. 22 pages, fully sourced.
Download Source Document (PDF) →Our AI assistant can answer factual questions about both candidates, explain the Buenger scandal, describe Brady Rule obligations, and help you find Carroll County election information.
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