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State Auditor of Mississippi

Elected official in the executive branch of Mississippi's state government


Elected official in the executive branch of Mississippi's state government

FieldValue
postState Auditor
bodyMississippi
imageShad White (cropped).jpg
altPhotograph of Shad White
incumbentShad White
incumbentsinceJuly 17, 2018
termlengthFour years, renewable, no term limits
inauguralJohn R. Girault
formation1817
website

The state auditor of Mississippi is an elected official in the executive branch of Mississippi's state government. The duty of the state auditor is to ensure accountability in the use of funds appropriated by the state legislature by inspecting and reporting on the expenditure of the public funds.

Shad White is the incumbent state auditor of Mississippi as of 2025. He assumed office on July 17, 2018.

History of the office

The position of state auditor was enumerated as part of the executive branch in Mississippi's first constitution in 1817. The office was filled by the choice of the Mississippi Legislature. The first auditor, John R. Girault, was elected on December 19, 1817. The 1832 constitution stipulated that the auditor was to be popularly elected to serve a two-year term. The 1869 Constitution extended the term to four years.

The fourth Constitution of Mississippi, ratified in 1890, made the state auditor ineligible to hold consecutive terms, and barred the state auditor and state treasurer from immediately succeeding each other. This measure was implemented as an effort to prevent collusion between the two officeholders, after a series of embezzlements and misuses of public funds during the Reconstruction era. A 1966 constitutional amendment lifted the prohibitions, making the state auditor eligible to serve consecutive terms. In 1986, the Constitution Committee of the Mississippi House voted to approve a proposal to limit the state auditor to a ten-year tenure, but the measure was rejected by the full House after initially being passed by the state senate. The 1890 constitution also required the auditor to publish a report of all expenses incurred by the legislature during its sessions, though this responsibility was transferred to a different officer in 1989.

In 1993 some employees in the Department of Audit's investigative division were made law enforcement officers. Originally restricted to exercising the power of arrest only after an individual had been indicted by a court following an auditing investigation, in 2003 the officers were granted full arrest powers and thus permitted to arrest anyone for any crime they detected in the course of their duties.

Hamp King, who held the office from 1964 to 1984, was the first certified public accountant to serve as state auditor. Ray Mabus, who became auditor in 1984, raised the public profile of the office through a crackdown on corruption. The incumbent auditor, Shad White, assumed office on July 17, 2018.

Powers, duties, and structure

Under Article 5, Section 134, of the Mississippi Constitution, the state auditor is elected every four years. Candidates for the office must meet the same constitutional qualifications as candidates for the position of secretary of state; they must be at least 25 years old and have lived in the state for at least five years. Auditors are elected to a four-year term without term limits.

The state auditor is responsible for auditing state agencies, county governments, school districts, and tertiary educational institutions. They also conduct data audits for public schools and monitor state agencies' inventory. They advise local governments on accounting matters in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles and relevant laws, and investigate misuse of public funds. The office lacks the ability to prosecute cases of criminal wrongdoing in court and, in such instances where wrongdoing is believed to have occurred, typically turns over its findings to other prosecutors.

The Department of Audit has approximately 150 employees, including about 40 certified public accountants. It has four divisions: Financial and Compliance Audit Division, Investigative Division, Government Accountability Division, and the Technical Assistance Division. The auditor's salary was $90,000 per year, but increased to $150,000 annually in 2024.

List of auditors

Source: Mississippi Official & Statistical Register

Territorial auditors (1798–1817)

  • Charles B. Howell
  • Beverly R. Grayson
  • Park Walton

State auditors (1817–present)

#ImageNameTerm of officeParty
1John R. Girault1817–1819
2John Richards1819–1822
3[[File:Hiram Runnels.jpg60px]]Hiram G. Runnels1822–1830
4Thomas B. J. Hadley1830–1833
5John H. Mallory1833–1837
6A. B. Saunders1837–1842
7J. E. Matthews1842–1847
8George T. Swann1847–1851
9Daniel R. Russell1851–1855
10Madison McAfee1855–1859
11[[File:E.R..jpg60px]]Erasmus Burt1859–1861
12A. B. Dilworth1861–1862
13A. J. Gillespie1862–1865
14Thomas T. Swann1865–1869
15Henry Musgrove1869–1874
16William H. Gibbs1874–1876
17Sylvester Gwin1878–1886
18[[File:Walter W Stone.png78x78px]]W. W. Stone1886–1896Democratic
19[[File:William Dunbar Holder by Andres Molinary.jpg72x72px]]W. D. Holder1896–1900Democratic
20[[File:William Qualls Cole, Mississippi State Auditor.jpg60px]]William Qualls Cole1900–1904Democratic
21[[File:Thomas Monroe Henry.png60px]]Thomas Monroe Henry1904–1908Democratic
22Elias Jefferson Smith1908–1912Democratic
23[[File:Duncan Thompson.png79x79px]]Duncan Lafayette Thompson1912–1916Democratic
24[[File:Robert E Wilson MS.png73x73px]]Robert E. Wilson1916–1920Democratic
25[[File:William J Miller.png77x77px]]W. J. Miller1920–1924Democratic
26[[File:George D Riley.png79x79px]]George Dumah Riley1924–1928Democratic
27[[File:Carl C. White from Clarion-Ledger election ad.jpg60px]]Carl C. White1928–1932Democratic
28[[File:Joe S Price.png78x78px]]Joe S. Price1932–1936Democratic
29[[File:Carl Craig 1943 campaign ad photo.jpg60px]]Carl Craig1936–1940Democratic
30[[File:J M Causey.png75x75px]]J. M. Causey1940–1944Democratic
31[[File:Bert J Barnett.jpg74x74px]]Bert J. Barnett1944–1948Democratic
32[[File:Carl Craig 1943 campaign ad photo.jpg60px]]Carl Craig1948–1952Democratic
33[[File:W D Neal.jpg94x94px]]William Donelson Neal1952–1956Democratic
34[[File:E B Golding.jpg84x84px]]E. Boyd Golding1956–1960Democratic
35[[File:W D Neal.jpg94x94px]]William Donelson Neal1960–1964Democratic
36[[File:W. Hampton King.jpg60px]]Hamp King1964–1984Democratic
37[[File:Ray Mabus (MS) (cropped).png60px]]Ray Mabus1984–1988Democratic
38Pete Johnson1988–1992
39Steve Patterson1992–1996Democratic
40[[File:Governor Phil Bryant (cropped).jpg60px]]Phil Bryant1996–2008Republican
41[[File:Stacey E. Pickering.jpg60px]]Stacey Pickering2008–2018Republican
42[[File:Shad White (cropped).jpg60px]]Shad White2018–presentRepublican

References

Works cited

References

  1. (June 17, 2007). "Auditor: Accountability not partisan". [[Clarion-Ledger]].
  2. (July 17, 2018). "Shad White takes oath as new state auditor in Mississippi". [[Clarion-Ledger]].
  3. MS Const. (1890) art. V, § 134.
  4. (October 10, 1890). "[untitled]". [[The Mississippi Enterprise]].
  5. (October 27, 1966). "Amendment Would Change 1890 Constitution On State Auditor". Columbian-Progress.
  6. (November 9, 1966). "Mississippi's amendments gather heavy urban votes". [[Hattiesburg American]].
  7. (January 30, 1986). "Treasurer succession recommended". [[The Clarksdale Press Register]].
  8. (February 12, 1986). "Legislature OKs amendment to let treasurers succeed selves". [[The Clarion-Ledger]].
  9. (April 5, 1991). "Longtime auditor Hamp King dies". Enterprise-Journal.
  10. Johnson, Hayes. (July 23, 1987). "6 vie for post in low visibility state auditor race". The Clarion-Ledger.
  11. Pettus, Emily Wagster. (July 17, 2018). "Shad White takes oath as new state auditor in Mississippi". The Clarion-Ledger.
  12. Gates, Jimmie E.. (July 22, 2018). "When politics meets the road". The Clarion-Ledger.
  13. "About". Mississippi Office of the State Auditor.
  14. Pender, Geoff. (April 7, 2022). "Amid vetoes, Gov. Reeves lets pay raises for elected officials pass". Nonprofit Mississippi News.
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