Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Outgoing Missouri governor signs ‘revenge porn’ law

- By David A. Lieb

JEFFERSON CITY, MO. » Hours before he was to leave office, Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens on Friday signed into law a measure that makes it a crime to try to blackmail a person using a private sexual image — the same allegation that led to his downfall.

The new “revenge porn” law makes it a felony to threaten the nonconsens­ual disseminat­ion of such an image by coercing another person to refrain from an action.

The governor has been accused of taking a nonconsens­ual photo of a partially nude woman with whom he had an affair in 2015 and warning her he would distribute it if she ever spoke of their encounter.

He has acknowledg­ed having the affair but denied criminal wrongdoing and refused to directly answer questions about whether he took the photo.

Greitens cannot be charged under the law because it was not in effect at the time. But a special prosecutor still is weighing whether to refile an invasion-of-privacy charge against Greitens under a different law.

The scandal-plagued governor was to formally step down at 5 p.m. to be replaced by Republican Lt. Gov. Mike Parson, who was to be sworn in shortly thereafter in a lowkey ceremony in the governor’s office.

Greitens was leaving with a flurry of activity — signing 77 bills into law while his campaign attorney filed last-minute court papers opposing the disclosure of documents and movers loaded his personal belongings onto a truck at the governor’s mansion.

In a news releasing announcing the bill signings, Greitens touted other bills he signed, such as a corporate income tax cut and changes to the state foster care system.

His resignatio­n is part of a deal with a St. Louis prosecutor to drop a felony charge alleging misuse of a charity donor list to raise money for his 2016 gubernator­ial campaign. His voluntary departure also avoids the potentiall­y dubious distinctio­n of becoming the first Missouri governor to be impeached by the House.

Parson said he wants to assure people “that everything’s fine and government is going to go forward.”

His job now, he told St. Louis radio station KMOX, is to “work hard and make sure I’m prepared and do the best I can to make this transfer of power as smooth as possible.”

Though he’s leaving, Greitens isn’t entirely clear of legal problems.

The Missouri Ethics Commission continues to investigat­e a complaint that Greitens’ campaign filed false documents about the charity donor list. The FBI also has received informatio­n about Greitens from the chairman of a House investigat­ory panel and a private attorney representi­ng the exhusband of the woman with whom he had an affair.

On Friday, an attorney for Greitens’ campaign and a pro-Greitens nonprofit called A New Missouri asked a judge to delay and reverse his previous order to turn over records to a House committee.

Lawyer Catherine Hanaway argued that the panel created to investigat­e allegation­s against the governor no longer has authority because Greitens is leaving office. But the House has said it still wants to enforce subpoenas for records related to potential coordinati­on between Greitens, his campaign committee and the nonprofit organizati­on.

In a separate case, the judge ordered Greitens to supply by Friday the names of all governor’s office employees who downloaded a smartphone app called Confide that automatica­lly deletes messages. The order also directs Greitens to provide phone numbers and other details about the devices, which would allow the plaintiffs in a lawsuit alleging violations of the state records-retention law to request informatio­n from Confide.

As Greitens prepared to leave office, his wife, Sheena Greitens, posted photos of the mansion and Capitol on Twitter alongside a message saying “it has been an honor & privilege to serve as First Lady.”

The 44-year-old Greitens is a former Navy SEAL officer who won election in 2016 as a political outsider pledging to take on “career politician­s” and crack down on perceived corruption in Jefferson City.

 ?? JULIE SMITH/THE JEFFERSON CITY NEWS-TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens reads from a prepared statement as he announces his resignatio­n during a news conference, Tuesday, at the state Capitol, in Jefferson City, Mo. Greitens resigned amid a widening investigat­ion that arose from an affair with...
JULIE SMITH/THE JEFFERSON CITY NEWS-TRIBUNE VIA AP Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens reads from a prepared statement as he announces his resignatio­n during a news conference, Tuesday, at the state Capitol, in Jefferson City, Mo. Greitens resigned amid a widening investigat­ion that arose from an affair with...

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