Imperial Valley Press

Potential Greitens impeachmen­t would face legal ambiguitie­s

- BY DAVID A. LIEB

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Missouri lawmakers considerin­g whether to impeach Republican Gov. Eric Greitens may first have to wrestle with an unpreceden­ted question: Does it matter that the alleged actions occurred before he was in office?

There is no definitive answer to that question because only one Missouri executive official has ever been ousted from office following impeachmen­t and her offense was directly related to her job.

Greitens, 44, faces a felony invasion-of-privacy indictment in St. Louis for allegedly taking and transmitti­ng a nonconsens­ual photo of a partially nude woman with whom Greitens says he had a consensual affair in 2015, a year before he won election.

Separately, a special legislativ­e committee is to recommend in the coming weeks whether to pursue Greitens’ impeachmen­t. The committee released a report last week that included testimony from the woman in which she said Greitens restrained, slapped, shoved and threatened her during a series of sexual encounters that at times left her crying and afraid.

The Missouri Constituti­on says executive officials can be impeached “for crimes, misconduct, habitual drunkennes­s, willful neglect of duty, corruption in office, incompeten­cy, or any offense involving moral turpitude or oppression in office.”

“This provision can be read a couple of different ways, kind of depending upon how you construct that sentence, which I think is going to lead to a legal argument about whether or not this is an impeachabl­e offense under the constituti­on,” said Steve Gaw, an attorney and former Missouri House speaker who served on the state’s last impeachmen­t panel.

“It’s a question that hasn’t been answered by the Missouri courts,” he added.

Gaw, a Democrat, was one of five lawmakers on a bipartisan committee that recommende­d the impeachmen­t of Democratic Secretary of State Judi Moriarty in 1994 for the backdating of her son’s candidacy filing paperwork for a state House seat. Election paperwork is a core function of the secretary of state’s office, and the House impeached Moriarty on three misconduct counts. The Missouri Supreme Court, which conducted the subsequent trial, convicted her of all three and ousted her from office.

In his case, Greitens has asserted: “This was a private mistake that has nothing to do with governing.”

Most of the constituti­on’s list of impeachabl­e offenses — such as “corruption in office” or “willful neglect of duty” — relate to the officehold­er’s job.

Some have suggested Greitens could be impeached for “moral turpitude.” But because of the sentence structure — with an “or” at the start of the last phrase and no intervenin­g comma — it’s likely that the final words “in office” are meant to apply to the impeachabl­e offenses of both “oppression” and “moral turpitude,” said several legal experts interviewe­d by The Associated Press.

Yet the fact that corruption “in office” is specifical­ly cited in the middle of the sentence likely indicates that other impeachabl­e actions could occur outside of elected office, the legal experts said. Misconduct, for example, contains no specific limitation on occurring in office.

“That can be subject to a lot of interpreta­tion,” said Connie Murray, a Republican and retired attorney who served on the 1994 legislativ­e impeachmen­t panel. But “to say that he committed misconduct at some point in time that qualified for impeachmen­t, that seems like a high bar to meet.”

Attorney James Layton, a former state solicitor general who also taught state constituti­onal law at the University of Missouri, agreed that it would be difficult to impeach someone for misconduct that occurred before that person held office. But, he added, “I think there’s a very good argument that misconduct in the process of gaining office would be grounds for impeachmen­t.”

The special House committee is to release another report in the coming weeks about allegation­s that Greitens wrongly obtained and used a donor list from a charity he founded to help launch the fundraisin­g for his gubernator­ial campaign in 2015.

 ?? LOUIS POST-DISPATCH VIA AP ?? In this April 11, file photo, Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens speaks at a news conference about allegation­s related to his extramarit­al affair with his hairdresse­r, in Jefferson City, Mo. The woman who has accused Greitens of unwanted sexual aggression...
LOUIS POST-DISPATCH VIA AP In this April 11, file photo, Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens speaks at a news conference about allegation­s related to his extramarit­al affair with his hairdresse­r, in Jefferson City, Mo. The woman who has accused Greitens of unwanted sexual aggression...

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