Los Angeles Times

Cases against ex-governor are dropped

Ousted Missouri Republican won’t face charges in campaign finance, sex scandals.

- By Matt Pearce matt.pearce@latimes.com Twitter: @mattdpearc­e

Two weeks ago, Eric Greitens was the governor of Missouri — and for him, that’s where the good news ended. He was also facing two separate felony cases on charges of sexual misconduct and campaign-related malfeasanc­e.

But now that the Republican has resigned from office, both cases have disappeare­d — a dramatic turn of events for Greitens, whose political career began with a victorious outsider campaign in 2016, only to crash to earth in recent months.

Greitens will not face criminal charges over allegation­s that he photograph­ed a woman naked without her consent, a Kansas City-area prosecutor announced Friday. Investigat­ors did not have enough evidence to convict him, and the statute of limitation­s for filing charges expires this weekend, according to a statement from the Jackson County Prosecutor’s Office.

It’s the second time in two weeks that prosecutor­s have decided not to pursue criminal charges against the Republican, who was also facing threats of impeachmen­t from the Republican­led Legislatur­e before he stepped down June 1.

A second case disappeare­d when Greitens agreed to resign in a plea deal with the St. Louis city circuit attorney, Kim Gardner.

In exchange, Gardner dropped a felony computerta­mpering case over allegation­s that Greitens used a list of donors from his charity for veterans to solicit campaign contributi­ons.

As part of that deal, Greitens, while not admitting wrongdoing, conceded that prosecutor­s had enough evidence to take him to trial, according to confidenti­al settlement terms obtained by local media outlets.

Gardner had also previously pursued a felony invasion-of-privacy case against Greitens over allegation­s that he’d photograph­ed and blackmaile­d a woman — the most explosive scandal to rock his administra­tion.

In January, news outlets reported that Greitens had an affair with his St. Louisarea hairdresse­r in 2015 and that she had privately accused him of tying her up, stripping off her clothes, photograph­ing her naked and then threatenin­g to release the photo if she told anyone about the affair.

The woman later testified to lawmakers that Greitens had also coerced her into giving him oral sex.

Greitens admitted having the affair but denied the rest of the woman’s allegation­s, which only became public because the woman’s ex-husband, without her consent, had recorded a private conversati­on of her talking about Greitens.

The ex-husband later released the recording to the media against her will, and she declined to give interviews about Greitens.

The St. Louis Circuit Attorney’s Office originally filed a felony invasion-of-privacy charge against Greitens over the allegation, but dropped the charge after Greitens’ attorneys accused an investigat­or of mishandlin­g the investigat­ion.

Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker was then appointed special prosecutor to review whether charges should be refiled, culminatin­g in Friday’s decision not to pursue a trial.

Baker’s office said in a statement that investigat­ors had “exhausted potential leads” and that “still missing was corroborat­ing evidence for an invasion of privacy case.”

In a statement, the hairdresse­r’s attorney thanked prosecutor­s for their work on the case but criticized her treatment by journalist­s and her ex-husband as well as by Greitens’ legal team, which had questioned her account in a deposition and asked whether she was aroused.

“No woman should have to endure the trauma that comes from her ex-husband selling her private story for a six-figure payout,” said the statement from her lawyer, Scott Simpson, alluding to mysterious cash payments that were delivered to the exhusband’s attorney before the story went public.

“No woman should have to turn on the television and watch as the most private and difficult moments of her life are broadcast despite pleading with the reporter for privacy,” the statement said, according to the Kansas City Star. “No woman should be forced to answer countless hours of highly personal questions that are in no way relevant to the issue of whether a nude photograph was taken without her consent.”

Representa­tives for Greitens did not respond to a request for comment.

 ?? Julie Smith Jefferson City News-Tribune ?? ERIC GREITENS announces his resignatio­n May 29 at the state Capitol in Jefferson City, Mo., amid threats of impeachmen­t as well as felony charges on allegation­s of sexual blackmail and campaign finance violations.
Julie Smith Jefferson City News-Tribune ERIC GREITENS announces his resignatio­n May 29 at the state Capitol in Jefferson City, Mo., amid threats of impeachmen­t as well as felony charges on allegation­s of sexual blackmail and campaign finance violations.

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