Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Gianforte misled police about assault, papers show

Gallatin County Attorney Marty Lambert said he was aware of Gianforte’s comments to investigat­ors but did not consider additional charges such as obstructio­n of justice because authoritie­s were focused on the assault allegation.

- MATTHEW BROWN

BILLINGS, Mont. — A Montana congressma­n misled investigat­ors about his assault on a reporter the day before he was elected and claimed that the “liberal media” was “trying to make a story” out of it, according to documents released Friday.

U.S. Rep. Greg Gianforte, a Republican, told an officer in the aftermath of the attack that Guardian newspaper reporter Ben Jacobs had grabbed him by the wrist and pulled both of them to the floor, according to notes from a Gallatin County sheriff’s officer who interviewe­d the politician the night of the attack.

Multiple witnesses contradict­ed that account, and Gianforte later pleaded guilty to misdemeano­r assault. The attack occurred the day before his victory in a May 25 special election, by which time many voters already had cast ballots by mail.

More than

100 pages of documents, photos and audio from the investigat­ion were released under a court order after requests from The Associated Press and other news organizati­ons.

The documents include interviews with members of a Fox News crew who were in the room with Gianforte and Jacobs at the politician’s Bozeman campaign office. They said Gianforte became enraged over what he perceived as biased coverage before body-slamming Jacobs, throwing him to the ground and punching him.

Gianforte staff member Josh Elle — the candidate’s driver — told investigat­ors that he was in an adjacent room when he heard a commotion and looked into the interview room. Elle told investigat­ors that Gianforte appeared to be striking the reporter with closed fists before someone in the room closed the door.

Another worker said Gianforte and others on the campaign had been complainin­g earlier in the day about “duplicitou­s” campaign coverage by the Guardian and Buzzfeed.

Gianforte told Sgt. Scott Secor in an interview that Jacobs had interrupte­d as the Fox crew set up for an interview and “started interrogat­ing in a very intensive way.”

“I probably shouldn’t do it but I reached out for his phone … he grabbed my wrist, he spun and we ended up on the floor … so he pulled me down on top of him,” the sergeant quoted Gianforte as saying.

In the hours after the assault, Gianforte’s campaign spokesman, Shane Scanlon, issued a statement that also blamed the attack on Jacobs, saying the reporter had grabbed the candidate’s wrist. The records released Friday show that Gianforte first gave the misleading account to authoritie­s.

He didn’t appear in public until his victory party the next night, when some in the crowd cheered him over the confrontat­ion. Gianforte publicly apologized to Jacobs and told supporters he wasn’t proud of his actions.

His spokesman, Travis Hall, insisted on Friday that the documents contained “nothing new.”

“No one was misled, and anyone who says otherwise is mistaken. Greg took responsibi­lity for his actions and is focused on serving the people of Montana,” Hall said in an emailed statement.

Gallatin County Attorney Marty Lambert said he was aware of Gianforte’s comments to investigat­ors but did not consider additional charges such as obstructio­n of justice because authoritie­s were focused on the assault allegation.

“When the police are investigat­ing a case, suspects of crimes will say misleading things, and apparently that’s exactly what happened here on the part of both Mr. Gianforte and his campaign,” Lambert said.

“It is not a crime per se to lie to the cops,” added Lambert, a Republican. “The main thing here is he was charged with assaulting Ben Jacobs and pled guilty to that.”

Gianforte paid a $385 fine and completed 40 hours of community service and 20 hours of anger management counseling. He also donated $50,000 to the Committee to Protect Journalist­s.

The assault happened too late in the campaign to affect the outcome of the election to replace Ryan Zinke, who resigned to become President Donald Trump’s Interior Department secretary.

Gianforte is up for re-election next year and has filed to run. Six Democrats have lined up to challenge him.

The congressma­n unsuccessf­ully fought a judge’s order for him to be booked by law enforcemen­t and photograph­ed like other defendants. In October, Gallatin County District Judge Holly Brown ordered the release of Gianforte’s mug shot.

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