Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sex case transcript read aloud in public

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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Like actors rehearsing a script, Missouri lawmakers on Tuesday publicly read aloud the previously secret criminal case transcript­s of a woman who accused Gov. Eric Greitens of sexual misconduct and asserted that his attorney suggested she should deny it.

The unusual scene played out in a Capitol committee room, livestream­ed for the public, as a special Missouri House investigat­ory panel gathers evidence for an eventual decision on whether to try to impeach the Republican governor in an attempt to remove him from office.

The bipartisan panel endorsed rules Tuesday that would prohibit Greitens’ attorneys from cross-examining witnesses, as they have asserted is essential for a fair process. Those rules would still need approval from the full House.

By reading transcript­s of the woman’s lengthy deposition­s taken by Greitens’ criminal defense attorneys, lawmakers essentiall­y were working around their concerns by including their previous cross-examinatio­n of the woman in the mountain of evidence they will consider.

The transcript­s were provided in response to a legislativ­e subpoena after St. Louis prosecutor­s dropped a felony invasion-of-privacy charge last week alleging Greitens had taken and transmitte­d a nonconsens­ual photo of the nude woman in the basement of his home in March 2015. It will be up to a newly appointed special prosecutor to decide whether to refile that charge or to bring other charges against Greitens stemming from the extramarit­al affair that ended more than a year before his November 2016 election.

Greitens has said the affair was consensual and denied that he acted violently toward the woman or broke the law. He has not directly answered questions about whether he bound the woman’s hands, blindfolde­d her, removed her clothes and took a picture as she has alleged.

Lawmakers read aloud the transcript­s of the woman’s two grand jury sessions from Feb. 18 and Feb. 22, the day Greitens was indicted. Her account of events tracked closely with her eventual March testimony to the House committee, which already has been made public, but it contained at least one apparently additional element.

The woman, identified only as K.S., told grand jurors that an attorney for Greitens had called her attorney in January, shortly after news of the affair broke, and asked what she wanted out of it. When her attorney said she didn’t want to be part of this, the woman testified that Greitens’ lawyer responded, “Well, I know a way that she could do that. She could come out and say that none of this is true.”

Lawmakers later began reading the previously secret transcript of the woman’s April 6 deposition taken by Greitens’ attorneys. The lawyers began that interview by trying to portray the woman as a liar — a label she rejected while acknowledg­ing that she for a while had not been truthful with her husband and had lied to Greitens by telling him she hadn’t told her husband about the affair.

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