Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

AG impeached in South Dakota

He’ll face Senate trial tied to ’20 crash that killed pedestrian

- MITCH SMITH

The South Dakota House of Representa­tives voted Tuesday to impeach the state’s attorney general, Jason Ravnsborg, who fatally struck a man with his car in 2020.

The impeachmen­t vote, which split the Republican­s who dominate South Dakota politics, suspended Ravnsborg from his official duties while he awaits a trial in the state Senate that could result in his permanent removal from office.

“I believe impeachmen­t should be reserved only for grave and exceptiona­l circumstan­ces. And I believe this is one,” state Rep. Will Mortenson, a Republican, said Tuesday on the House floor.

Ravnsborg, a Republican in his first term in office, called 911 in September 2020 to report that he had hit something, possibly a deer, with his car while traveling at night on a rural highway. The next day, when Ravnsborg and others surveyed the scene of the collision, they saw that the car had struck Joe Boever, 55, who had been walking along the side of the highway near Highmore, S.D.

Ravnsborg pleaded no contest to two misdemeano­r charges in connection with the crash. He did not serve jail time.

Prosecutor­s who testified before a legislativ­e committee this year said they did not have evidence to support more serious charges. That legislativ­e committee recommende­d against impeachmen­t last month but left the final decision to the full House, which voted 36-31 to impeach him.

Craig Price, secretary of the South Dakota Department of Public Safety, told lawmakers that he believed Ravnsborg should have been charged with second-degree manslaught­er.

Ravnsborg, who had said little publicly about the case, released a letter the day before the impeachmen­t vote, saying that he “could not resign then and cannot resign now because the incident did not impede my ability to perform the functions” of attorney general. He accused Gov. Kristi Noem, a fellow Republican who repeatedly called on him to resign, of taking the “unfortunat­e circumstan­ces of a man being killed in a traffic accident to make her political moves.”

Noem fired back, calling the attorney general’s letter bizarre and accusing him of lying about the events of the crash. Investigat­ors had focused on whether Ravnsborg knew on the night of the crash that it was a person that he had hit, or whether, as he asserted, he did not learn that until the next day.

“The Attorney General wants to make this about me, to distract House members, when the question before them is whether he should be the state’s top law enforcemen­t officer,” Noem said on Twitter before the impeachmen­t vote. “He killed an innocent man, lied about the events of that evening, and abused his office to cover it up.”

After Ravnsborg was impeached, Noem said lawmakers “did the right thing for the people of South Dakota and for Joe Boever’s family.”

Attempts to reach Ravnsborg after the vote were not immediatel­y successful. The chief of staff for the South Dakota attorney general’s office referred requests for comment to an outside spokespers­on for Ravnsborg, who did not immediatel­y respond to a message.

For Ravnsborg to be convicted by the state Senate and possibly removed from office, two-thirds of the senators would have to vote to convict him. The state constituti­on requires that Ravnsborg be served with papers at least 20 days before the Senate trial begins, meaning those proceeding­s cannot take place until May.

 ?? (AP/Pierre Capital Journal/Jorge Encinas) ?? Republican state Rep. Will Mortenson talks to fellow South Dakota House members during the impeachmen­t hearing for Attorney General Jason Ravnsborg on Tuesday in Pierre.
(AP/Pierre Capital Journal/Jorge Encinas) Republican state Rep. Will Mortenson talks to fellow South Dakota House members during the impeachmen­t hearing for Attorney General Jason Ravnsborg on Tuesday in Pierre.

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