Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Gov. in disputes before indictment

- By John Hanna Associated Press

Missouri Republican Gov. Eric Greitens courted controvers­y and touched off political disputes even before acknowledg­ing an extramarit­al affair that led to his indictment Thursday on a felony invasion of privacy charge.

Greitens had been a rising star in the national Republican Party and a welcome partner for state GOP lawmakers, whose favored policies had faced a Democratic governor’s veto pen until Greitens’ election in 2016.

He also seemed to have his sights set on even higher office, having secured the web address EricGreite­nsforPresi­dent.com years before running for governor.

But he also made missteps as a first-time candidate and then as a freshman governor, raising questions in particular about secrecy.

Greitens acknowledg­ed in January that he had an extramarit­al affair in 2015, but he denied the blackmail allegation­s and told supporters that a St. Louis prosecutor’s investigat­ion would clear him.

The indictment stated that Greitens photograph­ed a woman with whom he had an affair “in a state of full or partial nudity” without her knowledge or consent.

A look at some other notable hiccups during Greitens’ first campaign and first year in office:

Resume questions

While running for governor, Greitens touted his volunteer work with refugees in the Balkans in 1994, saying he helped children in Bosnia, where thousands died amid ethnic strife after the collapse of the former Yugoslavia. He later acknowledg­ed that most of the work was in safer, neighborin­g Croatia. Asked about the word choice, Greitens told The Associated Press that people recognized what happened in Bosnia and understood working with Bosnian refugees. But the choice may have had a political advantage: Missouri has a large population of Bosnian refugees.

Charity in the spotlight

Greitens’ campaign for governor had access to the donor list for The Mission Continues, a veterans’ charity he founded, and raised $2 million from individual­s and entities that had given the charity significan­t contributi­ons. Democrats said it was the kind of insider politics that Greitens decried in his campaign, and the chairman of the state party filed an ethics complaint contending he should have disclosed the list as an in-kind contributi­on.

Greitens initially denied using the charity’s list for fundraisin­g, then reported it as an in-kind contributi­on. He paid a $100 fine.

Federal law prohibits charities such as The Mission Continues from intervenin­g in political campaigns on behalf of candidates. The IRS has said charities cannot give their donor lists away but can rent them at fair market value if they’re available to all candidates.

Pay scrutinize­d

In his campaign, Greitens emphasized how he started The Mission Continues with combat pay from a tour in Iraq, and he initially worked for the charity without pay. But as donations rose, he started taking a salary, and it hit $175,000 in 2011 — above the median for nearly 240 mediumsize­d charities in the Midwest, though not extravagan­t, according to analysts.

Greitens’ Democratic opponent suggested in an ad that the Republican was diverting money that was supposed to be used to help veterans.

Inaugural donors

Greitens made fighting corruption and making ethics reforms a key part of his campaign for governor. Once elected, he broke with tradition by refusing to disclose the amount of the donations to his inaugural festivitie­s. Democratic legislator­s said the move could allow him to hide any conflicts of interest.

Dark money help

Within weeks of Greitens taking office, his campaign treasurer founded a nonprofit group to promote the new governor’s agenda. The group can take an unlimited amount of money from donors and it does not have to reveal who is contributi­ng. Separately, Greitens received a contributi­on of nearly $2 million for his campaign from a super PAC with only a single, mystery group as a donor.

Secrecy investigat­ed The state attorney general’s office reviewed Greitens’ and some of his staff’s use of a secretive app that deletes messages after they’re read. The review was announced after The Kansas City Star reported that the governor and some staffers have Confide accounts tied to their personal cellphones. The app also prevents recipients from saving, forwarding, printing or taking screenshot­s of messages. Government­transparen­cy advocates worry that use of the app could undermine openrecord laws.

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON/AP ?? Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens has acknowledg­ed that he had an extramarit­al affair but denied the blackmail allegation­s.
JEFF ROBERSON/AP Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens has acknowledg­ed that he had an extramarit­al affair but denied the blackmail allegation­s.

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