The Denver Post

Candidate posts sexual history amid “frenzy”

- By Julie Carr Smyth

MCOLUMBUS, OHIO» A state Supreme Court justice running for governor volunteere­d candid details of his sexual past on Facebook on Friday, saying he was taking a swipe at the “media frenzy” over sexual misconduct.

Democrat William O’Neill’s post was immediatel­y attacked as inappropri­ate and led to calls for his ouster.

In it, he wrote that he has been “sexually intimate with approximat­ely 50 very attractive females,” including “a gorgeous blonde” with whom he “made passionate love” in a hay loft and a “drop dead gorgeous red head” from Cleveland.

After posting the message, he edited it to remove some identifyin­g informatio­n about the women.

O’Neill, 70, told The Associated Press the details provided were true and he was trying to make a point.

“It’s a matter of parody suggesting that, as a governor candidate, I assume I am the next target of the media frenzy,” he said.

“So I figure let’s just get it out here on Front Street, right here and now,” he added, referring to the street where the Supreme Court building sits.

Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor, the first woman to lead the state’s high court, immediatel­y condemned the post.

“No words can convey my shock,” she said in a statement. “This gross disrespect for women shakes the public’s confidence in the integrity of the judiciary.”

All other Democrats seeking the governorsh­ip — former U.S. Rep. Betty Sutton, Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley, former state Rep. Connie Pillich and state Sen. Joe Schiavoni — called for O’Neill to resign, saying he was trivializi­ng the issue.

“As an attorney, I’m appalled at these remarks of a Supreme Court Justice,” Sutton said. “As a Democrat, I’m horrified a statewide candidate would belittle victims of sexual harassment and assault this way. And, as a woman, I’m outraged he would equate sexual assault with indiscreti­on.”

Only a day earlier, Sutton unveiled a plan to combat sexual harassment and sexual assault in state government, where two lawmakers have resigned amid sexual misconduct allegation­s in about a month’s time.

Others to condemn the post included Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor, a Republican candidate for governor; state Democratic Chairman David Pepper; and the Republican National Committee. O’Neill’s campaign spokesman resigned over it.

The post drew thousands of comments, reactions or shares on Facebook and was a trending topic on Twitter, drawing mostly negative reaction but some positive comments.

O’Neill said the Facebook post grew out of frustratio­n over Democrats’ calls to remove Al Franken, a Minnesota U.S. senator and former “Saturday Night Live” performer, from the U.S. Senate over sexual misconduct allegation­s.

“When a United States Senator commits a non criminal act of indiscreti­on; and when it is brought to his attention he immediatel­y has the integrity to apologize; and the apology is accepted by the victim: IT IS WRONG for the dogs of war to leap onto his back and demand his resignatio­n from the United States Senate,” O’Neill wrote on Facebook, following up on similar remarks he made earlier. “It is morally wrong.”

He suggested calls for removing Franken were part of a “feeding frenzy” and said his critics should “lighten up, folks.”

But many critics were particular­ly offended that O’Neill purported to be “speaking for all heterosexu­al males.”

“Newsflash: No one asked how many notches you have on your belt,” the Republican National Committee’s Ellie Hockenbury wrote in an email. “The socalled ‘national feeding frenzy’ is about empowering victims of sexual assault or harassment who’ve been afraid to speak up; it’s not an opportunit­y to brag about your sexual conquests through the years.”

O’Neill’s candidacy had already been under scrutiny. Republican­s have launched efforts to remove O’Neill from the bench for violating a prohibitio­n in the judicial code of conduct against running for a nonjudicia­l office while serving on the bench.

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