The Denver Post

Ethics violation: Former Gov. John Hickenloop­er fined by commission.

Panel levies $2,750 penalty for flight, rides Hickenloop­er accepted in 2018

- By Conrad Swanson

U.S. Senate candidate John Hickenloop­er must pay a $2,750 fine for gifts he inappropri­ately accepted as governor but he faces no further consequenc­es for a contempt citation, the Colorado Independen­t Ethics Commission determined Friday.

The fines are twice the commission’s estimated cost for a one-way private flight and limousine rides Hickenloop­er improperly accepted at different points in 2018.

“Governor Hickenloop­er accepts the Commission’s findings and takes responsibi­lity,” Melissa Miller, a spokeswoma­n for his campaign, said Friday.

Commission Vice Chair William Leone noted that the body has never been able to assess “robust” penalties. It’s less about the money, anyway, he said. Instead it’s about the complaint, a breach of trust and violation of state ethics laws.

The commission shot down a request from Hickenloop­er’s attorney, Mark Grueskin, to purge a contempt citation they leveled against the former governor after he refused to cooperate with a subpoena requiring his testimony. But the group also agreed they wouldn’t attempt to charge Hickenloop­er for attorney fees over that citation given concerns voiced by Commission­er Yeulin Willett that the body might not have the authority to do so.

The commission’s ruling comes just a week after it determined Hickenloop­er violated state ethics laws by allowing large corporatio­ns to pay for a private jet trip to Connecticu­t, a Maserati limousine ride and plush dinners in 2018.

Hickenloop­er did not address the commission Friday, though he listened in on the call.

He has also downplayed the case as a smear attempt from Republican­s before the June 30 primary. The initial complaint was filed by a former Republican speaker of the Colorado House, and GOP officials have taken to hammering Hickenloop­er over the ordeal.

The commission found that Hickenloop­er violated the state’s ban on gifts to public officials in June 2018 when he attended secretive Bilderberg Meetings in Italy.

The commission also found last week that Hickenloop­er had also violated ethics rules when he accepted a flight and fancy dinners from MDC Holdings in March 2018.

Hickenloop­er’s Democratic primary opponent, Andrew Romanoff, has used the violations to demand that the former governor drop out of the race.

The pressure from both sides of the aisle put Hickenloop­er on the defensive over the last week, including in two debates with Romanoff.

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