The Mercury News

Governor’s trial hinges on photo that may or may not exist

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For all of the sensationa­l allegation­s in the invasion-of-privacy case against Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens — an extramarit­al affair, bondage, blackmail — the verdict may come down to the technical workings of the iPhone, the definition of “transmissi­on,” and the whereabout­s of a photo that may or may not exist.

Jury selection begins today in the felony case against the 44-year-old Republican, who is accused of taking an unauthoriz­ed photograph of a blindfolde­d and partially naked woman while she was bound to exercise rings in his basement in 2015, before he was elected.

The woman, a hairdresse­r with whom Greitens has admitted having an affair, told investigat­ors she saw a flash through the blindfold and heard what sounded like a photo being taken. Greitens allegedly told her, “You’re never going to mention my name, otherwise there will be pictures of (you) everywhere.”

The woman, whose name has not been released, said that she became upset and that Greitens told her he deleted the picture.

But the trial could prove to be like a murder case without a body: Prosecutor­s acknowledg­ed in court Monday that they have not found such a photo. And Greitens has repeatedly declined to say if he took a picture.

In addition to the invasion-of-privacy case, Greitens faces separate criminal charges of misusing a charity donor list for political purposes, and the Legislatur­e will convene in special session this month to consider impeachmen­t.

Beyond the question of whether the photo exists are some highly technical issues that could be pivotal: What happens to an iPhone picture if it’s deleted? Does it go to the cloud, and if so, can it be retrieved? And what exactly constitute­s transmissi­on of a photo?

The last question is important because under Missouri law, simply taking an unauthoriz­ed photo of someone in a full or partial state of nudity is a misdemeano­r, punishable by up to a year behind bars. It is a felony carrying up to four years in prison if the image is distribute­d to someone else or if a person “transmits the image in a manner that allows access to that image via computer.”

There is no evidence Greitens shared or posted any photo.

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