The Oklahoman

New Mo. governor takes office

- BY DAVID A. LIEB

JEFFERSON CITY, MO. —

Just hours before he left office Friday, Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens signed scores of new laws, including a measure that makes it a crime to try to threaten a person using a private sexual image — the same allegation that led to his downfall.

In the flurry of lastminute activity, the scandal-plagued governor approved 77 new laws, granted several pardons and commutatio­ns and won at least a temporary reprieve in a court battle over campaign records. He posted a long Facebook message touting his accomplish­ments — without any mention of why he was quitting — and quietly left the Capitol about an hour before his resignatio­n took effect.

A short time later, fellow Republican Lt. Gov. Mike Parson was sworn in as Greitens' successor and immediatel­y pledged "to bring honor, integrity (and) transparen­cy to the governor's office."

"We have an opportunit­y beginning today to have a fresh start in state government," Parson said.

The "revenge porn" law signed by Greitens creates a felony that will apply to cases when someone threatens the nonconsens­ual disseminat­ion of a private sexual image by coercing another person to refrain from an action. The governor has been accused of taking a nonconsens­ual photo of a partially nude woman with whom he had an affair in 2015 and warning her he would distribute it if she ever spoke of their encounter.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Missouri Gov. Mike Parson signs papers at his desk immediatel­y after being sworn in as the state’s 57th governor following the resignatio­n of Eric Greitens on Friday in Jefferson City, Mo.
[AP PHOTO] Missouri Gov. Mike Parson signs papers at his desk immediatel­y after being sworn in as the state’s 57th governor following the resignatio­n of Eric Greitens on Friday in Jefferson City, Mo.

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