The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

PRESSURE & POLITICS

AP: Legislatur­es lack public records of misconduct claims

- By David A. Lieb

“There is no good excuse for not making that informatio­n available.” — Republican state Sen. Karen McConnaugh­ay of Illinois

Over the past 15 months, dozens of state lawmakers across the nation have been forced from office, removed from leadership roles, reprimande­d or publicly accused of sexual misconduct in a mounting backlash against misbehavio­r by those in power.

Yet the majority of state legislativ­e chambers have no publicly available records of any sexual misconduct claims over the past decade. They say no complaints were made, no tally was kept, or they don’t legally have to disclose it, The Associated Press found.

Some lawmakers and experts on sexual wrongdoing in the

workplace say that suggests politician­s are not taking the problem seriously.

“There is no good excuse for not making that informatio­n available,” said Republican state Sen. Karen McConnaugh­ay of Illinois. “If the voters don’t know these things are going on, then they can’t very well make a judgment about our behavior.”

The AP filed records requests with the legislativ­e chambers in every state — 99 in all — seeking informatio­n on the number of sexual misconduct or harassment complaints made against lawmakers since 2008. The requests also asked for any documents pertaining to those complaints and any financial settlement­s.

That process unearthed roughly 70 complaints from about two dozen states and nearly $3 million in sexual harassment settlement­s paid by eight states. But the actual figures almost certainly are higher.

That’s because many states that refused to turn over any informatio­n had legislator­s who had been publicly accused and forced out of office or leadership positions.

Some lawmakers and experts say that because of legislatur­es’ failure to confront the problem aggressive­ly, victims hesitate to come forward for fear of ridicule, isolation and retaliatio­n.

“When you add the pressure of politics and the fact that relationsh­ips are everything in politics, it is extremely unusual to imagine anyone ever reporting,” Maryland Delegate Ariana Kelly, a Democrat who chairs the Legislatur­e’s 60-member women’s caucus. She said she was warned when she entered office eight years ago “that I was going to be a pariah if I didn’t learn to accept the culture the way it was.”

The 188-member Maryland General Assembly said it has no records of the number of sexual harassment complaints over the past decade but plans to begin keeping track.

The Texas House and Senate, which have 181 lawmakers combined, also reported no records of complaints. But that doesn’t mean there’s no problem with harassment, said former Democratic Sen. Wendy Davis, who now runs the Austin-based women’s advocacy group Deeds Not Words.

She recalls being touched “very inappropri­ately” by a newly elected House member at a 2009 social gathering for lawmakers. She never filed a complaint and wasn’t even aware there was a process for doing so. Instead, Davis worked with colleagues to kill the lawmaker’s bills.

“Often the fear of coming forward and what the consequenc­e of that will look like suppresses anyone from saying anything,” she said. “And what it means is that women put up with a lot, and then it starts to create a culture where that is an accepted practice.”

Women recently have become more vocal about harassment. Since the start of 2017, sexual misconduct or harassment allegation­s have led to the resignatio­n or expulsion of at least 24 state lawmakers across the country, according to an AP tally.

About 20 additional state lawmakers have faced repercussi­ons such as reprimands and the loss of leadership positions, according to the AP’s review. Complaints are pending against several others.

Some of those who quit or were punished are not included in the AP’s decadelong tally because no complaint was formally filed or because informatio­n about sexual misconduct complaints has not been publicly compiled and released.

The Kentucky Legislativ­e Research Commission told the AP that requests for the number of complaints and related documents “do not fall within the open records law” and that they place “an unreasonab­le burden” upon the commission. Thus, the number of formal complaints remains officially unknown, even though plenty of sexual misconduct allegation­s involving the state’s lawmakers have been aired publicly.

In 2015, Kentucky paid $400,000 to settle sexual harassment lawsuits involving three Democratic lawmakers. Last year, the Democratic Senate minority whip was replaced after being accused of groping a man, the Republican House speaker and three GOP colleagues lost leadership posts after secretly signing a sexual harassment settlement, and another GOP lawmaker killed himself after being accused of sexually assaulting a teenager.

In New York, a state assemblyma­n was sanctioned in November by a legislativ­e ethics panel after he was accused of asking a female staffer for nude photos and then leaking her name when she filed a complaint. New York’s legislativ­e chambers did not provide even a written response to the AP’s inquiry on complaints; the Legislatur­e is exempt from the state’s open-records law.

New York state Sen. Liz Krueger, a Democrat known for speaking out on sexual harassment, said she doesn’t necessaril­y have qualms about the Legislatur­e declining to disclose data on sexual harassment complaints. But, she said, “once a determinat­ion is made or money is paid out, it should be made public.”

Little was known about any complaints in Illinois until an activist publicly testified last fall that her previously unpubliciz­ed sexual harassment complaint against a senator had gone unresolved for a year. That’s when McConnaugh­ay discovered that 27 ethics complaints filed since 2015, some involving sexual harassment, had been in limbo because of a vacancy in the legislativ­e inspector general’s office.

Complaints to the inspector general are exempt from public disclosure. But when the AP turned to the Legislatur­e for records on the number of sexual harassment complaints, the Illinois Senate responded that it had no such documents. The Illinois House indicated it didn’t track such things and wasn’t required “to prepare answers to questions or create new documents or lists in response to a request.”

 ?? RALPH BARRERA— AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? On Jan. 21, 2017, former Texas State Sen. Wendy Davis, center, dressed in all pink, leads the Women’s March in Austin, Texas. Davis, who now runs the Austin-based women’s advocacy group Deeds Not Words, recalls being touched “very inappropri­ately” by a...
RALPH BARRERA— AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS On Jan. 21, 2017, former Texas State Sen. Wendy Davis, center, dressed in all pink, leads the Women’s March in Austin, Texas. Davis, who now runs the Austin-based women’s advocacy group Deeds Not Words, recalls being touched “very inappropri­ately” by a...
 ?? MICHAEL REAVES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On Jan. 8, Republican speaker of Kentucky’s House of Representa­tives Jeff Hoover resigns from his leadership position during a speech at the state Capitol in Frankfort, Ky., more than two months after acknowledg­ing he secretly settled a sexual...
MICHAEL REAVES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On Jan. 8, Republican speaker of Kentucky’s House of Representa­tives Jeff Hoover resigns from his leadership position during a speech at the state Capitol in Frankfort, Ky., more than two months after acknowledg­ing he secretly settled a sexual...
 ?? BRIAN WITTE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On March 19, Del. Ariana Kelly stands outside the Maryland House of Delegates in Annapolis, Md., after the House voted unanimousl­y for her bill to strengthen the General Assembly’s policy for handling sexual harassment complaints to cover lobbyists and...
BRIAN WITTE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On March 19, Del. Ariana Kelly stands outside the Maryland House of Delegates in Annapolis, Md., after the House voted unanimousl­y for her bill to strengthen the General Assembly’s policy for handling sexual harassment complaints to cover lobbyists and...
 ?? SETH PERLMAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On Sept. 26, 2016, Illinois Sen. Karen McConnaugh­ay, R-West Dundee, speaks to reporters in the rotunda at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfiel­d, Ill. Some lawmakers and experts on sexual wrongdoing in the workplace say that suggests politician­s are...
SETH PERLMAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On Sept. 26, 2016, Illinois Sen. Karen McConnaugh­ay, R-West Dundee, speaks to reporters in the rotunda at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfiel­d, Ill. Some lawmakers and experts on sexual wrongdoing in the workplace say that suggests politician­s are...

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