Yuma Sun

Ariz. ethics panel won’t investigat­e lawmaker over riot

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PHOENIX – The head of the Arizona House Ethics Committee on Friday rejected 82 complaints against a Republican lawmaker who attended the Jan. 6 rally in Washington that turned into a siege on the U.S. Capitol.

The complaints fail to establish that Rep. Mark Finchem of Tucson supported the violent overthrow of the U.S. government or directly participat­ed in the attack on the Capitol, Republican Rep. Becky Nutt, the head of the ethics panel, wrote to committee members.

“Absent such facts, the complaints amount to an objection to Representa­tive Finchem’s advocacy of controvers­ial political opinions,” Nutt wrote. “But the ethics committee is not – and cannot become – a forum for resolving political disagreeme­nts, no matter how important the issues at stake.”

Finchem has said he was near the Capitol on Jan. 6 but did not go inside and didn’t learn the building was breached until hours later.

A mob egged on by then-President Donald Trump temporaril­y delayed the certificat­ion of Joe Biden’s victory, prompting the impeachmen­t of Trump by the House.

Finchem declined to comment, citing advice from his attorney.

Democrats were furious with the decision to dismiss the complaints without an investigat­ion.

“The oath we all take to defend our Constituti­on against enemies foreign and domestic should mean something, but that oath loses all meaning when our leaders look the other way at legitimate allegation­s of sedition and insurrecti­on,” Democratic Rep. Cesar Chavez of Phoenix, said in a statement.

Most House Democrats have signed onto a resolution to expel Finchem from the House, and some have demanded that the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI investigat­e.

Finchem has been one of Trump’s most vocal allies in Arizona and was a leader of efforts to overturn the state’s presidenti­al election results, pointing to disproven allegation­s of fraud or irregulari­ties. Biden was the first Democrat since 1996 to win Arizona’s electoral votes.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS NOV. 9, 2015, FILE PHOTO, Arizona state Rep. Mark Finchem, R-Tucson (right), speaks during a Joint Border Security Advisory Committee at the Arizona Capitol as Arizona House Speaker David Gowan, R- Sierra Vista, listens in Phoenix.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS NOV. 9, 2015, FILE PHOTO, Arizona state Rep. Mark Finchem, R-Tucson (right), speaks during a Joint Border Security Advisory Committee at the Arizona Capitol as Arizona House Speaker David Gowan, R- Sierra Vista, listens in Phoenix.

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