Las Vegas Review-Journal

Prosecutor­s to dismiss charge against Greitens

Governor’s resignatio­n spurs move to drop case

- By David A. Lieb and Jim Salter The Associated Press

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Prosecutor­s agreed to drop one of two felony criminal cases against Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens after the governor’s attorneys said he would resign if the allegation­s were dismissed, a spokeswoma­n for St. Louis’ top prosecutor said Wednesday.

A day after Greitens announced that he would step down, St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner said her office decided to dismiss a charge of computer data tampering after conversati­ons with the defense team for the governor.

“I remain confident we have the evidence required to pursue charges against Mr. Greitens, but sometimes pursuing charges is not the right thing to do for our city or our state,” Gardner said.

A spokeswoma­n for Gardner’s office, Susan Ryan, said the defense approached prosecutor­s with an offer to resign if the case were dropped.

Defense attorney Jim Martin acknowledg­ed reaching out to Gardner to resolve the issue but added, “I don’t think that’s exactly the full play.”

The charge, filed in April after an investigat­ion by the Missouri attorney general’s office, accused Greitens of using a donor list from the veterans charity he founded,

The Mission Continues, for his 2016 gubernator­ial campaign.

Responding to Greitens’ statements calling the prosecutio­n “a witch hunt” that inflicted pain on his family, Gardener said the governor had brought the charges upon himself “by his actions, his statements, his decisions, his ambition and his pursuit for power.”

A St. Louis judge approved the agreement, which has seven stipulatio­ns, two of which are sealed.

One of the open stipulatio­ns said that Greitens has agreed to release Gardner and her office from civil liability.

The governor also was indicted on invasion-of-privacy charges in February in St. Louis in connection with allegation­s of taking an unauthoriz­ed and compromisi­ng photo of a woman during an extramarit­al affair in 2015, before he was elected. The charge was dropped earlier this month.

 ?? Julie Smith The Associated Press ?? In a deal with prosecutor­s, Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens will not face a felony charge of computer data tampering.
Julie Smith The Associated Press In a deal with prosecutor­s, Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens will not face a felony charge of computer data tampering.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States