Los Angeles Times

Embattled Missouri governor resigns

For months he has fought allegation­s of sexual and financial misconduct.

- By Matt Pearce matt.pearce@latimes.com

Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens announced Tuesday that he would step down Friday, abandoning a monthslong effort to stay in office as he faced felony criminal charges and threats of impeachmen­t by the Legislatur­e.

“I love Missouri, and I love our people. That love remains,” a somber Greitens, a Republican, told reporters in Jefferson City, the state capital, where legislator­s had called for his resignatio­n and a legislativ­e oversight committee was investigat­ing the governor’s conduct.

Greitens, who has previously said he was the victim of a political witch hunt, said Tuesday that millions of dollars in attorneys’ fees and what he described as legal harassment and personal attacks were starting to take their toll, including on his friends and family.

“It’s clear for the forces that oppose us there is no end in sight,” said Greitens, who did not immediatel­y indicate why he picked Friday as the day to resign.

“This is not the end of our fight,” he said. “I will always be a fighter for the people of Missouri. A great deal of work is left undone.… For the moment, let us walk off the battlefiel­d with our heads held high.”

Investigat­ions by prosecutor­s and lawmakers examining possible sexual and financial misconduct by Greitens had offered the public a stark window into Missouri politics and into the private life of the governor, whose 16 months in office had alienated many Republican leaders.

Some were concerned the scandals would dampen enthusiasm for Republican state Atty. Gen. Josh Hawley’s U.S. Senate bid against Democratic incumbent Claire McCaskill.

Missouri Republican House Speaker Todd Richardson, who had previously called for Greitens’ resignatio­n, welcomed the governor’s announceme­nt. “We believe the governor has put the best interest of Missourian­s first today by choosing to resign,” Richardson said in a statement. “The past few months have been difficult for everyone involved, including the governor and his family.”

Democratic leaders took a harsher view of Greitens’ announceme­nt.

“Innocent people don’t resign and criminals don’t get let off the hook simply because they cut and run,” Missouri Senate Democratic leader Gina Walsh said in a statement. “Missourian­s deserve to know what laws were broken, what lies were told, and how deep the corruption went.”

Greitens, a former Navy SEAL and philanthro­pist who won an outsider bid for the governor’s seat in 2016, was a rising star in the Republican Party. Promising to shake up the political establishm­ent, he caught national attention for firing a machine gun in one of his campaign ads.

But in January, media outlets in St. Louis revealed that a hairdresse­r, with whom Greitens had had an affair in 2015, had privately accused him of stripping her clothes off and photograph­ing her naked against her will. The woman also testified to state legislator­s that Greitens had coerced her to perform oral sex.

Greitens, who admitted having the affair but denied allegation­s of sexually attacking the woman, was charged with felony invasion of privacy in St. Louis.

Prosecutor­s dropped the case after Greitens’ attorneys accused an investigat­or of wrongdoing. A Kansas City-area prosecutor has been appointed to determine whether the charge should be refiled.

“Our investigat­ion continues,” Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker said in a statement Tuesday. “Our review of this case, as I have stated before, will be pursued without fear or favor.”

The allegation­s of sexual misconduct were the most explosive scandal surroundin­g Greitens’ administra­tion, but the governor was also dogged by allegation­s of financial wrongdoing.

He was separately charged with a felony on suspicion of stealing a list of donors from his nonprofit group for veterans, the Mission Continues, and using the list to solicit donors to his campaign after he stepped down from the charity to run for office. He previously denied criminal wrongdoing, but on Tuesday prosecutor­s signaled that a plea agreement had been reached. They did not provide details.

“I have been in contact with the governor’s defense team over the past several days. We have reached a fair and just resolution of the pending charges,” St. Louis city Circuit Atty. Kimberly M. Gardner said in a statement Tuesday. “We will provide more informatio­n tomorrow.”

Greitens also caused concern among political opponents during his campaign by raising millions of dollars that were routed through advocacy nonprofits, limited-liability corporatio­ns and political action committees in a way that allowed the sources of the money to remain hidden, even today.

Michael Hafner, an aide who worked on Greitens’ campaign, testified to state lawmakers that Greitens asked him to “have conversati­ons with donors who intended to raise significan­t amounts of money and … conceal the identity of those donors.”

Hours before Greitens’ resignatio­n, a Cole County judge had ordered a Greitens-linked nonprofit, A New Missouri Inc., to turn over documents to lawmakers seeking to determine whether Greitens or his supporters broke campaign finance laws.

The head of the state House oversight committee investigat­ing Greitens, Rep. Jay Barnes, a Republican, said last week that he had also spoken to the FBI about allegation­s that Greitens sought donations from foreign donors.

“I had direct conversati­ons regarding foreign contributi­ons with very high net worth individual­s that Eric Greitens connected me with,” Hafner tweeted, disputing Greitens’ supporters’ claims that he had given “dubious testimony.”

The legislativ­e oversight committee has also been unable to definitive­ly establish who gave $100,000 to a St. Louis attorney who played a key role in revealing allegation­s of sexual misconduct against Greitens in January.

The attorney, Al Watkins, who represente­d the woman’s aggrieved ex-husband, distribute­d private audio recordings to local media outlets in which the woman accused Greitens of attacking her.

Before the story became public, Watkins received $100,000 in cash from a Missouri newspaper publisher who said he was delivering the money on behalf of a “wealthy Republican” who had a personal problem with the governor, Watkins told The Times.

Greitens’ attorneys have suggested that the source of the money might be housing developers — a powerful lobby in Missouri — who stood to lose millions of dollars after Greitens spearheade­d an effort to shut down the state’s lucrative low-income housing tax credit program.

Greitens’ replacemen­t, Republican Lt. Gov. Mike Parson, is a supporter of the tax credit.

In a twist that has vexed legislator­s, Scott Faughn, the publisher who delivered the money to the lawyer, said the cash was his own.

Faughn, one of the most politicall­y connected figures in the state, refused to reveal how he got more than $100,000 in cash. Faughn’s sworn testimony appeared to directly conflict with the testimony given by Watkins.

“I would presume that this could lead to questions of perjury,” Republican Rep. Curtis Trent said during the hearing.

Faughn did not respond to messages seeking comment.

 ?? Julie Smith Jefferson City News Tribune ?? REPUBLICAN Gov. Eric Greitens, facing felony criminal charges and threats of impeachmen­t, announces his resignatio­n at the state Capitol in Jefferson City.
Julie Smith Jefferson City News Tribune REPUBLICAN Gov. Eric Greitens, facing felony criminal charges and threats of impeachmen­t, announces his resignatio­n at the state Capitol in Jefferson City.

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