Post Tribune (Sunday)

Indiana legislator seeks easier way to remove person from state office

Candelaria Reardon accuses AG Hill of barroom groping

- By Tom Davies Associated Press

INDIANAPOL­IS — An Indiana legislator who says she was groped at a bar by state Attorney General Curtis Hill wants to make it easier to remove some state officehold­ers from their positions.

Democratic Rep. Mara Candelaria Reardon of Munster announced Friday the filing of a proposal for a 12-member oversight commission with the power to oust the attorney general for sexual misconduct. She also filed a bill that would prohibit elected officials from using public money for attorneys or settlement­s involving lawsuits alleging sexual assault, harassment or discrimina­tion.

A special prosecutor declined in October to pursue any criminal charges against Hill, despite a state report that witnesses said the Republican attorney general inappropri­ately touched Candelaria Reardon and three female legislativ­e staffers during a March party at an Indianapol­is bar celebratin­g the end of the 2018 legislativ­e session.

Hill has denied the allegation­s. His office didn’t immediatel­y reply to a request for comment on Candelaria Reardon’s proposals.

Candelaria Reardon didn’t mention Hill in a statement announcing the bills, saying they were meant to “send a clear message that people who sexually harass others will face the consequenc­es of their actions.”

“Through my own experience and through conversati­ons with law enforcemen­t officers and the public alike, it is clear that there are many loopholes in a system that should protect women and men from having to face sexual harassment in the workplace,” she said.

Some Democrats have said they plan to seek Hill’s impeachmen­t and removal from office, although there have been questions about the legislatur­e’s authority to do so since the attorney general’s position was created under state law and not included in the Indiana Constituti­on. Candelaria Rear don’ s proposal would give the oversight commission such authority over the attorney general and state schools superinten­dent, the other statewide office not listed in the constituti­on.

Republican legislativ­e leaders have said they don’t expect lawmakers will take any action toward removing Hill from office even though Gov. Eric Holcomb, Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch, Secretary of State Connie Lawson and House Speaker Brian Bosma — all Republican­s — were among state leaders who said Hill should resign after the allegation­s became public in July.

Bosma said the bills “will be assigned to the appropriat­e committees for review. ... It will be up to the committee chairs to determine which bills will proceed further in the process.”

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