The Denver Post

Hick ignores ethics panel

Commission sends subpoena to force him to testify in case

- By Justin Wingerter

Former Democratic governor and current U.S. Senate candidate John Hickenloop­er was held in contempt Thursday by the Colorado Independen­t Ethics Commission after refusing to comply with a subpoena and testify about his alleged violations of a state gift ban.

“By failing to honor the subpoena of the commission, (Hickenloop­er) has indicated a disrespect for the rule of law, disrespect for the commission, disrespect for the process, disrespect for the parties and the witnesses,” said Commission­er Bill Leone before

he and other commission­ers voted unanimousl­y, 5-0, to hold Hickenloop­er in contempt.

The contempt vote is believed to be unpreceden­ted in the commission’s 13-year history, according to its executive director, Dino Ioannides.

Hickenloop­er refused to appear because he believes a virtual hearing, conducted over the video conferenci­ng platform WebEx, would violate his due process rights. His campaign spent much of Thursday pointing out glitches and flaws in the platform, which is being used because of the pandemic.

“John Hickenloop­er has made clear he will testify in person. Today’s debacle of a hearing has made clear that WebEx doesn’t work for a legal proceeding like this,” said Melissa Miller, a spokeswoma­n for Hickenloop­er’s campaign.

Thursday’s six-hour hearing was plagued by the sort of technical difficulti­es that are common on video conference­s: background noise from nonmuted observers, faulty internet connection­s, and audio that cut out. A participan­t was unable to use a slide show, and as she spoke the name “Turd Ferguson” appeared as a screen name of a meeting observer.

Early in the day, commission­ers voted 5-0 to have the attorney general’s office enforce the subpoena, and that office filed a motion in Denver District Court to do so. Hickenloop­er’s attorneys fought it, but the court granted the request late Thursday.

However, as a vote on contempt neared Thursday afternoon, Hickenloop­er attorney Mark Grueskin said his client had changed his mind and would be willing to testify June 16. That only further frustrated the five commission­ers.

“I’m not willing to wait until the 16th,” said Chairwoman Elizabeth Espinosa Krupa.

“(Hickenloop­er) has repeatedly asserted that the commission has been causing delays in these proceeding­s and is now intimating that he wants to cause a delay in the proceeding­s,” Commission­er Selina Baschiera said.

Hickenloop­er stands accused of violating the Colorado Constituti­on’s ban on gifts when he accepted private jet flights from wealthy friends and businesses as governor. He has maintained his innocence and accused the Public Trust Institute, which filed the ethics complaint, of playing politics with ethics laws.

On Thursday, commission­ers heard from two witnesses, both called by Suzanne Staiert with the Public Trust Institute. The first was state Sen. Bob Gardner, a Colorado Springs Republican, who discussed a trip he, Hickenloop­er and others took in March 2018 to Connecticu­t for the commission­ing of the USS Colorado submarine.

Gardner spoke of how he traveled commercial­ly and often dined cheaply, including a meal from McDonald’s. He contrasted that with the ritzy VIP treatment Hickenloop­er received. At issue is Hickenloop­er’s decision to fly to Connecticu­t on a company jet owned by MDC Holdings without reimbursin­g.

The second witness was state controller Bob Jaros, who spoke in the early afternoon about how public officials are reimbursed. It’s not clear what relevance his testimony has to the case Staiert is presenting.

Thursday’s hearing followed a weeks-long dispute between Hickenloop­er’s attorneys and the IEC in which Hickenloop­er announced he would not testify, was subpoenaed by the IEC, fought that subpoena in court then lost his court fight late Wednesday night, 11 hours before the hearing was to start.

The hearing will continue Friday.

Hickenloop­er will face Andrew Romanoff in a Democratic primary June 30. The winner will take on Sen. Cory Gardner, a Yuma Republican, in early November.

Hickenloop­er is a favorite of the Democratic Party establishm­ent, and Republican­s watched with glee Thursday as the IEC verbally pummeled the former governor. Donald Trump Jr. and U.S. Sen. Marsha Blackburn, a Tennessee Republican, chimed in with criticisms of Hickenloop­er on Twitter.

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