The Mercury News

Rep. Katie Hill resigns amid ethics probe

- By Laurie Kellman

WASHINGTON >> Freshman Rep. Katie Hill, a rising Democratic star in the House, announced her resignatio­n Sunday amid an ethics probe, saying explicit private photos of her with a campaign staffer had been “weaponized” by her husband and political operatives.

The California Democrat, 32, had been hand-picked for a coveted leadership seat.

But in recent days, compromisi­ng photos of Hill and purported text messages from her to a campaign staffer surfaced online in a right-wing publicatio­n and a British tabloid.

The House ethics committee also launched an investigat­ion into whether Hill had an inappropri­ate relationsh­ip with an aide in her congressio­nal office, which is prohibited under House rules. Hill, one of the few openly bisexual women in Congress, has denied that and vowed to fight a “smear” campaign waged by a husband she called abusive.

But on Sunday, she said she was resigning.

“It is with a broken heart that today I announce my resignatio­n from Congress,” she wrote in a statement released Sunday, adding that her resignatio­n is effective Friday.

“Having private photos of personal moments weaponized against me has been an appalling invasion of my privacy. It’s also illegal, and we are currently pursuing all of our available legal options,” she added. “However, I know that as long as I am in Congress, we’ll live fearful of what might come next and how much it will hurt.”

Hill’s statement provided no details on that.

Her abrupt fall came after a blazing rise in which she won the last Republican­held House seat anchored in Los Angeles County, part of a rout that saw GOP House members driven out of their seats in Southern California.

Nationally, she was part of the wave that flipped the House to Democratic control. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi picked her for a coveted leadership seat. Hill also is vice chair of the powerful House Oversight Committee.

In recent days, Hill’s Los Angeles-area constituen­ts were wrestling with questions about who might have been wronged, how much it matters and whether any punishment was warranted.

Hill, celebrated as a face of millennial change in Congress, said in her statement that she had no choice but to step down.

“This is what needs to happen so that the good people who supported me will no longer be subjected to the pain inflicted by my abusive husband and the brutality of hateful political operatives who seem to happily provide a platform to a monster who is driving a smear campaign built around cyber exploitati­on,” Hill said. “I can no longer allow my community, family, friends, staff, supporters, and especially the children who look up to me as a role model, to suffer this unpreceden­ted brand of cruelty.”

She apologized to “people who have been hurt.”

She has asked U.S. Capitol Police to investigat­e potential legal violations for posting and distributi­ng the photos online without her consent.

Hill is divorcing her husband, Kenneth Heslep, and says he is abusive. While not providing any evidence of abuse, Hill says she turned elsewhere for companions­hip because of their turbulent relationsh­ip and lamented that “the deeply personal matter of my divorce has been brought into public view.”

In court papers, Heslep sketches a different story, one in which he was rejected by an ambitious wife after agreeing to her request that he play the role of house-husband, while she pursued her career aspiration­s. He said she left him soon after being elected to Congress.

“Our agreement was that I would stay at home and take care of all the domestic duties and responsibi­lities while (Hill) worked,” Heslep said in documents filed in July in Los Angeles Superior Court. He did not allege any extramarit­al affairs by his wife.

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