CREW FILES SENATE ETHICS COMPLAINT AGAINST SENATOR CRAIG

28 Aug 2007 // Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) filed a complaint with the Senate ethics committee against Senator Larry Craig (R-ID) asking for an investigation into whether the senator violated the Senate Rules of Conduct by engaging in disorderly conduct.

On August 27, 2007, Roll Call revealed that on August 8th, Sen. Craig pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct charges stemming from his June arrest in a Minnesota airport men's restroom. Undercover officers were monitoring the restroom following complaints of sexual activity there. According to the police report:

Craig entered the restroom and sat in the stall next to [the undercover officer]. Craig began tapping his right foot, touched his right foot to the left foot of the officer and brushed his hand beneath the partition between them. He was then arrested.

As part of his guilty plea, Craig paid a fine of $500 and was placed on one year's probation.

The Senate Ethics Manual provides that certain conduct may be improper even though it does not violate specific Senate rules or regulations. Such conduct has been characterized as "improper conduct which may reflect upon the Senate." This rule is intended to protect the integrity and reputation of the Senate as a whole. The Ethics Manual explains that "improper conduct" is given meaning by considering "generally accepted standards of conduct, the letter and spirit of laws and Rules..."

Even though Sen. Craig has already been adjudicated guilty in a criminal court, the Senate may still discipline him for improper conduct as it has other members in the past.

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