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Sanford Faces 37 Charges Of Breaking State Ethics Laws

Sanford Impeachment

JIM DAVENPORT   11/23/09 09:31 PM ET   AP

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Gov. Mark Sanford is accused of breaking 37 ethics laws regarding campaign finances and travel, including using taxpayer money for high-priced airplane tickets that took him around the world and to Argentina for a rendezvous with the woman he once called his "soul mate."

The governor's attorney said he looks forward to answering the "technical questions" regarding Sanford's travel and finances at a State Ethics Commission hearing early next year. Details of the civil charges were released Monday and carry a maximum $74,000 in fines.

They came after a three-month investigation by the panel and could be pivotal in a push by some South Carolina lawmakers to remove the Republican governor from office before his second and final term expires in January 2011. The state attorney general is deciding whether Sanford would face any criminal charges.

The civil charges include 18 instances in which Sanford is accused of improperly buying first- and business-class airline tickets, violating state law requiring lowest-cost travel; nine times of improperly using state-owned aircraft for travel to political and personal events, including a stop at a discount hair salon; and 10 times he improperly reimbursed himself with campaign cash.

Herb Hayden, executive director of the commission, said he could not recall another governor facing this number of charges in the past 25 years.

Sanford has been under scrutiny since he vanished for five days over the summer, reappearing to tearfully admit to an extramarital affair with the Argentine woman. The travel allegations were uncovered in a series of Associated Press investigations. Some of the allegations about his use of campaign funds were revealed by The State newspaper in Columbia.

"We are confident that we will be able to address each of these questions, none of which constitutes findings of guilt and none of which we believe rise anywhere near to the traditional standard of impeachment," Sanford attorney Butch Bowers said Monday.

The ethic commission's investigative report shows it reviewed 668 flights on state-owned planes, 12 overseas trips on commercial planes and 25 reimbursements to Sanford and his wife using more than $10,800 in campaign money.

Each of the counts claims Sanford used his office for personal financial gain.

The report also shows the commission questioned 61 previously undisclosed flights on privately owned aircraft but did not issues charges after Sanford reported them while the investigation was ongoing.

Among the mistakes the ethics commission says it found:

_ Approval of the purchase of four first- and business-class commercial airline tickets for a June 2008 trip during which he met with his mistress in Argentina.

_ Personal use of state-owned aircraft for trips such as the birthday party of a campaign contributor in Aiken, and flying from Myrtle Beach to Columbia for a "personal event," including a haircut.

_ Reimbursing himself nearly $3,000 using campaign contributions, including about $900 for expenses to attend a Republican Governors Association meeting in Miami and a hunting trip in Dublin, Ireland, several days later.

Still, even several lawmakers who have called for Sanford to step down said it was unclear whether the accusations would be weighty enough to propel an impeachment measure.

"If it's relatively minor ethics violations, I don't believe there will be sentiment there to remove the governor," said House Majority Leader Kenny Bingham, R-Cayce.

For months, Sanford has insisted he did nothing wrong and served as a better steward of the taxpayer dollar than his predecessors.

But four GOP lawmakers already have filed a resolution that would force Sanford from office because of "dereliction of duty," and the travel allegations play no part in that move. Their measure deals solely with Sanford's absence from the state, when he led his staff to believe he was hiking the Appalachian Trail while he was in Argentina.

A committee considering that measure has an initial meeting set for Tuesday.

Sanford has brushed off repeated calls from his own party to step down and in the past month scored a political victory by helping land a Boeing Co. assembly plant that is expected to bring thousands of jobs to North Charleston.

Meanwhile, the first lady and their four sons moved out of the governor's mansion. While the Sanfords have said they were trying to reconcile, Jenny Sanford more recently has described the two as separated. She is writing a book about it.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roxanna
08:43 PM on 11/28/2009
This is good news! It's about time!

Of course, Mark will tell us that God has forgiven him and told him to stay on even when the people don't want him !... That's how these guys work, condemn others while in office, but give excuses for them selves.
06:53 PM on 11/25/2009
Clearly, impure thoughts are not a crime, or we would all be in jail, some of us for longer than others. But when lawmakers convert impure thoughts into overt action, they have voluntarily chosen to cross into the dark side, from which there is no public return or redemption. Although it’s not a criminal offense, infidelity embodies the holy trinity of sins—lying, cheating and stealing—and America should not accept it, but instead consider such a breach a punishable offense, with resignation and its accompanying self-loathing and self-pity as punishment.

This is not to say that lawmakers who choose to breach the public’s trust should not be forgiven, they are simply unfit to serve. Let them toil on other fronts, wondering what may have been if only they hadn’t traded virtue for vice. There are far too many morally fit men and women treading water, ready, willing and able to serve the public in place of those who are morally bankrupt.

http://americanmuser.wordpress.com
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GrooveGrl4
06:38 PM on 11/24/2009
So this is what I can't understand. Who can disappear for five days, reappear, and still have their job? I couldn't care less about the affair. What people do in their bedrooms is no business of anyone else. I do, however, take serious issue with the fact that Sanford abandoned the state and disappeared, effectively leaving SC leaderless (although I guess you could argue that SC was leaderless even when Sanford did show up for his job). If I didn't show up at work, I would lose my job. Period. Why in the world isn't a governor held to the same standards as everyone else? Oooohhhh, wait right, "God" put Sanford on earth to lead the mindless heathens, so rules don't apply to him.
03:31 PM on 11/24/2009
Aren't governors sort of like Kings in their respective states?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tangelan
"We don't believe you!" Alright, alright.
02:33 PM on 11/24/2009
Okay, does the "purity test" apply to those already in office or are they grandfathered in?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Peter007
12:15 PM on 11/24/2009
The entire thing looks fishy. With 50 governors why is this guy getting hit with 37 ethics violations. he happens to be in the news a lot lately. Is that the reason?
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kareemachan
watashi ha tororu ga oroka da to omoi masu。
12:54 PM on 11/24/2009
Could it be that he's in the news because he made some unethical decisions as of late? Duh.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
goodasitgets
Beer for me and Whiskey for my Aardvark.
04:26 PM on 11/24/2009
karemachan, I think you may have came up with the answer...................
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
blisster
Need more micro-bio fuel for my mitochondria
11:48 AM on 11/24/2009
Load him into a cannon at Fort Sumter and ceremoniously blast his A$$$ into Charleston harbor...........
repeatedly.
04:24 PM on 11/24/2009
LOL
11:30 AM on 11/24/2009
so why hasn't he been impeached yet. what is wrong with S Carolina anyway ?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
goodasitgets
Beer for me and Whiskey for my Aardvark.
04:27 PM on 11/24/2009
Same thing that has always been wrong with South Carolina.
05:00 PM on 11/24/2009
Birds flying upside down?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GrooveGrl4
06:28 PM on 11/24/2009
Well, SC has one of the highest obesity rates in the nation, it ranks something like 2 in the nation in domestic violence, it vacillates between 48, 49, and 50 in education depending on the year, and it has around a 40% high school graduation rate. To me, that says that SC is full of a bunch of fat, stupid, violent people. Although, I really didn't need those statistics to reach that conclusion, as I have lived in SC for almost my entire life. I went to school with an alarming number of people who actually believe "the South will rise again" and who care more about gun rights than human rights. Charleston is the state's only saving grace - it is like a completely different world down there compared to the rest of the state.
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littlepuffycloud
I propose a toast to my self control...
11:10 AM on 11/24/2009
So instead of impeaching him, are the good people of SCarolina going to build a monument to him?
iridium53
Semper Fi
10:50 AM on 11/24/2009
move along, nothing to see here.

The citizens of South Carolina obvious like Sanford's politics well enough to tolerate his corruption.

What else is there to say?
10:36 AM on 11/24/2009
Have you no sense of decency, sir? At long last, have you left no sense of decency?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GrooveGrl4
06:31 PM on 11/24/2009
To him, he has done nothing wrong. He is a malignant narcissist who believes "God" chose him to be a leader, so he doesn't see why there should be any consequences for his actions.
10:24 AM on 11/24/2009
Medical science should study this guys fingernails. Not many other humans could hold on as long as Sanford has.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jacobomorales
10:07 AM on 11/24/2009
That's okay, you see Jesus loves him and will forgive him.
08:22 AM on 11/24/2009
Okay. Thanks for the news tip. But the question is: is he still going to be the governor after all of this?
Is impeachment in the process?
10:02 AM on 11/24/2009
"If it's relatively minor ethics violations, I don't believe there will be sentiment there to remove the governor," said House Majority Leader Kenny Bingham, R-Cayce.

Apparently not.

Remember, IOKWARDI.
08:19 AM on 11/24/2009
In South Carolina that fact could get him re-elected.
10:03 AM on 11/24/2009
Seriously, what the foxtrot does it take to impeach someone down there? Does he have to be caught in bed with a dead underage h00ker first?