More

Arizona Legislative Immunity Repeal Proposed

Arizona Legislative Immunity

By PAUL DAVENPORT   01/21/12 02:04 PM ET   AP

PHOENIX -- An Arizona senator gets in a fight with his girlfriend on a Phoenix freeway and avoids arrest. An Arkansas legislator leads officers on a high-speed chase through two counties and doesn't get taken into custody. A Georgia lawmaker claims he couldn't be prosecuted on a DUI charge.

In each case, a little-known privilege called legislative immunity that prevents the arrests of legislators while they are in session came into play.

The issue is getting a closer look in Arizona this year after a lawmaker introduced a resolution seeking to amend the state Constitution to delete wording barring the arrest of legislators during, and 15 days before, legislative sessions. Like those in many other states, Arizona's legislative immunity protects legislators from arrest except for "treason, felony or breach of the peace."

Then-Sen. Scott Bundgaard became a part of the debate after he was involved in a domestic violence incident on a Phoenix freeway last year. He and his girlfriend at the time pulled off to the side of the road after an argument while returning home from a Dancing with the Stars-type competition. The ensuring fight left both with cuts and bruises.

Police showed up and put Bundgaard in handcuffs. Officers testified that he identified himself as a legislator, cited the constitutional provision and demanded that they remove handcuffs, even though Bundgaard denies invoking legislative immunity.

Bundgaard was allowed to go home that night without being arrested, but his girlfriend spent the night in jail. Bundgaard was later prosecuted and ended up pleading no-contest to a misdemeanor charge, and the Peoria Republican eventually was ousted as Senate majority leader and quit the Legislature.

The girlfriend was not prosecuted after she was deemed the victim in Bundgaard's criminal case. Bundgaard would have been arrested on possible domestic violence charges and suspicion of DUI on the night of the incident if not for the immunity law, the sergeant and an officer testified.

State Sen. Steve Gallardo introduced the legislation to change the Constitution because he believes it's an unfair and outdated protection afforded lawmakers.

"The question is should legislators have a get-out-of-jail free card. That's exactly what it is. And I really think voters would come out and say no – they should not have this card," said Gallardo, a Phoenix Democrat. "We should be living by the laws that we pass."

The National Conference of State Legislatures says most states have similar legislative immunity provisions in their constitutions. Members of Congress technically have the protection as well, but it has been so narrowly interpreted by the courts that U.S. lawmakers gain no real benefit from it.

Experts say legislative immunity, along with related protections for legislative speech and debate, has its roots in the 16th and 17th centuries, when English monarchs frequently feuded with lawmakers.

"In essence this is a form of separation of powers, since it is the executive that has the power to arrest and prosecute," said Toni McClory, author of a textbook on the Arizona Constitution.

It's not known how many times legislative immunity is invoked, but the provision occasionally makes headlines.

Legislative immunity was in the news in Arizona two years ago when a newspaper reported that Gov. Jan Brewer was briefly detained – and handcuffed – by state police after a freeway accident in 1988 when she was a legislator.

Officers thought Brewer was under the influence of alcohol, but they decided that legislative immunity prohibited an arrest. Brewer denied being under the influence the night of the accident.

She didn't invoke the privilege but an officer determined she was a senator by noticing an identification placard on the floor of her car, a police report said.

An Arkansas sheriff's deputy last year mistakenly thought legislative immunity meant he couldn't arrest a speeding legislator who led officers on a high-speed chase through two counties. The lawmaker was let go with a scolding but later charged and convicted of fleeing, careless driving and improper passing. He's appealing.

There was talk in 2005 of amending the Georgia Constitution to repeal legislative immunity after a lawmaker tried unsuccessfully to use it in a DUI case, but the provision remains law in the Peach State.

The related protection for legislative speech figured in a 1997 court ruling that a Kansas legislator couldn't be prosecuted on a blackmail charge stemming from a threat to another lawmaker. The conduct involved was "possibly criminal and clearly unethical," but was protected as legislative speech, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled.

Given changes in society since Arizona and other states adopted their immunity provisions a century or two ago, it could be time to consider changes, said George Anagnost, an Arizona judge who writes on constitution topics.

But with the contentiousness in politics today, the immunity may not have outlived its usefulness, Anagnost said. "It makes sense to have these safeguards."

Some Arizona legislators agree.

Sen. Ron Gould, a Bundgaard critic who chaired his ethics proceeding, said he can envision the possibility of a rogue law enforcement officer harassing a legislator to stop him from traveling to the Capitol to vote on legislation on a controversial topic such as public employee benefits.

Better to keep legislative immunity on the books but hold lawmakers accountable through ethics proceedings if they abuse it, the Lake Havasu City Republican said.

Gallardo's resolution has been assigned to a Senate committee whose chairman is noncommittal about giving it a hearing.

"Any time you have a kneejerk reaction to one instance you run the risk of making a mistake, and I think that's what is happening here. It's a kneejerk reaction to the Bundgaard situation," said Sen. Rick Murphy, R-Peoria.

Gallardo said he's certain voters would approve his proposal if it reaches the November ballot. And chances for that are good with current scrutiny of legislative ethics because of Bundgaard's case and disclosures of Fiesta Bowl freebie trips and game tickets given legislators, he said.

"When you start looking overall at the role of the legislator(s) and what they're allowed and they're not allowed, all of that is going to be looked at this year, and I think immunity should be at the top of the list," he said.

___

AP reporters Andrew DeMillo in Little Rock, Ark., John Hanna in Topeka, Kan., and Kristen Wyatt in Denver contributed.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST POLITICS
Subscribe to the HuffPost Hill newsletter!
PHOENIX -- An Arizona senator gets in a fight with his girlfriend on a Phoenix freeway and avoids arrest. An Arkansas legislator leads officers on a high-speed chase through two counties and doesn't g...
PHOENIX -- An Arizona senator gets in a fight with his girlfriend on a Phoenix freeway and avoids arrest. An Arkansas legislator leads officers on a high-speed chase through two counties and doesn't g...
Filed by Elyse Siegel  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 198
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Post Comment Preview Comment
To reply to a Comment: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to.
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (7 total)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
09:09 PM on 01/26/2012
They definitely should get rid of these laws. It is unfortunate that our elected representatives bully the cops into getting them out of jail.
photo
MSROADKILL612
am not convinced geothermal energy is above ground
06:54 AM on 01/26/2012
some states would have iud laws if they could
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yankeebrown
08:34 AM on 01/25/2012
I thought only illegal aliens commit crimes Mrs. Brewer
photo
SmotPoker
Medical Marijuana saved my life.
05:39 AM on 01/25/2012
Not only do I approve of removing their immunity, I would also argue for double penalty for ALL convictions of a legislator. As an elected official that is responsible for making the laws that we ALL must live under they should be held to a much higher standard. To blatantly disregard the very limits they put on the public is simply unacceptable.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lithium12
Fighting ignorance makes you an enemy of the right
12:40 PM on 01/24/2012
no doubt such upstanding people as Newt will decrying this attempt to make lawmakers subject to the laws they make as unamerican.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ConservativebyNature
I'll cling to my guns and religion, thank you
10:22 AM on 01/24/2012
If the United States Congress or State Legislatures are going to write the laws that the restof us have to follow, then by golly they should have to follow them too, in session or not. If they break the law, they get arrested just like the rest of us.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
klincklanc
Don't mistake activity for achievement.
07:48 PM on 01/23/2012
Thirty years ago Jan probably would have looked hot in that gold suit.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wardropper
Highly-detailed empty micro-bio
11:58 AM on 01/24/2012
Maybe fifty years ago.

You age quickly when you sell your soul.
03:31 PM on 01/23/2012
When the GOP controls congress one of thier first priorities is to limit congressional ethics panels to investigating democrats. So, to be fair, it is time for congress to follow the laws that everyone else has to follow.
photo
FreeSwingingSoul
Searching more into my core
11:49 AM on 01/23/2012
I didn't need to read this article to understand that politicians feel entitled and above the rest of us ordinary citizens. I simply go the the Politics section here on HuffPo and read about that mind set in most of the articles there. America may be the "land of the free." But that supposition that we are all equal? That's a farce. America is the land of the privileged. It's just that the privileged don't want the rest of us to realize that.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Texas Aggie
11:08 AM on 01/23/2012
What about waiting until they are no longer in session and then arresting them? Or in the case of state constitutions that protect legislators whether in session or not, how about arresting them once they lose an election? For those things where the statute of limitations have run out, they were probably so minor as not to be of any significance.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
klincklanc
Don't mistake activity for achievement.
10:47 AM on 01/23/2012
Fighting on the side of a public highway doesn't constitute a breach of the peace?
photo
bridgeman
Jesus was a Jazz fan
10:31 AM on 01/23/2012
This happens all the time.

I was in car with an unnamed congressmen friend who was driving 100+MPH on the highway.
When he got pulled over, the police officer recognized him and simply said have a good day congressman, you may want to slow it down a bit though.
08:59 AM on 01/23/2012
Its a very good idea but will never see the light of day in Arizona. The bill is a democrat idea that won't even get a hearing. The republicans are the ones here who are always in trouble. They will never pass it.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ConservativebyNature
I'll cling to my guns and religion, thank you
10:38 AM on 01/24/2012
Republicans... always in trouble. Really? No democrat has ever gotten in trouble in Arizona or anywhere else? On a national level, Sen Kennedy comes to mind, or Anthony Wiener. Then there's Elliot Spitzer who cheats on his wife with hookers and is rewarded with a job on CNN. Wait, how about Arizona's Mark DeSimone (D, Phoenix), a representative being arrested for beating his wife? Does that count as a Dem getting in trouble? My point is that using words like 'always', 'never', 'all', etc. opens you up for being wrong. In this case, it isn't Republicans who are 'always' in trouble.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kevin Rayburn
honesty in politics is a guilty plea
11:13 PM on 01/24/2012
but the left seems to think that if a democrat is in trouble it is a republican's fault somehow, usually w's fault. personally i think it is time for all these numbnuttz in dc accept responsibility for their own actions or lack of actions depending upon what the case maybe. but you are definately correct in the "always and never" thing, the use of those terms and to thrown in my fav term "oh please" do nothing but make someones argument invalid.
08:15 AM on 01/23/2012
The original intent of this law was to prevent selective detention of legislators by government agencies during a vote on legislation. Without this protection, in some form or another, it would be possible for a government agency to manipulate legislative sessions to effect outcomes of pending bills. It would make sense to expand which crimes should not be protected by this law, in order to prevent some of the more egregious examples cited here.
12:44 AM on 01/23/2012
laws are to be applied equally across the board, and it is obvious that it is not!
its bad enough we are supposed to be created equal and we know thats is not the case as some are more equal than others and and poor go to jail for lack of funds for representation and yes there are court legal aid attorneys, but they have many cases and are overburden and then there are many that don't care!its just a job---forget that many are dependent upon them