Prosecutors Say Sen. Craig's Conviction in Bathroom Sex Sting Should Stand

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Prosecutors Say Sen. Craig's Conviction in Bathroom Sex Sting Should Stand

STEVE KARNOWSKI
AP News

Feb 22, 2008 23:20 EST

Prosecutors argued Friday that Sen. Larry Craig's appeal misinterprets the
disorderly conduct law and his guilty plea in a bathroom sex sting should
stand.

The Idaho Republican asked the Minnesota Court of Appeals last month to let
him withdraw his guilty plea. His lawyers claim the state's disorderly
conduct law would apply only if witnesses other than the police officer who
arrested Craig had been present.

In the response, prosecutors also argued that a district court judge did not
abuse his discretion, as Craig's lawyers contended, when he refused to let
Craig change his guilty plea after he had entered it and paid his fine.

Craig was arrested June 11 at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport by
an undercover officer who said Craig tapped his feet and swiped his hand
under a stall divider in a way that signaled he wanted sex. The senator was
arrested in a broader sweep targeting men soliciting sex in the airport's
bathrooms.

After news of his arrest became public in August, Craig denied the
allegations, insisting his actions were misconstrued and that he's not gay.
He said he pleaded guilty in hopes of resolving the matter quietly.

The disorderly conduct statute refers to conduct that a person knows or
reasonably should know "Will, or will tend to, alarm, anger or disturb
others" or "who engages in offensive, obscene, abusive, boisterous or noisy
conduct ... tending reasonably to arouse alarm, anger or resentment in
others."

The prosecution said the law explicitly does not require that the prohibited
conduct arouse "alarm, anger or resentment," just that it's the sort of
conduct that would tend to do so.

As they've argued before, prosecutors said in their brief that Craig entered
the plea voluntarily as part of a deal in which a more serious charge of
interference with privacy was dropped, and that he should be bound by that
agreement.

They also rejected claims by Craig's attorneys that even if he had used hand
signals to communicate a desire for sex, such actions would be
constitutionally protected free speech.

And the prosecutors disputed claims made in a friend-of-the-court brief
filed by the American Civil Liberties Union, which said that even if Craig
did seek to have sex in the bathroom, he had a legal expectation of privacy.
The ACLU said his alleged actions weren't illegal. The prosecutors countered
that Craig's alleged actions all took place in a public place.

Judy Smith, a spokeswoman for Craig's attorneys, said the lawyers were
"reviewing the brief and will file a response with the court."

Source: AP News
 
On 23 Feb 2008, Sid9 wrote:

> Prosecutors Say Sen. Craig's Conviction in Bathroom Sex Sting Should
> Stand
>
> STEVE KARNOWSKI
> AP News
>
> Feb 22, 2008 23:20 EST
>
> Prosecutors argued Friday that Sen. Larry Craig's appeal misinterprets
> the disorderly conduct law and his guilty plea in a bathroom sex sting
> should stand.
>


Huuh huhh, huh, huh.

He said "stand".
 
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