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UPDATE: IDAHO STATESMAN PUBLISHES
IN-DEPTH
INVESTIGATION INTO SEN. LARRY CRAIG -- Includes
statement of undercover cop who made arrest
and reports of Craig "cruising" for sex.

Original stories, with backlinks, on the Larry
Craig bathroom arrest can be found here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/07/
nf07/nfAUG07/nf082807-10.htm
Report from undercover officer who arrested
Craig is here...
http://media.idahostatesman.
com/smedia/2007/08/27/19/08
28_local_arrest_final.source
.prod_affiliate.36.pdf
We have four stories from the Idaho
Statesman.
For more on Senator Larry Craig, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/
sessearch.php?q=larry
+craig&op=ph
First story here...
http://www.idahostatesman.
com/eyepiece/story/143801.html
Story below:
-------------------------
Men's room arrest reopens questions about Sen.
Larry Craig
Idaho senator pleads guilty to disorderly
conduct after incident at Minnesota airport that echoes previous
allegation of homosexual conduct.
By Dan Popkey -
dpopkey@idahostatesman.com
Sen. Larry Craig, who in May told the Idaho Statesman he had never
engaged in homosexual acts, was arrested less than a month later by an
undercover police officer who said Craig made a sexual advance toward
him in an airport men's room.
The arrest at a Minnesota airport prompted Craig to plead guilty to
disorderly conduct earlier this month. His June 11 encounter with the
officer was similar to an incident in a men's room in a Washington,
D.C., rail station described by a Washington-area man to the Idaho
Statesman. In that case, the man said he and Craig had sexual contact.
The Minnesota arrest was first reported Monday by Roll Call, a Capitol
Hill newspaper.
In an interview on May 14, Craig told the Idaho Statesman he'd never
engaged in sex with a man or solicited sex with a man. The Craig
interview was the culmination of a Statesman investigation that began
after a blogger accused Craig of homosexual sex in October. Over five
months, the Statesman examined rumors about Craig dating to his college
days and his 1982 pre-emptive denial that he had sex with underage
congressional pages.
The most serious finding by the Statesman was the report by a
professional man with close ties to Republican officials. The
40-year-old man reported having oral sex with Craig at Washington's
Union Station, probably in 2004. The Statesman also spoke with a man who
said Craig made a sexual advance toward him at the University of Idaho
in 1967 and a man who said Craig "cruised" him for sex in 1994 at the
REI store in Boise. The Statesman also explored dozens of allegations
that proved untrue, unclear or unverifiable.
Craig, 62, was elected to Congress in 1980. Should he win re-election in
2008 and complete his term, he would be the longest-serving Idahoan ever
in Congress. His record includes a series of votes against gay rights
and his support of a 2006 amendment to the Idaho Constitution that bars
gay marriage and civil unions.
News about the June 11 arrest at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International
Airport was reported on Roll Call's Web site Monday. According to police
and court records obtained by Roll Call, Craig pleaded guilty Aug. 8 to
misdemeanor disorderly conduct in Hennepin County District Court. He
paid $575 in fines and fees. A 10-day jail sentence was suspended and
Craig received one year's unsupervised probation.
Craig on Monday denied any misconduct. "At the time of this incident, I
complained to the police that they were misconstruing my actions," he
said in a written statement. "I was not involved in any inappropriate
conduct. I should have had the advice of counsel in resolving this
matter. In hindsight, I should not have pled guilty. I was trying to
handle this matter myself quickly and expeditiously."
Craig, through his staff, declined to answer questions.
Craig resigns Romney post
On Monday afternoon, Craig resigned from his role as the U.S. Senate
co-chair of the Mitt Romney for president campaign. Monday night, the
Romney campaign canceled a visit to Boise scheduled for today by
Romney's son, Josh.
Until Monday, the Statesman had declined to run a story about Craig's
sex life, because the paper didn't have enough corroborating evidence
and because of the senator's steadfast denial.
In the hourlong May 14 interview, Craig was accompanied by his wife,
Suzanne. He specifically and generally denied ever engaging in any
homosexual conduct.
During that interview, the Statesman played Craig an audiotape of the
man claiming that he and Craig had sex in the Union Station restroom.
Like the Minnesota airport restroom, the Union Station restroom is known
as a place where men can find anonymous sex.
Craig denied the man's account and said, "I am not gay and I have never
been in a restroom in Union Station having sex with anybody.
"There's a very clear bottom line here," Craig said. "I don't do that
kind of thing. I am not gay, and I never have been."
Craig's accuser spoke to the Statesman on the condition he not be named.
The man said he was sure it was Craig he had oral sex with but said he
had no evidence other than his word.
Craig also denied the claims of the two other men that he made sexual
advances to them.
One man, who was considering pledging with Craig's fraternity at the U
of I in 1967, said Craig took him to his room and made what the man said
he took to be an invitation to sex. Responding to that allegation in
May, Craig said, "I don't hit on any men."
Another man said that in November 1994 Craig "cruised" him at the REI
store in Boise. The man, who is gay, told the Statesman that Craig
stared at him in a sexually inviting way and followed him around REI for
a half-hour. Said Craig: "Once again, I'm not gay, and I don't cruise,
and I don't hit on men. I have no idea how he drew that conclusion. A
smile? Here is one thing I do out in public: I make eye contact, I smile
at people, they recognize me, they say, ‘Oh, hi, Senator.' Or, ‘Do I
know you?'
"I've been in this business 27 years in the public eye here. I don't go
around anywhere hitting on men, and by God, if I did, I wouldn't do it
in Boise, Idaho! Jiminy!"
Undecided about re-election
On Aug. 9, the day after his guilty plea in Minnesota, Craig told the
Statesman he had yet to decide whether he would seek re-election in
2008. He served five terms in the House before he was elected to the
Senate. His third Senate term expires in January 2009. Lt. Gov. Jim
Risch has said he will likely run should Craig retire. Former Democratic
Rep. Larry LaRocco announced in April that he will run for the Senate.
Craig said that he would announce his re-election plans by
mid-September. He said personal factors, including spending time with
his nine grandchildren, were weighing on the side of retirement. But he
also said he enjoyed his job and the benefits of seniority.
During the interview in May, Craig said his re-election or retirement
would not be influenced by accusations that he was gay. "If I'm going to
run from these kinds of stupid, false allegations after 27 years in
public life, having done a credible job, then I shouldn't have been
there in the first place."
Blogger makes claims
The Statesman began its inquiry last October, after a gay activist
blogger, Mike Rogers, published a claim that Craig had sex with men.
Rogers cited anonymous sources. Rogers believed he had the evidence to
nail a hypocritical Republican foe of gay rights, raise the din in the
Rep. Mark Foley scandal, and help the Democrats win the Congress.
Millions heard or read of Rogers' claims. Amid anticipatory buzz from
Web sites like the liberal Wonkette, Rogers published his report at
blogactive.com Oct. 17. He also appeared on a liberal talk show in 100
radio markets. Mainstream media — including four Idaho newspapers, the
Washington Post, USA Today, MSNBC and Bill Maher on HBO — spread the
story widely.
But Statesman editor Vicki Gowler would not rely on Rogers' anonymous
sources. Instead, she decided to investigate the widespread rumors that
date to 1982, when Craig pre-emptively denied involvement in a gay sex
scandal involving congressmen and underage pages.
During its investigation, the Statesman interviewed 300 people, visited
the ranch where Craig grew up, and made two trips to Washington, D.C.
On May 12, two days before its interview with Craig, the Statesman
finally interviewed Rogers' "best source," the man who says he is
certain he had a brief sexual encounter with Craig at Union Station,
which is two blocks from Craig's office. The man said the sex occurred
in two restrooms on a weekday afternoon. He estimated the encounter
lasted three or four minutes.
The man's motive was twofold. A lifelong Republican, he recently had
re-registered as a Democrat because he's angry with what he sees as the
GOP's gay-bashing. Second, he was tired of Rogers picking on
congressional staffers and offered him the chance to "out" a senator.
The Washington-area man's story has remained consistent, beginning with
his Aug. 9, 2004, e-mail to Mike Rogers: "I've hooked up with Craig ...
why not out some actual members and not their staffers?"
That suggestion came shortly after Rogers launched his outing campaign,
prompted by his anger over the GOP election-year push for a
constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. Craig voted for the
failed measure July 14, 2004. He also has opposed allowing gays or
lesbians in the military and voted against extending civil rights
protections to homosexuals in the workplace.
Craig told the Statesman in May that he doesn't care about a person's
sexual orientation. He said he had a homosexual staffer. "I hire people
based on their talent and their ability to produce," he said.
Marriage should be between and man and a woman, Craig said. But he said
he supports unions between same-sex couples. "You can have a civil
union, but you can't commandeer the institution of marriage. That's very
special, religious, culturally, and you can't go there."
Last fall, however, after Rogers' report, Craig issued a statement
saying he would vote for an amendment to the Idaho Constitution on the
November ballot that bans both gay marriage and civil unions.
In the May 14 interview, Craig and his wife listened to a four-minute
excerpt of the Statesman's interview with the 40-year-old man who first
spoke to Rogers. At first, Craig objected to the man's anonymity, but
agreed to listen. The man's voice was disguised.
Craig said the man is an activist. "The gay movement, we know it for
what it is. It's now aggressive and it's liberal and it's naming people
to try to put them in compromising, difficult situations."
Suzanne Craig's eyes reddened and filled with tears as she listened.
After her husband's denial, she said, "I'm incensed that you would even
consider such a piece of trash as a credible source."
To which Craig added, "Jiminy God!"
Before moving on to the next question, Craig turned to his wife and
said, "Sorry, Hon."
Until Monday's report, Craig was facing a lone credible accuser. Rogers
told the Statesman he had lost track of his other two sources, who he
said described encounters with the senator, one in Idaho and one in
Seattle. Rogers concedes he doesn't know those two sources' last names.
"I was an amateur," he told the Statesman.
The Statesman followed dozens of leads about alleged sexual partners.
Two prevalent rumors swirl around two men who are dead. The Statesman
has found no written record of sexual intimacy between those men and
Craig. Relatives of those men are dead, unaware of proof to substantiate
the rumors, or unreachable.
Two other alleged partners unequivocally denied having been intimate
with Craig. Other accounts are simply unfounded. Some were inconclusive.
There are, however, the two men who told the Statesman Craig made passes
at them. Craig denied those accounts in his May 14 interview.
The Page Scandal
Until the Mike Rogers report in October and the Roll Call story on
Monday, rumors about Craig were grounded in the 1982 congressional page
scandal. Craig denied involvement in 1982, but the timing of his
statement fueled rumors that lasted decades. Among them were that Craig
married shortly after the scandal to cover up his alleged homosexuality.
Craig and the then-Suzanne Scott had their first date on Valentine's Day
1980, when Craig was making his first run for Congress. Craig proposed
six months after the scandal, on Suzanne's birthday, Dec. 28, 1982. They
married in July 1983.
About a year before the marriage, on June 30, 1982, 13.3 million viewers
of CBS News heard page Leroy Williams allege he had sex with three House
members when he was 17.
The following day, Craig issued a statement saying he'd received calls
from reporters saying they were going to publish his name in connection
with the scandal. His statement called the allegations "part of a
concerted effort at character assassination."
"I have done nothing that I need to be either publicly or privately
ashamed of. I am guilty of no crime or impropriety, and I am convinced
that this is an effort to damage my personal character and destroy my
political career."
Craig alone — among 535 members of Congress — issued such a statement.
In the news vacuum of the July 4 recess, the freshman Republican was
thrust into the national spotlight. A network helicopter followed him to
Jordan Valley, Ore., where he attended a potluck for Southwest Idaho
ranchers.
He told a national audience: "Persons who are unmarried as I am, by
choice or by circumstance, have always been the subject of innuendos,
gossip and false accusations. I think this is despicable."
Before he hit the airwaves, Craig hosted a breakfast for his campaign
staff at the Owyhee Hotel to tell them what was about to happen. Brad
Hoaglun remembers the moment: "He was very matter-of-fact and
forthright. He said, ‘I want to tell you nothing in the story is
accurate.'"
"I was finishing up college. This was my first paid campaign, and I can
remember sitting there thinking, my gosh, what have I got myself into?
And, OK, do I believe Larry Craig? And I came quickly to the conclusion
that, yes, I do."
Hoaglun went on to be an important GOP hand and was former Gov. Jim
Risch's spokesman.
After the staff breakfast in 1982, Cheryl Miller, a top Craig campaign
aide, drove Craig to Jordan Valley in her silver Pontiac. She said Craig
liked to sing along to her 8-track tapes of country western and gospel.
It relaxed him. Despite the pressure, Craig's gift for campaigning was
unaffected, Miller said. All who knew him believed he'd been wrongly
accused, she said.
Staffer John Keenan was on the next leg, from Boise to North Idaho. "It
really rattled our cages," said Keenan, a Craig staffer from 1981-85. At
a stop in Council, a crew from a second network helicopter "stuck a
microphone in his face. I was standing there, just kind of amazed. I was
so impressed, he handled it so well."
During the drive, Craig told tales of his youth on the family ranch 24
long miles from Midvale, where he attended the one-room South Crane
School, became a champion orator and tussled with a cow that stuck its
head in his tent and took off running.
"He took comfort in telling us stories," said Keenan. "He has a sense of
humor that he doesn't reveal easily. Gosh, I was laughing my head off."
At the time, a top Craig staffer, Karmen Larson, said reporters from CBS
and The New York Post said they were going to name Craig, prompting his
denial. The CBS reporter on the story, John Ferrugia, declined comment
to the Statesman.
Craig says he ‘panicked'
But Peter Fearon, then with the New York Post, said he never said his
paper was preparing to name Craig. "No, no — it wasn't ‘are you under
investigation?' It was simply an inquiry: ‘Have you heard anything? Who
have you heard about? Have you heard any names mentioned? What's your
reaction to this news?'
"The next thing I know, Larry Craig has issued a press release: ‘This
isn't me.' Which I just thought was a bizarre and ultimately very
foolish thing to do.
"He was the only person going on the record anywhere," Fearon said. "And
of course, when you do that, it's like raw meat. He's saying, ‘Nobody's
actually accusing, but it wasn't me!' It's no wonder it's dogged him. He
denied something that no one had accused him of."
Four weeks later, page Williams recanted, saying he'd made up the whole
thing. A second page who had appeared on CBS, Jeffrey Opp, said he'd
exaggerated or misunderstood what he took to be sexual advances from
congressmen.
A six-month probe into sex charges was launched by the House ethics
committee. In December 1982, they exonerated those accused by Williams
and Opp.
The committee chastised CBS's Ferrugia for planting "lurid tales of
sexual misconduct and homosexual prostitution in the Congress" in Opp's
mind. Opp declined to speak to the Statesman for this story; Williams
did not reply to repeated inquiries.
Though his staff credits Craig for a cool head in 1982, he told the
Statesman on May 14 that he panicked.
"I was scared, plain and simple scared," he said. "When you have
somebody walk into your office and make that kind of allegation and
tells me he's gonna go to print — and I'm a freshman congressman and go,
‘Oh my God!'"
Craig talks to FBI
Craig allowed the Statesman to review, but not copy, what he said were
an FBI report and a privately administered polygraph from 1982 regarding
the page scandal.
Craig did not respond to requests to have the FBI verify the
authenticity of the FBI document. Craig also declined to sign a waiver
allowing the Statesman to review anything in his FBI file regarding
homosexuality.
The FBI document supplied by Craig describes a July 20, 1982, FBI
interview with Craig at the offices of his Washington law firm. Craig
requested the interview with the FBI and said reporters had threatened
to disclose allegations of homosexuality.
"Craig stated that he had never engaged in a homosexual relationship"
with Williams or Opp, the FBI report said. "Craig further indicated that
he has never engaged in a homosexual relationship with any person."
The document says Craig told the FBI that he suspected that then-Rep.
Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo., might be behind the allegations against
him. Opp was appointed by Schroeder. "Craig said that recent polls
indicate strong support for his re-election this fall, and he perceives
this as a slanderous campaign by the opposition party to have him
defeated," said the report.
An attached document from a polygraph examiner hired by Craig said it
was the examiner's opinion "that Congressman Craig is not a homosexual
and has since adulthood not engaged in homosexual acts of any type."
Craig also provided the Statesman military records to respond to a rumor
he left the Idaho National Guard because he was homosexual. Craig was
honorably discharged in 1972, after 20 months of a six-year enlistment.
Had he been discharged for homosexual conduct, a different section of
the military code would have been cited, and he wouldn't have received
an honorable discharge. Records show he was let go because of a
"physical disqualification," although they do not specify the reason.
There is no physician's report available, according to the Pentagon and
the Idaho Guard. Craig says his ailment was flat feet.
U of I days
Craig told the Statesman he was unaware of rumors about him being gay
going back to his college days. Craig had about 150 fraternity brothers
at Delta Chi during his U of I years.
The Statesman interviewed 41 of them. Of those 41, three said there were
jokes about him being effeminate and possibly gay. Most said that had
Craig been thought to be gay, he would have never become a leader in the
fraternity and the student body.
As president of Delta Chi, Craig secured a $100,000 loan to remodel the
fraternity house, instituted study hours, and blackballed members for
drug use. They called him "Mother Craig" for his officiousness.
After shedding 50 pounds the summer before college, he was elected state
president of the Future Farmers of America on his second try. He also
was student body president at U of I. Graduating in 1969, he won the
Donald R. Theophilus Outstanding Senior Award. Five years later, at 28,
he was elected to the state Senate. He's been in public office ever
since.
Most of Craig's college friends say he was disciplined, studious and
serious, even if he was awkward with women.
One woman who dated him off and on for a year asked not to be named, but
said, "I don't imagine that he ever held my hand. He was into the gotta-hold-the-door-for-the-woman
sort of thing. But I always felt like I was an accessory. I might as
well have been his briefcase."
Craig said he did sometimes invite women because a date was expected.
But he said he had a serious girlfriend in college; they split over
religious differences. He declined to name her.
Men Craig served with or under in Congress — Republicans Jim McClure,
Orval Hansen, George Hansen and Steve Symms and Democrats Richard
Stallings and Larry LaRocco — all said they have no credible evidence of
Craig being gay. The same goes for scores of former staffers. They spoke
to the Statesman before Monday's news of Craig's guilty plea.
McClure, whom Craig succeeded in the Senate, said Craig's formal manner
of speaking has fueled rumors. Craig was taught by an old-school orator
— the late D.L. Carter of Weiser. The lessons served Craig well, as he
won state championships, attended two national contests and filled his
bedroom at the ranch with trophies.
Said McClure: "He was of the old oratorical school where you went in and
took each word and broke it into syllables and enunciated and all of
that. And that's how that style came about, to project across a full
hall."
Craig also took piano lessons in high school and was in the high school
choir.
"Larry's speech patterns are very precise," said McClure. "They're not
what you expect from a rancher from Midvale. His speech patterns say,
‘Hey, here's a guy who's a little different.' And he is, he's a little
different. But that doesn't mean he's homosexual for heaven's sakes! You
have to jump from prejudice to suspicion to I don't know what to give
the rumors any credibility."
Neighbors weigh in
Last fall, Craig's neighbors at a Washington marina expressed disbelief
at Rogers' attempt to out him. Ed Johnson is an openly gay man, former
local elected official and has been an acquaintance and neighbor of
Craig's off and on for 15 years. He is president of the Gangplank
Slipholders Association, a neighbor to the smaller Capital Yacht Club,
where Craig lives.
A Democrat, Johnson works for the American Humanists Association, which
he describes as "the godless, liberal, left-wing atheists."
"If I thought there was truth to the rumor, I'd be first in line to out
him," said Johnson, who agrees hypocritical public officials should be
exposed.
"But after 15 years in a close-knit community where everybody knows
everybody's business, to be that clandestine and never have anything
said — it's just hard to imagine. I mean, if somebody has a fight and
breaks up with their boyfriend or girlfriend, you know it the next day."
What happens if Larry Craig resigns from the
Senate?
If Sen. Larry Craig resigns his seat, Idaho law will require Gov. Butch
Otter to appoint someone to fill the vacancy until the next general
election, which is set for November 2008.
Otter spokesman Jon Hanian said the governor has not discussed any
possible replacements should Craig resign. "(Otter's) not commenting
until he's had an opportunity to talk directly to the senator and he
hasn't had a chance to do that yet," Hanian said Monday.
Idaho reactions
“I’m sorry we don’t live in a world where the senator feels he can be
open about his sexual orientation.”
Idaho Rep. Nicole LeFavour, D-Boise
“We need to make sure we have all the facts. If there’s truth to it,
then I think it’s the kind of thing where the senator needs to think
about resigning from office.”
Bryan Fischer, executive director of the Idaho Values Alliance
Washington sex scandals
* In July, U.S. Sen. David Vitter, R-La., acknowledged having been in
touch with the D.C. Madam, whose phone records were examined by an
investigator for Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt. Vitter went
into seclusion for a week, then had a news conference with his wife to
apologize for his conduct.
* Last fall, Mark Foley, a Republican congressman from Florida, resigned
from Congress after news reports surfaced that he sent lewd computer
messages to a former congressional page. Last week, a Florida newspaper
reported that he is unlikely to face criminal charges.
* In 1998, the House of Representatives impeached President Bill Clinton
after his affair with former intern Monica Lewinsky became public. The
Senate acquitted the Democratic president.
* And at the height of the public interest in Clinton’s affair with
Lewinsky, Idaho had its own Washington sex scandal when the late U.S.
House Rep. Helen Chenowith, a Republican, admitted that she had once had
a six-year affair with a married man.
Dan Popkey: 377-6400
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Second story here...
http://www.idahostatesman
.com/politics/story/143629.html
Story below:
-------------------------
Others react to Craig's arrest
Statesman staff - Idaho Statesman
Congressional leaders in Idaho and elsewhere say they learned of Sen.
Larry Craig’s arrest in Minnesota through the news media today, and many
say they won’t rush to judgment.
Craig pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct after being arrested by
airport police investigating allegations of lewd conduct in an airport
restroom.
This is what a few Idaho lawmakers and a Senate leader had to say today:
— Idaho Rep. Mike Simpson learned today about the arrest through the
media. “We are learning about it as it is breaking,” said Simpson
spokeswoman Nikki Watts. “We don’t have enough information to say
anything.”
— Idaho Rep. Bill Sali also learned of the incident today, but his
spokesman was unsure exactly how Sali learned about it.
“We don’t know any of the details,” said spokesman Wayne Hoffman. “It is
prudent to not rush to judgment, to give Sen. Craig an opportunity to
respond and to give him the benefit of the doubt,” Hoffman said. Sali
has conveyed these sentiments to Craig’s office.
— Sen. Mike Crapo:
“Sen. Crapo learned about this via the news reports today. He had no
prior knowledge,” said spokesman Lindsay Nothern. “Once we learn more
and talk to Senator Craig, we will make a comment.”
— Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell:
Josh Holmes, a spokesman for said that it until it appeared in Roll
Call, they hadn't heard about Craig's arrest. “We just found out about
this incident late this afternoon,” Holmes said.
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Third story here...
http://www.idahostatesman.
com/localnews/story/143796.html
Story below:
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What does the undercover officer allege
happened?
- Idaho Statesman
U.S. Sen. Larry Craig pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct this month
after his arrest in a Minneapolis airport men's room by an undercover
officer who said Craig was sending signals that he wanted to have sex.
Craig said his actions were misconstrued by police and that he should
not have pleaded guilty to the charges.
"At the time of this incident, I complained to the police that they were
misconstruing my actions," Craig said in a release. "I was not involved
in any inappropriate conduct. I should have had the advice of counsel in
resolving this matter. In hindsight, I should not have pled guilty.."
Craig was detained for about 45 minutes, interviewed, photographed,
fingerprinted and released. Police then prepared a complaint for
interference with privacy and disorderly conduct. According to the
report obtained by Roll Call:
Sgt. Dave Karsnia was investigating complaints regarding sexual activity
in the men's room where Craig was arrested. Airport police had made
"numerous arrests" there in connection with sexual activity. Karsnia
entered the restroom at noon on June 11. A few minutes after taking a
seat in a stall, Karsnia said he saw a man who turned out to be Craig
lingering outside the stall.
"I could see Craig look through the crack in the door from his
position," Karsnia wrote. Craig then took the stall next to Karsnia,
placing his roller bag against the front of the stall door.
"My experience has showed that individuals engaging in lewd conduct use
their bags to block the view from the front of their stall," Karsnia
wrote.
Karsnia continued: "At 1216 hours, Craig tapped his right foot. I
recognized this as a signal used by persons wishing to engage in lewd
conduct. Craig tapped his toes several times and moves his foot closer
to my foot. I moved my foot up and down slowly. While this was
occurring, the male in the stall to my right was still present. I could
hear several unknown persons in the restroom that appeared to use the
restroom for its intended use. The presence of others did not seem to
deter Craig as he moved his right foot so that it touched the side of my
left foot which was within my stall area."
Craig then swiped his hand under the stall divider toward Karsnia, wrote
the officer. Karsnia then held his police identification down by the
floor so Craig could see it. "With my left hand near the floor, I
pointed towards the exit. Craig responded, ‘No!' I again pointed towards
the exit. Craig exited the stall with his roller bags without flushing
the toilet....Craig said he would not go. I told Craig that he was under
arrest, he had to go, and that I didn't want to make a scene. Craig then
left the restroom."
In a recorded interview after his arrest, Craig "either disagreed with
me or ‘didn't recall' the events as they happened," according to the
police report.
Craig told police he had a wide stance when going to the bathroom and
that he was reaching down to pick up a piece of paper, the report says.
"It should be noted that there was not a piece of paper on the bathroom
floor, nor did Craig pick up a piece of paper," wrote the officer.
At one point, police documents said, Craig handed Karsnia his business
card identifying him as a U.S. Senator and said, "What do you think of
that?"
Source: Roll Call
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Fourth story here...
http://www.idahostatesman
.com/opinion/story/143694.html
Story below:
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Our View: Sen. Craig owes Idahoans an
explanation
- Idaho Statesman
Sen. Larry Craig has spent 27 years in Congress — with rumors about his
sexual orientation following him almost from the outset.
Now, after the report of Craig's arrest at a Minnesota airport restroom,
Idaho's senior senator must speak candidly with the people who have
hired him for more than a quarter of a century. He owes this to voters —
no matter how difficult that may be for him and for his family. And
voters owe Craig a chance to explain himself.
Craig was arrested on June 11 by a plainclothes officer investigating
lewd conduct complaints, the Washington, D.C., newspaper Roll Call
reported Monday. According to Roll Call, which obtained a police
incident report, Craig's behavior signaled that he wished to engage in
lewd conduct. Craig pleaded guilty on Aug. 8 to a misdemeanor charge of
disorderly conduct; he paid more than $500 in fees and fines and was
sentenced to one year's probation. A 10-day jail sentence was stayed.
This bizarre case now moves into the court of public opinion, where
Craig has a lot of explaining to do:
• If Craig's actions in the restroom were misconstrued and he was not
involved in any inappropriate conduct, as he said in a statement Monday,
then why did he plead guilty?
Craig says, in hindsight, he should not have pleaded guilty and "should
have had the advice of counsel in resolving this matter." On the
surface, it seems implausible that any educated professional — much less
an elected official — would face criminal proceedings without hiring an
attorney.
• Did Craig try to use his title to make the case go away? According to
the police report, Craig handed the plainclothes officer a U.S. Senate
business card during an interview with police, and asked the officer,
"What do you think about that?"
This suggests an inexcusable abuse of power. Craig was elected to
represent Idaho's interests in the Senate — not to use the title of U.S.
senator in his own self-interest during a police interrogation.
• Why did Craig not come forward after the June 11 arrest? Did he
honestly think this would never become public? For Craig to keep this
from his constituents, for 11 weeks, is not merely bad public relations.
It's an unacceptable breach of trust.
• Craig has said he is not gay — repeating this assertion,
categorically, in a May interview with the Statesman. Does he maintain
that today, or has he been lying, blatantly and repeatedly, to his
constituents? Elected officials have a right to privacy, but also an
obligation to tell the truth about who they are.
Yes, we have pointed questions, as many Idahoans surely do. But there's
a difference between asking hard questions and making snap judgments. We
ask Idahoans to await the answers before passing judgment.
We are sad for Craig's family, and yes, for Craig. This is a painful
time, made worse by the fact that Craig so far has been less than
forthcoming. And his statement Monday, at a spare and vague 56 words,
raises more questions than it answers.
Eight times since 1980, Idaho voters have elected Craig to Congress,
five times to the House and three times to the Senate. In exchange,
voters now deserve the full story from their senior senator.
"Our View" is the editorial position of the Idaho Statesman. It is an
unsigned opinion expressing the consensus of the Statesman's editorial
board. To comment on an editorial or suggest a topic, e-mail
editorial@idahostatesman.com.
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Larry Scott --