South Carolina Supreme Court rules governor cannot keep ethics probe into his travel secret

By Jim Davenport, AP
Thursday, November 5, 2009

SC high court says gov’s ethics probe is public

COLUMBIA, S.C. — South Carolina’s Supreme Court ruled Thursday that an ethics investigation into Gov. Mark Sanford’s travel must be made public, clearing the way for lawmakers considering impeachment to review a report on the probe.

Sanford’s lawyers had tried keep a report on a criminal investigation by the State Ethics Commission from being released to the House of Representatives as leaders there decide whether to move forward with impeachment efforts.

The commission’s investigation was launched after Sanford returned from a five-day rendezvous with an Argentine lover in June that prompted investigations by The Associated Press into his travel practices. The AP found Sanford used state airplanes for personal and political purposes; used pricey commercial travel despite a state low-cost travel requirement; and didn’t report private plane trips given by friends and donors.

Sanford’s spokesman and lawyers, as well as Ethics Commission Director Herb Hayden, did not immediately respond to questions.

The governor said shortly after the investigation began that he would waive confidentiality rights, but his lawyers later argued he only intended to allow the scope of the investigation to be released. Attorneys wanted Sanford to have a chance to respond to the report before lawmakers saw it.

However, the court found the Republican governor had waived rights to confidentiality unconditionally in an Aug. 28 letter to the Legislature. The letter also said Sanford was “fighting for transparency,” and that travel documents would support his frugal record.

That indicated “his intent was to waive confidentiality without limitation,” the high court said. The court said Sanford’s confidentiality waiver means nearly everything generated by the commission will be public.

House Speaker Bobby Harrell has said lawmakers will not move forward with impeachment discussions until they review the investigative report.

“It looks like now we will have access to this reporting of the facts,” Harrell spokesman Greg Foster said.

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