COLUMBUS Ohio
Risking impeachment, Ohio's attorney general on Monday refused demands from
the governor and other fellow Democrats that he resign over a sexual harassment
scandal in his office and an affair with a subordinate.
Gov. Ted Strickland told reporters that Democrats will begin drafting an
impeachment resolution against Attorney General Marc Dann right away. Republican
House Speaker Jon Husted said Monday that his chamber which takes the first step
in any impeachment was already reviewing the process.
Virtually every state-level Democratic officeholder urged Dann to resign in a
letter late Sunday after Strickland tried twice during the day to persuade him
to leave office.
A sexual harassment investigation uncovered an atmosphere in Dann's office
rife with inappropriate staff-subordinate relationships, heavy drinking and
harassing and threatening behavior by a supervisor. On Friday, Dann admitted to
an extramarital affair with a subordinate after the investigation threatened to
reveal the relationship.
"I would hope the Attorney General will understand that his effectiveness as
an attorney general has been so diminished that in my judgment he can no longer
effectively serve in that office," Strickland said Monday. The governor and Dann
were among many Ohio Democrats swept into office in 2006 in the wake of a
Republican scandal over state investments.
"I think it's important for Democrats to send a very clear message that we
will clean our own house," Strickland said.
For impeachment proceedings to go forward, Dann must have committed a wrong
act, according to the state constitution. Strickland declined to say what act or
acts Democrats planned to name against Dann in the proceedings.
"The work of the Office of the Attorney General matters more, and is far more
important, than any one person," Democrats said in their letter to Dann. "In
many, many cases it is all that stands between the people and the powerful.
Sadly, we no longer have even the most remote hope that you can continue to
effectively serve as Attorney General and that is why we are asking for your
resignation."
Dann had previously conceded that his own behavior contributed to an
atmosphere in the office that permitted two junior staffers to be harassed and
threatened by Anthony Gutierrez, a friend he hired as an aide.
However, Dann insisted he is still capable of working as the state's lawyer
and top law enforcement officer.
"I am in the office, have rolled up my sleeves and am working on behalf of
the people of State of Ohio," Dann said Monday in a written statement to his
staff. In the statement, he apologized to them for putting them in a tough
position but added, "our work is too important to do anything but our jobs
today."
A message seeking further comment was left Monday with Dann spokesman Ted
Hart.
Strickland said that in his failed attempts to persuade Dann to resign, "he
told me that he does not believe that he has done anything that would justify
his leaving office, that he feels that he was elected by the people and he will
continue to do his best to remain in office," Strickland said.
Ohio Democratic Party Chairman Chris Redfern said the party plans to vote
Saturday on whether to rescind its endorsement of Dann and pull all party
resources from him, which would make him "essentially an independent." He said
Dann will find it difficult to be effective.
"We will distance ourselves both figuratively and literally from the Attorney
General until he makes the decision that is best for the people of the state of
Ohio, and that is to step down," Redfern said.
Gutierrez was fired Friday after an internal investigation found his
treatment of two 26-year-old employees violated sexual harassment policy.
Communications Director Leo Jennings, who was accused of asking a co-worker to
lie under oath, also was fired. Ed Simpson, Dann's policy chief, resigned;
investigators said he failed to address inappropriate behavior in the office.
Dann, who is married, apologized to his wife and supporters Friday for having
an affair with an employee he refused to name.
Dann's scheduler, Jessica Utovich, 28, resigned last week without
explanation. In his testimony during the investigation, Dann said Utovich
sometimes spent the night at his apartment but declined to talk about his
relationship with her specifically.
Dann had lived with Gutierrez and Jennings at an apartment during much of his
first year in office and some of the alleged harassment by Gutierrez occurred
there.
Strickland said, as a congressman, he opposed former President Bill Clinton's
impeachment. But he said the two situations are "dramatically different." His
request for Dann to resign is not based substantially on his extramarital
affair, Strickland said.
"It goes well beyond that. It involves many, many factors that are much more
complicated than that," he said.
Associated Press Writers Matt Reed, Stephen Majors and Andrew Welsh-Huggins
contributed to this report.
Copyright 2008 Associated Press