
The U.S. Justice
Department has ended a nine-month public corruption
investigation of former Spokane, Wash., mayor Jim West
without bringing criminal charges, a prosecutor says.
The limited investigation found insufficient evidence
that West offered paid jobs or internships, in
exchange for sex, to men he met in an online chat room, Mark
Bartlett, an assistant U.S. attorney from Seattle who
served as special prosecutor, told a news conference
Thursday in Spokane.
"I am announcing today that the Department of
Justice will not be filing criminal charges against
Jim West. In addition, we are ending our investigation
as of today," Bartlett said in a rare instance of
federal officials commenting publicly on an investigation.
The inquiry, which included interviews with more
than two dozen people as well as forensic examination
of the former mayor's city and personal computer
contents, found no evidence that West "specifically intended
to defraud citizens of their intangible rights for honest
service," the standard for federal criminal charges,
Bartlett said.
"We did not attempt to determine whether Jim
West should be mayor of Spokane. We did not attempt to
judge whether his actions over the past several years
were moral or correct," he said. Nor did the federal
probe determine whether state laws were violated, he said.
West told a news conference later Thursday that
the FBI investigation had upheld his contention that
he committed no crimes and never offered jobs or perks
to anyone in exchange for favors. "I cooperated completely
from the beginning," he said.
West was recalled from office in December by 65%
of the voters. The recall charge alleged that he
abused his office in making an online job offer in
anticipation of sex with someone he thought was an
18-year-old man. West acknowledged mistakes in
judgment but maintained he did not break state or
federal laws.
West said he understood why people voted to
recall him, blaming "a barrage" of articles in The
Spokesman-Review of Spokane. "If I had done the things
alleged by The
Spokesman-Review, I would have voted against
myself," he said.
He called articles contending that he molested
children in the past "a lie" and had several testy
exchanges with Spokesman-Review reporters who
questioned him. "I did not commit those acts," West
said, adding that the allegations "cut me to the quick
and destroyed my reputation.
"I think The Spokesman-Review owes me a
personal apology," West said, reiterating an earlier threat
to sue the newspaper "at some point and time."
Carla Savalli, the newspaper's senior editor for
local news, said West would not get an apology. "The
newspaper will absolutely not apologize for our
coverage. We stand by our reporting," she said. "I
don't think the FBI's decision today in any way diminishes
our feeling about the work that we've done. It in no
way reflects on the quality of our journalism."
West is unemployed and said he is looking for
work in the Spokane area. He did not rule out another
run for public office and said he is talking with a
radio station about a talk show.
The FBI's inquiry began in May, shortly after
The Spokesman-Review published reports that
the mayor had offered city appointments and jobs to
young gay men he met in an online chat room. West's
office computer was seized but later returned after the FBI
made copies of its contents. The FBI also searched
West's home in July, seizing three computers, 60
computer disks, and other electronic storage media,
according to a U.S. district court search warrant inventory.
Bartlett declined to say whether the case had
been brought to a federal grand jury, nor would he say
what material was found on West's computers. An
investigator hired by the Spokane city council concluded
last November that West violated state law and city
computer-use policies.
Bill Etter, a Spokane lawyer who represented
West when he appealed the recall to the state supreme
court, said state and county prosecutors deferred to
the FBI early in the investigation, so it is unlikely the
former mayor will face state charges.
There was no answer to a call for comment placed
to Spokane County prosecutor Steve Tucker's office
after regular business hours Thursday. (AP)
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