Attorneys for
U.S. senator Larry Craig are asking the Minnesota court of
appeals to correct a ''manifest injustice'' by allowing the
Idaho Republican to withdraw his guilty plea stemming
from an airport restroom sex sting.
In court papers
filed Tuesday, the lawyers asked the appellate judges to
reverse the trial court's decision to let stand Craig's
guilty plea to a disorderly conduct charge. They also
asked the court to vacate his plea.
Craig was
arrested in June in a restroom stall at Minneapolis-St. Paul
International Airport during a broad sweep targeting men
soliciting sex. An undercover officer said Craig
tapped his feet and swiped his hand under a stall
divider in a way that signaled he wanted sex.
After news of his
arrest and plea became public in August, Craig denied
wrongdoing. He insisted his actions were misconstrued and
said he wasn't gay. He said he pleaded guilty and paid
a fine hoping to resolve the matter quietly.
He later tried to
withdraw his guilty plea, but a Hennepin County judge
refused.
Tuesday's filing
repeats many arguments that Craig's attorneys made
before, including claims that the lower court abused its
discretion and that the guilty plea is invalid because
there is no factual basis for a disorderly conduct
charge.
Craig's behavior
as he looked into a stall was ''consistent with the
conduct of an innocent person waiting for one of the
occupied stalls to clear,'' the attorneys wrote. They
also noted that the state's disorderly conduct statute
refers to ''others'' -- and that Craig's actions did not
affect multiple victims.
Prosecutors have
said in court documents that the judge did not abuse his
discretion. They also have argued that Craig's attorneys are
misinterpreting the state disorderly conduct statute and
that the arresting officer may be the only person
present.
Defense attorneys
argued that even though Craig may have pleaded guilty
to avoid publicity and face a more serious charge, that
doesn't change the fact that the plea is inaccurate.
The court of
appeals had not yet set a time for oral arguments. Once
these are heard, a ruling is required within 90 days.
Craig has said he
will finish his term, which ends in January
2009. (AP)