Extrait d'actualité

La commission d'éthique du Rhode Island rejette la plainte contre le gouverneur McKee

Cet article est apparu à l'origine in the Boston Globe on January 23, 2024 and was written by Edward Fitzpatrick.  

Below is John Marion’s comment on the Ethics Commission’s dismissal of a complaint that claimed Governor Daniel J. McKee violated the ethics code by accepting a free lunch with a lobbyist.

John M. Marion, executive director of Common Cause Rhode Island, said the “knowing and willful” standard used for ethics violations is a high one. “There are other lesser standards in other laws,” he said. “It’s a policy decision the Ethics Commission and the legislature have made over the years to make the bar high.”

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Marion said ethics violations are serious and can tarnish someone’s reputation. “So there should be high bar,” he said. “I think it’s worth a debate, though, about whether there shouldn’t be a lower bar for situations where there are unintentional lapses.”

For example, he noted that in 2020 a judge overturned the Ethics Commission’s decision to fine then-state Supreme Court Justice Francis X. Flaherty $200 for failing to disclose he was president of a Catholic legal group while ruling on a priest sexual abuse case.

“The commission could not prove intent,” Marion said. “There needs to be a stick available to the Ethics Commission for people that might not be looking to engage in unethical behavior but are not abiding by the law nonetheless.”

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