Seattle mayor to resign after 5th sex abuse claim emerges

spaminator

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Seattle mayor to resign after 5th sex abuse claim emerges
Gene Johnson And Rachel La Corte, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Tuesday, September 12, 2017 05:06 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, September 12, 2017 10:12 PM EDT
Seattle Mayor Ed Murray, beset over the past five months by sex abuse allegations, plans to resign Wednesday, bringing an ignoble end to a lengthy political career in which he championed gay rights and better pay for workers.
His announcement Tuesday came after The Seattle Times reported that a fifth man — one of his cousins — had accused Murray of molesting him decades ago. Though he has vehemently denied all of the accusations against him, Murray, a Democrat, had already decided not to seek re-election.
“While the allegations against me are not true, it is important that my personal issues do not affect the ability of our city government to conduct the public’s business,” he said in a statement.
He apologized to his staff and to the city for “this painful situation,” and said it had become clear that his resignation was best for the city.
The news left the city waiting to hear who would fulfil the remaining months in his term.
The latest allegations came from Joseph Dyer, the son of Murray’s first cousin, Maryellen Sottile. Dyer told the newspaper he was 13 and Murray was in his early 20s when Murray came to live with Dyer’s family in Medford, New York, in 1975. The two shared a bedroom, and Murray repeatedly molested him over the course of a year, Dyer said.
“There would be times when I would fake sleeping because I didn’t want him touching me,” Dyer said.
Dyer said the molestation stopped only after Murray was accused of abuse by a boy in a Catholic group home where Murray worked. Dyer told the newspaper his uncle persuaded the group home not to pursue charges as long as Murray left.
Efforts by The Associated Press to reach Dyer were not immediately successful.
Murray, who is gay, has not faced criminal charges. He denied abusing Dyer and blamed the allegation on resentment between their families.
He initially told the Times he would not resign, but eventually did so as pressure mounted Tuesday.
Former U.S. Attorney Jenny Durkan, who is vying to succeed him, called for Murray to step down and removed his endorsement from her campaign website. Her rival, urban planner Cary Moon, reiterated her own call for Murray’s resignation, which she first made months ago.
“Mayor Murray is doing the right thing by stepping down,” Gov. Jay Inslee said in a statement. “He has done good things for Seattle and his resignation will allow the city to move forward.”
City Council President Bruce Harrell will become mayor upon Murray’s resignation and has five days to decide whether to fill out the remainder of his term. If he declines, the council would appoint someone else, possibly Councilman Tim Burgess, who is retiring this year.
Before being elected mayor in 2013, Murray, 62, was a long-time state lawmaker who led the campaign to legalize same-sex marriage in Washington state. As mayor he pushed to raise the city’s minimum hourly wage to $15.
Murray grew up in working class neighbourhoods in and around Seattle as one of seven children in an Irish Catholic family and became one of the state’s most prominent political figures.
As a young man, he considered joining the priesthood and spent a year at a seminary in 1976 before studying sociology at the University of Portland, a private Catholic institution.
Murray worked as a paralegal with public defender lawyers in Portland before returning to Seattle and joining the vanguard of the gay rights movement in the 1980s, serving as campaign manager for Cal Anderson, a Seattle state senator who was the state’s first openly gay member.
Anderson, Murray’s mentor, died in 1995. Murray failed in his bid to win Anderson’s seat, but he was appointed to fill the legislative seat of the state representative who won the state Senate campaign.
During his 18 years as a state lawmaker, Murray was the prime sponsor of Washington’s gay marriage law, spearheaded an effort to protect LGBTQ youth in public schools and led the state’s push to ban discrimination based on sexual orientation.
As mayor, Murray recently fought to boost funding to address Seattle’s homelessness crisis.
Before Dyer, four men had accused Murray of sexually abusing them. Delvonn Heckard sued the mayor in April, saying Murray had paid him for sex when Heckard was a teen.
Heckard subsequently dropped the case, saying he would refile it after Murray was out of office. The mayor claimed the dropping of the lawsuit as vindication.
Another man who accused Murray, his former foster son Jeff Simpson, had first approached Seattle media with the allegations in 2008, when Murray was a state legislator. The Times decided at the time not to write about the allegations because details could not be verified.
This year, Oregon’s Department of Human Services discovered old files that included a child-welfare investigator’s conclusion that Murray sexually abused Simpson in the early 1980s.
La Corte reported from Olympia, Washington.
Seattle mayor to resign after 5th sex abuse claim emerges | World | News | Toron
 

White_Unifier

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Kid getting is frowned on every where. This one stayed past his welcome.

He's not been found guilty yet. Whether he's guilty or not, stepping down from his position is still the right thing to do under the circumstances. Even if the allegations are false, they still prove that he must have done something to anger a few people in some way.

As for whether he's guilty or innocent of the specific allegation against him, that's for a court to decide. That's not a journalist's job nor mine.
 

Retired_Can_Soldier

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He's not been found guilty yet. Whether he's guilty or not, stepping down from his position is still the right thing to do under the circumstances. Even if the allegations are false, they still prove that he must have done something to anger a few people in some way.

As for whether he's guilty or innocent of the specific allegation against him, that's for a court to decide. That's not a journalist's job nor mine.

Why is stepping down the right thing to do? I mean if your innocent, why should you step down?
 

White_Unifier

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Why is stepping down the right thing to do? I mean if your innocent, why should you step down?

I guess you have a point. There can be different interpretations. I guess we could say that if the allegations affect his work, then he should step down. If not, then he should stay. So how do we determine whether the allegations are negatively impacting his work? I don't know. I'm not in his shoes and have never experienced anything like it, so I can only imagine. I do know though that if I a whole bunch of people started making such accusations against me and I was innocent, I'd be pissed, but what could I do?

And that's the problem with sexual assault accusations. They're just so bloody difficult to prove either way.
 

Retired_Can_Soldier

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I guess you have a point. There can be different interpretations. I guess we could say that if the allegations affect his work, then he should step down. If not, then he should stay. So how do we determine whether the allegations are negatively impacting his work? I don't know. I'm not in his shoes and have never experienced anything like it, so I can only imagine. I do know though that if I a whole bunch of people started making such accusations against me and I was innocent, I'd be pissed, but what could I do?

And that's the problem with sexual assault accusations. They're just so bloody difficult to prove either way.

But this is where we are at, especially in mainstream and social media. We don't believe in due process. We will try,convict and execute a person in media before we have all the facts.

If you are accused of something and believe your defense will prove you are innocent then you shouldn't have to step down.
 

White_Unifier

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But this is where we are at, especially in mainstream and social media. We don't believe in due process. We will try,convict and execute a person in media before we have all the facts.

If you are accused of something and believe your defense will prove you are innocent then you shouldn't have to step down.

I guess you're right. That said, even if he's innocent (and I'm not saying either way since I don't know), he might still feel humiliated not by guilt (since 'm presuming right now that he's innocent), but just by embarrassment and anger at the false accusations. Especially if he's particularly angered, he might decide to step down so he can focus on fighting the allegations. Looking at it that way, he shouldn't be forced to step down, but to choose to step down does not in itself prove guilt. I know I'd feel humiliated if facing public false accusations of sexual assault no matter how innocent I was unless I could prove conclusively that I was innocent. But just as it's difficult to prove guilt, it's difficult to prove innocence too. That's what makes such accusations so damaging.
 

Retired_Can_Soldier

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Well, if I folded every time I got accused of eating someones cat (Can't count on both hands) I'd be in a perpetual state of EI.
 

White_Unifier

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In fact, it's precisely this kind of situation that makes me support laws making fornication a fine-able offence with the fine doubling with each repetition of the offence.

If a person is guilty, then the victim is more willing to report him in the knowledge that even if the prosecution cannot prove assault but can prove fornication, the perpetrator will receive at least a harsh financial punishment.

And if the accused is innocent, then the fine would still serve as a lesson for him to not sleep around with people he doesn't know. And if the prosecution can't prove so much as fornication let alone assault, then that gives the accused a greater opportunity to clear his name by raising questions as to why the alleged victim didn't report it sooner and couldn't provide more proof. This is not to say that failure to prove fornication would prove a person's innocence of sexual assault, but it could raise more doubts about the accused's guilt.

Well, if I folded every time I got accused of eating someones cat (Can't count on both hands) I'd be in a perpetual state of EI.

Why do so many people accuse you of eating their cats?