Story Published:
May 21, 2005 at 1:22 AM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 1:57 AM PDT
SPOKANE - John McKay, the U.S. attorney for Western
Washington, will direct a preliminary FBI investigation into
possible federal criminal violations by Spokane Mayor Jim West,
McKay's office says.
West returned to work Thursday after taking a 10-day leave to
prepare his defense against allegations of sexual impropriety and
misuse of his office by offering jobs to young men he met in a gay
chat room.
West, 55, attended a prayer breakfast Friday morning, but
continued to decline requests for interviews.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Bartlett has been given the special
prosecutor assignment, Emily Langlie, spokeswoman for McKay's
office, confirmed Friday.
McKay's office is handling the federal investigation because Jim
McDevitt, the U.S. attorney for Eastern Washington, asked to be
recused because he is a friend of West and contributed to his
campaign.
The U.S. Department of Justice approved the transfer of the case
to the Seattle office, McKay said in a release, declining further
comment.
West said hello to reporters as he entered the annual Greater
Spokane Association of Evangelicals leadership prayer breakfast,
but declined to be interviewed.
The mayor "has returned to work and is keeping a normal
schedule," spokeswoman Marlene Feist said Friday.
Meanwhile, the city opened its own investigation by appointing a
four-member independent panel to look into allegations that West
violated city policies.
Retired judges Harold P. Clarke and Phil Thompson, Michael
Stebbins of the Gonzaga University Institute of Ethics and Eastern
Washington University economics professor Tom Truelove will report
their findings to City Attorney Michael Connelly, Feist said.
A fifth member may be named to the panel, which will have
discretion to determine the scope and methods of the inquiry. City
officials asked the group "to be thorough, but as quick as they
can," Feist said.
West returned to City Hall on Thursday. He met with the top city
officials he calls his cabinet, spent much of the day in meetings,
then attended a neighborhood council meeting Thursday night, Feist
said.
The mayor announced he was going on leave May 9. Since then, he
has not said publicly if he plans to serve the 31 months remaining
in his term.
City Council President Dennis Hession said he met with West on
Thursday and discussed City Hall business but not the controversy.
The return of West is problematical, Hession told The
Spokesman-Review newspaper.
"I think it's pretty disruptive because there is a cloud over
this administration," he said. "Until these issues are resolved,
it's going to be awkward inside and outside of City Hall."
Council member Cherie Rodgers, who has said West should resign,
dismissed his reappearance as "public relations."
On May 5, the newspaper began publishing a series of stories
that included accusations that West molested two boys in the 1970s
when he was a deputy sheriff and a Boy Scout leader. West has
denied those accounts, which were given by two convicted felons
with acknowledged drug problems.
He has acknowledged seeking dates on Gay.com, and the newspaper
has reported that he offered gifts, favors and jobs at City Hall to
lure young men.
Only a recall petition and public vote can remove him from
office. A motion demanding that West take a formal leave of absence
failed on a tie vote Monday in the City Council with one member
absent.
A vote is scheduled May 30 on a resolution submitted by Rodgers
that asks West to resign immediately.
Meanwhile, a Spokane woman has filed a second petition to have
West recalled by voters.
Shannon Sullivan's new petition, filed Wednesday, replaced one
she filed May 9 which was rejected by the Spokane County
prosecutor's office because she failed to provide a sworn statement
that her accusations against West were true and that she had
knowledge of the facts on which her petition was based.