From Deseret News archives:

Herbert to forward complaint

Published: Wednesday, June 25, 2008 12:30 a.m. MDT
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As soon as the polls closed Tuesday, Lt. Gov. Gary Herbert announced he was referring an elections complaint from state treasurer candidate Richard Ellis to the attorney general's office for further investigation.

Ellis, who alleges his defeated GOP primary opponent, Rep. Mark Walker, R-Sandy, illegally offered him a job to drop out of the race, had taken the lieutenant governor to the state Supreme Court in an unsuccessful attempt to force a decision before the election.

"I'm not going to allow the lieutenant governor's office to be used as a pawn," Herbert told the Deseret News Tuesday, saying he might have acted sooner had Ellis not waited nearly three months to file the complaint.

"It would have looked a little less squirrelly," the lieutenant governor said.

Herbert said he doesn't want to set a precedent that would allow a candidate to "game the system," even unintentionally, and gain political advantage over an opponent by being able to say an investigation is under way.

"It's not just this election. I've got to look long-term," he said.

Ellis, currently chief deputy state treasurer, has said he didn't intend to report the alleged offer made in March but felt he had to after receiving media inquiries. His complaint was filed on May 30, when absentee balloting for the primary was already under way.

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Herbert said in a statement issued on June 6 he was "concerned that any action on my part at this time could influence participation in or the outcome of" the primary.

Since issuing the statement, the lieutenant governor has not spoken publicly about the case until Tuesday. Herbert told the Deseret News the case is not clear-cut and that the candidates' discussion about the offer may have started innocently.

"There are no easy answers here. It's not as black-and-white as some people think," the lieutenant governor said."I am frustrated a little bit about it. Nobody likes having their integrity impugned."

Walker has said he assured Ellis that if he were elected, Ellis and other employees in the treasurer's office could keep their jobs. Walker has denied Ellis' allegations that he also asked Ellis to quit the race and promised him a substantial pay raise.

Herbert said Walker "probably not inappropriately" told Ellis he didn't intend to clean house if he won in November. "You can see how that could happen," the lieutenant governor said. "Who knows what it could have escalated into."

Ellis has provided e-mails from a go-between at Walker's former employer, Zions Bank, detailing Walker's offer. Herbert suggested the statements hindered rather than helped the case and may have put both candidates "on thin ice."

Recent comments

It's not as black-and-white as some people think," the lieutenant...

Made your bed now lie in it | June 25, 2008 at 10:48 p.m.

Here's what we know about the Lt. Gov's actions:

1) He referred...

NBA Ref | June 25, 2008 at 10:31 p.m.

Since when does a public official, like Mr. Herbert, have the option...

Mike Richards | June 25, 2008 at 9:19 p.m.

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