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News / Northwest

Washington lawmaker facing ethics violations to resign

The Columbian
Published: April 29, 2015, 5:00pm

OLYMPIA — A state representative is resigning this week following allegations of falsified travel expense forms, according to a statement issued Wednesday by the House chief clerk.

Rep. Susan Fagan is resigning her seat effective Friday, according to a written statement issued by House Clerk Barbara Baker. Fagan was elected to the chamber in a special election in 2009, and she was re-elected in 2012.

In a prepared statement released to the Spokesman-Review in Spokane, Fagan said she was resigning “with a sad heart.”

“I should have been more precise with my records, and I did not give my reimbursement reports the respect and attention they deserve. That is my fault,” she wrote. “At no point did I try to derive personal gain from expense reimbursements.”

Baker says that she was presented with evidence last fall that there were discrepancies in Fagan’s travel reimbursement forms.

In meetings between House leadership and Fagan, the Pullman Republican denied wrongdoing and cited bookkeeping errors but said she would pay back overpayments, Baker wrote.

An investigation by the state’s Legislative Ethics Board was launched in January, after Baker filed an ethics complaint stating concerns brought to House Republican leadership by legislative assistants. Allegations included that Fagan claimed expenses for fake or nonexistent events, that she claimed more mileage than actually driven, that she sought reimbursement for campaign-related activity and that she directed her assistants to change expense reports.

“Last week, we learned that the preliminary investigation of the complaint substantiated the allegations that Rep. Fagan knowingly falsified her reimbursement forms,” Baker wrote.

Republican leadership met with Fagan on Friday to ask her to resign. In addition to resigning, Fagan has agreed to pay any remaining funds due to the state, Baker wrote.

In an email Wednesday, Baker wrote the total amount of money involved is not yet known and won’t be until the legislative ethics board finishes its investigation.

In the complaint she sent to the ethics board earlier this year, Baker wrote that over a 10-month period, “the total overpayments appeared to run into several thousand dollars and perhaps more.”

House Minority Leader Dan Kristiansen, a Snohomish Republican, said Fagan’s resignation and plan to repay the state is the “appropriate course of action and in the best interest of taxpayers.”

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