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Spokane Mayor James E. West can only be removed from office through a recall vote
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New allegations against Spokane mayor
Pressure for James West to resign increases
Published Thursday, 02-Jun-2005 in issue 910
SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) – Pressure for Mayor James E. West to resign grew after a newspaper published fresh accusations of past inappropriate behavior.
The Spokesman-Review published reports that West made an inappropriate comment to state Sen. Pam Roach about her teenage son and that a former Spokane man claimed West fondled him during a drug arrest when West was a sheriff’s deputy.
West, a conservative former state Senate majority leader and gay rights opponent, can only be removed from office by a recall vote.
After the Spokane Regional Chamber of Commerce and the Spokane Regional Convention and Visitors Bureau said West should resign, he said he expects to be exonerated and plans to serve out the remaining two and a half years of his term.
Last week, the newspaper reported that a resolution asking West to resign appears certain to win passage at the next council meeting, with six members saying they will vote for it and the seventh leaning in favor.
City Councilmember Al French also has drafted a resolution to change the city charter to allow the council to sanction or remove the mayor from office. A decision on whether to begin the process of putting that question on the ballot in November is also pending on the council’s agenda.
West, 55, a Republican, is the subject of two investigations into reports that he misused his office by offering jobs to men he met in a gay chat room.
Since May 5 the newspaper has reported accusations that West molested two boys in the 1970s when he was a deputy sheriff and a Boy Scout leader and that he offered gifts, favors and jobs at City Hall to lure young men.
The mayor has denied those accounts but acknowledged having relations with adult men. The Justice Department is investigating whether West improperly used his political office and city resources, and the city is conducting a separate investigation.
Roach, also a Republican, told the newspaper that on one occasion in about 1990 when she was in the Senate chamber and her son, then 18, was working as a tour guide in the state Capitol, “West told me, ‘I want to do to your son what no mother would want to know.’ He then got up and left.”
Roach said she told another Republican, Sen. Ann Anderson, at the time, but Anderson, now a lobbyist for Central Washington University, recalled the incident differently.
Anderson, a friend of West, told the newspaper Roach said West had commented, “Pam, you have a nice-looking young son.”
Roach said she later told her son, Dan Roach, now a Republican state representative from Bonney Lake, about the comment.
The newspaper also reported claims by a former Spokane man who said West fondled him in 1977 when the mayor was a sheriff’s deputy.
Jeffrey A. Mewes, 45, said he was 17 when West shoved his hand down the front of the teenager’s pants, ostensibly looking for marijuana.
“He put his hand way down inside the front of my pants, like a fondling search,” Mewes said. “I told him over and over, ‘My weed’s not there, it’s in my shoe.’”
“But he left his hand down inside my pants for a long time,” Mewes said. “I thought it was abnormal and very inappropriate.”
Through his private lawyer, Bill Etter, West denied the reports.
“Mr. West denies each and every one of these allegations,” Etter said.
Roach, who acknowledged having political differences with West when he was a senator, said she likely will be criticized for speaking out against a formerly powerful Senate member.
“I’m just somebody that he doesn’t have power over,” Roach said. “It’s time for the truth to come out about Mr. West.”
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