Recently, authorities arrested
Brown on a complaint of striking a woman, apparently after a sustained
period of partying. Turns out he has carried on an affair with the alleged
victim for a decade, according to her. Meanwhile, he appears to spend
more of his time at an address outside of the district at the residence
where his wife registered to vote, and gave that address to arresting
authorities. He also gets his mail there and more often than not in filling out
disclosure forms uses that address.
None of this automatically should compel
his resignation. A court has yet to find him guilty of any charge, much less a
felony that would force him out of the Legislature as dictated by the
Constitution. And while someone has filed
suit trying to remove him from office for failure to reside in the district
he represents, the procedure
by law to do this remains not yet invoked.