Last week, the Baton
Rouge Advocate got ahold of cards
sent from Schedler to and email messages between him and his former executive
secretary, who has filed suit against him for sexual harassment. It had
submitted a public records request for these, but according to it these arrived
with redacted key passages that could shed light on the relationship. However,
it also obtained unredacted versions, which, in the words
of its editorialist, showed “a pattern of lewd and embarrassing language by
one of the state’s top elected officials” that displayed “a powerful public
official making sex jokes and tasteless propositions on agency time.”
The snippet placed online by The Advocate, spanning just months, doesn’t reveal that egregious of communication, but I’m confident
it wouldn’t have described the nature of the entire set of conversations errantly.
(For readers otherwise unfamiliar with this, I am a weekly columnist for it.)
And its stories about the release of these and reporting on an interview
the former employee gave proved convincing enough for a very high-profile Republican,
Sen. John Kennedy,
to
add his voice in calling for Schedler’s immediate resignation.
A key point in Schedler’s defense has been his claims of a consensual sexual relationship, which apparently the messages don’t confirm or deny. From what The Advocate published, it seems the woman, who denies such a relationship, banters at times and on subjects unrelated to work. Consider as well she worked with him in various capacities for over a decade but left after her transfer into what she declared a deadhead job.
In terms of the validity of her suit, there’s no
smoking gun in the documents, and The
Advocate editorializes in a way that confirms in the unpublished,
unexpurgated records it has makes no such revelation. Further, these don’t
appear to address whether he violated R.S. 42:1161(F), which
mandates that administrators don’t knowingly place employees into jobs the work
product of which is so undemanding and/or unnecessary that it wastes taxpayer
dollars.
Regarding the suit, without such unambiguous
evidence – writing by the alleged victim making explicit that his attentions
made her uncomfortable and/or interfered with her ability to do her job, or written
proof that he engaged in retaliatory personnel actions out of alleged spurning –
on that count thus far we can’t declare Schedler a harasser by virtue of which thusly
he should forfeit his job, if not face legal penalties. As previously
mentioned, using these pieces of evidence as well as others, undoubtedly a
court will determine whether her charges have merit.
But regardless of the legal implications related
to potential sexual harassment, plenty in the available record points to
Schedler’s unfitness to serve in office. Even from the snippet published, it’s
clear that he let himself become unusually distracted by whatever relationship
they had, obviously spilling over into his job performance. That he used his
official email account to make such communications that had nothing to do with
his job – although she obviously abetted in that use – also indicates poor
judgment. That he filled these missives with, taking The Advocate’s words for it, “embarrassing language” that also was “tasteless”
additionally shows poor professionalism.
Schedler said the burdens of office don’t permit
him to exit at this time, although he said he wouldn’t run for reelection. And,
leaving before the end of the year essentially would
trigger a special election for the office.
But the Louisiana Legislature can make him go. Art. X Sec. 24 of
the Constitution provides for impeachment of, among others, elected officials
for “commission … of … gross misconduct while in such office.” Nothing in
statute defines “gross misconduct,” but even with the more serious charges left
as yet unproven, the smaller things combined may add up to this, especially
when the job assumes the highest integrity expected from the state’s chief
election officer.
Even the threat of impeachment, where the House of
Representatives indicts and the Senate tries with a two-thirds vote convicting,
probably would provide sufficient encouragement for Schedler to leave on his
own to spare himself further humiliation. If begun now, he likely would exit quickly
enough for arrangement of a special election during this fall’s federal and
other state elections at no additional expense. Legislators just have to have
the will to do it.
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