Eric Greitens

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Eric Greitens
56th Governor of Missouri
In office
January 9, 2017 – June 1, 2018
LieutenantMike Parson
Preceded byJay Nixon
Succeeded byMike Parson
Personal details
Born
Eric Robert Greitens

(1974-04-10) April 10, 1974 (age 50)
St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.
Political partyRepublican (2015–present)
Other political
affiliations
Democratic (before 2015)
Spouse
Sheena Chestnut
(m. 2011)
Children2
EducationDuke University (BA)
Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford (MPhil, DPhil)
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/service United States Navy
Years of service2001–present
Rank Lieutenant Commander
Awards Bronze Star
Purple Heart

Eric Robert Greitens (/ˈɡrtənz/;[1] born April 10, 1974) is an American politician, humanitarian, author, and former Navy SEAL who was the 56th governor of Missouri from January 2017 until his resignation in June 2018.

Born and raised in St. Louis, Greitens received a doctorate from Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, as a Rhodes scholar. During his four tours of duty as a U.S. Navy SEAL officer, he rose to the rank of lieutenant commander, commanded a unit targeting Al-Qaeda, and was awarded a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart. Later, after being a White House Fellow, Greitens founded a nonprofit organization, The Mission Continues, to benefit veterans. In 2013, Time included him in its list of the 100 most influential people in the world.[2]

After having been a Democrat during his early life, Greitens announced in 2015 that he had become a Republican. He ran for governor of Missouri as a Republican in 2016. Greitens prevailed over three opponents in the Republican primaries and then defeated Democratic state Attorney General Chris Koster in the general election. One of Greitens's signature accomplishments in office was signing Missouri's right-to-work law, which was later repealed by statewide referendum.

In February 2018, St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kimberly Gardner charged Greitens with felony invasion of privacy relating to alleged actions associated with an extramarital affair he had before becoming governor. Later, Gardner also charged him with campaign-related offenses. All charges were dropped in May 2018, and Greitens resigned from office on June 1[3] after the Missouri Legislature commenced a special session to consider impeachment. Greitens and his supporters deny any criminal wrongdoing and have repeatedly called the allegations a "political witch hunt".[4] Since June 2018, Special Prosecutor Gerard Carmody has been investigating Gardner and announced a 7-count felony indictment against the prosecution's lead investigator.[5][6] In February 2020, the Missouri Ethics Commission reported that its campaign investigation "found no evidence of any wrongdoing" by Greitens.

Early life

Greitens was born on April 10, 1974, in St. Louis, Missouri, a son of Becky and Rob Greitens.[7] He was raised in his mother's Jewish faith; his father is Catholic.[8][9] Greitens's mother retired as an early childhood special education teacher in St. Ann, Missouri, for the Pattonville School District. His father, also retired, was an accountant in St. Louis for the Department of Agriculture.[10] Greitens graduated from Parkway North High School.[11] He grew up as a Democrat.[12]

Greitens was an Angier B. Duke Scholar at Duke University, where he studied ethics, philosophy, and public policy and graduated summa cum laude.[13] At Duke he contributed photographs to a Save the Children Foundation project involving refugees from the Rwandan genocide and the war in Bosnia. Some of his work appeared in the publication Children in War: Community Strategies for Healing.[14][15]

Before graduating from Duke in 1996, Greitens was selected as a Rhodes[16][17] and a Truman Scholar.[18] He went on to attend Lady Margaret Hall, a constituent college of the University of Oxford, where he earned a master's degree in philosophy in development studies in 1998 and a doctorate in philosophy in 2000.[19] Greitens is a former Senior Fellow at the Harry S. Truman School of Public Affairs at the University of Missouri.[20]

Athletics

Greitens is a sub-three-hour marathon runner and a winner of Shamrock Marathon at Camp Fallujah, Iraq. A boxer, he won two Oxford University Boxing Blues and the gold medal at the British Universities Sports Association's National Boxing Championships.[21] Greitens has a black belt in Taekwondo.[22]

Humanitarian work

Greitens has done international humanitarian work in Rwanda, Cambodia, Albania, Mexico, India, the Gaza Strip, Croatia, and Bolivia.[23] During his 2016 campaign for governor, he said, "I have worked in Cambodia with kids who lost limbs to land mines and are survivors of polio. I’ve worked in Bolivia with children of the street. I’ve worked in one of Mother Teresa’s homes for the destitute and dying."[24]

For six weeks as a college student, Greitens worked at two refugee camps, the Puntizela camp outside Pula, Croatia, and the Gasinci camp outside Osijek, Croatia. Both are described in his book. Refugee camps in Croatia were temporary homes for Bosnians crossing the border.[25] Greitens also traveled to Rwanda and Zaire as a volunteer U.N. photographer.[26]

Career

Greitens has taught public service at the Truman School of Public Affairs and was an adjunct professor of business ethics in the MBA program at the Olin School of Business at Washington University in St. Louis.[21][27][28]

Armed services

Greitens matriculated at the United States Navy's Officer Candidate School in Pensacola, Florida, in January 2001, graduating in May of that year as an ensign in the United States Navy Reserve.[29][30] He then began Basic Underwater Demolitions/SEAL (BUD/S) training in Coronado, California,[31][32] graduating with Class 237 in February 2002.[33]

Greitens rose to be a lieutenant commander in the United States Navy Reserve. During his active duty career, he was deployed four times, to Iraq, Afghanistan, the Horn of Africa, and Southeast Asia. He was the commander of a joint special operations task unit, a Mark V Special Operations Craft detachment,[34] and an al-Qaeda targeting cell.[35] He was awarded the Bronze Star, Purple Heart, and the Combat Action Ribbon.[15][36] In 2011 the Association of the U.S. Navy named Greitens its Naval Reserve Junior Officer of the Year.[37]

He has criticized the Veterans Administration, saying of its employees, "Even if you’re only 40 percent disabled, they’ll give you 100 percent disability in some cases." "You have to think about the incentives of government workers. Guys in the VA don’t get paid to help veterans lead productive lives. Their metrics are on how many people sign up for benefits." He feels such overuse strains the VA system and prevents vets from reintegrating into general society.[15]

During a deployment in Thailand, Greitens learned of drug use by Navy personnel and initiated an investigation that led to their removal. In the Philippines Greitens's crew effectively shut down a transit site for a terrorist organization, according to an evaluation report.[26] Greitens spent three months in charge of a 50-person unit in Manda Bay, Kenya, near the Somali border. He left full-time active duty to take a one-year White House fellowship, where he developed a program to get architecture and engineering students involved in rebuilding efforts after Hurricane Katrina.[38] Greitens simultaneously remained in the Navy Reserves, leading a program that recruited high-level advisers for special military operations around the world.[26] After his fellowship, he volunteered for a six-month tour in Iraq that began in October 2006.[38]

Fallujah truck bombing

On March 28, 2007, two suicide bombers detonated trucks carrying chlorine gas at the Fallujah government complex where Greitens and other military personnel were sleeping. The attack was the seventh chlorine bombing in the Al Anbar province of Iraq by al Queda. Greitens was among about 15 who were wounded.[38] "The attack began at 6:33 a.m. with mortar fire, followed by two truck bombs and small arms fire. Iraqi Police identified the first suicide attacker and fired on the truck, causing it to detonate before reaching the compound," according to a Multinational Forces West press release. "Iraqi Army soldiers spotted the second suicide truck approaching the gate and engaged it with small arms fire, causing it to also detonate near the entrance of the compound."[39] Greitens received a Purple Heart after sustaining injuries from the bombing.[40]

White House fellowship

Greitens speaking in 2011

In 2005 President George W. Bush appointed Greitens as a White House Fellow.[41] As a White House Fellow he worked in the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)[42] and developed a new program to assist with rebuilding efforts after Hurricane Katrina: the Universities Rebuilding America Partnership (URAP),[43][44] a $5.6 million effort to engage architecture and engineering students in the continued effort to rebuild New Orleans. During his time as a White House Fellow he co-founded the President's Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll Program.[45]

Nonprofit work

After returning from Iraq, Greitens used his combat pay and the disability pay of two friends to start The Mission Continues, a nonprofit organization whose goal is to "challenge veterans to serve and lead in communities across America".[46] It encourages veterans to heal themselves through public service by engaging in volunteer organizations across the country.[47][48] In 2014 it won the CLASSY Award for its effectiveness in active-duty and veteran services.[49] Greitens stepped down as CEO in July 2014 and resigned from the board of directors in 2015.[50][51][52][53][54]

As CEO of The Mission Continues, Greitens worked without a salary in 2007–08. Later he received compensation between $150,000 and $200,000.[55] Daniel Borochoff, president and founder of CharityWatch, which evaluates nonprofit organizations, said that Greitens's wages "seem within a reasonable range"; the AP reported that his salary was about one-third higher than the $131,000 median compensation for chief executives of 237 medium-sized charities in the Midwest.[56] In a 2016 interview Borochoff cited Greitens's PhD and military experience as a possible reason for his slightly above-average salary. Borochoff said Greitens's wages "seem within a reasonable range. The leaders of the Mission Continues have a big responsibility with this program, dealing with kind of a complicated population, so people shouldn't make that comparison to their own salary."[57]

In 2011 New Profit added The Mission Continues to its portfolio of the fastest-growing and highest-impact nonprofits in the sector.[58] The Associated Press reported in March 2018 that Greitens had used the charity's email account to arrange political meetings about his intended gubernatorial campaign, which may not be allowed by federal tax law.[59] He was also accused of using the charity's list of donors to raise money for his political campaign, a violation of campaign finance law.[60] On December 28, 2018, the Missouri Attorney General informed The Mission Continues that, after a review of “hundreds of thousands of pages” and several depositions, there was not enough evidence to support enforcement action against the nonprofit.[61]

In July 2018 The Mission Continues president Spencer Kympton posted an open letter informing its members that "Regardless of someone's [Greitens's] history with The Mission Continues, we do not stand by actions that violate the core values we all strive to embody. And as uncomfortable as it may be, we must not fail to pronounce that." The letter also apologized to the volunteers and community leaders with The Mission Continues for any unwarranted attention from media and civic leaders they experienced.[62]

From 2010 to 2012, Washington University in St. Louis's Center for Social Development, in collaboration with The Mission Continues, conducted a study involving nearly 500 veterans in more than 400 nonprofit organizations in 42 states. Its aim was to assess the perceived personal, social and family impacts of participating in the organization's Fellowship Program.[63] “The results show that volunteering with The Mission Continues can help vets reengage in their communities and can increase their well-being," wrote Nancy Morrow-Howell, co-author and Faculty Associate, Center for Social Development, Washington University.[64]

Author

Greitens with U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis in March 2017

Greitens's first book, Strength and Compassion (2008), is a collection of photographs and essays with a foreword by Rwandan humanitarian Paul Rusesabagina and an introduction by Bobby Muller, cofounder of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines.[65][66] Photographs by Greitens were placed on display in the exhibition “Strength and Compassion” at the International Photography Hall of Fame (IPHF) in December 2014.[67] Strength and Compassion was recognized as ForeWord magazine's Photography Book of the Year and the grand prize winner of the 2009 New York Book Festival.[37]

On April 11, 2011, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt published Greitens's second book, The Heart and the Fist: The Education of a Humanitarian, the Making of a Navy SEAL.[68][69] The Heart and the Fist is Greitens's memoir, featuring stories of his humanitarian work, his training as a naval officer and SEAL and the military experiences that led him to adopt the philosophy that one has to be strong to do good but also has to do good to be strong. The book ranked 10th on the New York Times bestseller list for hardcover nonfiction in May 2011,[70][71] debuting on the St. Louis Independent Bookstore Alliance Best Sellers list at No. 1 for the week of April 17, 2011.[72] The following year, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt also released a young adult edition, The Warrior's Heart.[73]

In March 2015 Houghton Mifflin Harcourt released Greitens's book Resilience: Hard-Won Wisdom for Living a Better Life. It draws on letters Greitens wrote to a fellow SEAL struggling with PTSD.[74][75]

As an author and former SEAL, Greitens was a popular speaker before his political career.[28] In 2016 an anonymous group charged in a YouTube video that he had exaggerated his record and was unduly benefiting from his time in the SEALs; Greitens responded to the claims by releasing his military records and publishing a video he uploaded to his channel with testimonials from SEALs and Marines with whom he had served.[76]

Governor of Missouri

In 2015, Greitens—who was a Democrat in his early years—wrote a Fox News editorial announcing that he had become a Republican. He said he had been raised in the tradition of Harry Truman and had even been recruited as a Democratic candidate for Congress, but was pushed rightward after seeing the Department of Veterans Affairs fail to help many of his brothers in arms. He recalled being angered at how the Democrats' only solution was to "spend more money" on the VA. "The problem is that most Democrats seem to think more money and bigger government are the solutions to virtually every single problem," he wrote. He said he believed Democrats no longer had the right ideas to stand up for the middle class.[12]

2016 election

Gubernatorial election campaign logo

On September 26, 2015, Greitens announced his candidacy for governor of Missouri[77] as a Republican.[78] Shortly after a June 30, 2016, quarterly deadline for filing campaign contributions, he received the largest ever single contribution in a Missouri campaign, $1.975 million, which meant he did not have to reveal it until October, months after the primary. The source was a previously unknown Superpac, "SEALS for Truth".[79] SEALS for Truth had received the money from the American Policy Coalition (APC), another Superpac, on the same day APC received the entire amount. Greitens had assured voters he intended to increase transparency while reducing corruption in state politics as a campaign focus.[80] APC, about which there was almost no information online, was headed by Ohio lawyer David Langdon, who had incorporated it in Kentucky in 2015.[80] Between the 2010 election cycle and early 2015, at least 11 groups connected to Langdon spent at least $22 million on ballot initiatives against abortion and same-sex marriage and on federal and state elections around the country, as tabulated by the Center for Public Integrity.[81] On March 12, 2017, the St. Louis Post Dispatch and The Kansas City Star editorial boards published a joint editorial criticizing Greitens for "secret fundraising and secret spending" and for tactics such as ordering that "[s]ecurity staffers block reporters from getting close to him".[82] In 2018 Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley, a Republican running for the U.S. Senate, announced the opening of an investigation of Greitens's 2016 campaign financing.[83]

Greitens won the August 2 Republican primary with 236,250 votes (34.6%) to businessman John Brunner's 169,425 (24.8%), Lieutenant Governor Peter Kinder's 141,498 (20.7%), and former Speaker Catherine Hanaway's 136,350 (19.9%).[84][85] Democrat-turned-Republican Greitens faced Republican-turned-Democrat Chris Koster in the general election on November 8, 2016, and won with 51.3% of the vote to Koster's 45.4%.[86]

On April 28, 2017, the Missouri Ethics Commission fined Greitens's campaign $1,000 for violating state campaign ethics rules regarding campaign disclosure. Greitens did not contest the fine.[87]

2016 Republican Primary for Governor of Missouri[88]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Eric Greitens 236,481 34.56
Republican John Brunner 169,620 24.79
Republican Peter Kinder 141,629 20.70
Republican Catherine Hanaway 136,521 19.95
2016 Missouri Gubernatorial Election[89]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Eric Greitens 1,424,730 51.3
Democratic Chris Koster 1,261,110 45.4

Cabinet

Governor Greitens and DPS Director Drew Juden brief reporters during Winter Storm Jupiter at the State Emergency Operation Center on January 12, 2017.

Greitens's cabinet began service on January 9, 2017, when he was inaugurated as the 56th governor of Missouri. Director of the Department of Corrections Anne Precythe was the first member of his cabinet, appointed on December 21, 2016. All but three members of his cabinet were confirmed by the Missouri Senate by the end of predecessor Jay Nixon's administration. Rob Dixon, Steve Corsi, and Anna Hui served as Acting Director of Economic Development, Acting Director of Social Services, and Acting Director of Labor and Industrial Relations, respectively, before being confirmed. The Greitens administration had a majority female cabinet.

Cabinet Position Name Appointment Date
Administrator of the Office of Administration Sarah Steelman January 6, 2017
Director of the Department of Agriculture Chris Chinn December 27, 2017
Director of the Department of Corrections Anne Precythe December 21, 2016
Director of the Department of Natural Resources Carol Comer January 18, 2017
Director of the Department of Public Safety Charles Juden January 2, 2017
Director of the Department of Revenue Joel Walters February 14, 2017
Director of the Missouri Department of Insurance, Financial Institutions, and Professional Registration Chlora Lindely-Myers February 14, 2017
Director of the Department of Health and Senior Services Randall W. Williams February 9, 2017
Director of the Department of Economic Development Rob Dixon June 2, 2017
Director of the Department of Social Services Steve Corsi May 19, 2017
Director of the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations Anna Hui March 30, 2017

[90]

First year

A B-2 stealth bomber flies over the Inauguration of Governor Eric Greitens on January 9, 2017 in Jefferson City, Missouri.

Greitens took office as governor on January 9, 2017. His first two executive orders banned employees in the executive branch from accepting gifts from lobbyists and froze all new regulations through February 2017. He remained opposed to accepting a federal Medicaid expansion in Missouri.[91] In November 2018 a statewide referendum put heavy restrictions on lobbyist gifts, virtually banning them.[92]

On February 6, 2017, Greitens signed a bill making Missouri the 28th right-to-work state.[93] In response, unions that opposed the law filed a referendum to overturn it,[94] and on August 7, 2018, Missouri voters voted to overturn the right-to-work law.[95]

In February 2017, 170 gravestones at the Chesed Shel Emeth Jewish Cemetery in University City, Missouri, were toppled and overturned.[96][97] The vandalism drew national attention and occurred during a period when anonymous threats were being made against Jewish institutions nationwide.[97] Greitens responded to the vandalism by announcing that he would lead a cleanup at the site. Greitens, who is Jewish, posted on Facebook a request for volunteers to help him clean up the cemetery.[98] On February 27, 2017, Vice President Mike Pence was already in Missouri for a small business roundtable, where he toured a small business in Fenton with Greitens, and he accepted Greitens's offer to join the cleanup efforts.[99] The St. Louis Jewish Light reported, “the governor and vice president made their remarks atop a flatbed truck on a path inside the cemetery."[99] CNN reported that President Trump called Greitens to "thank the people of Missouri for standing up in the fight against anti-Semitism."[97]

On August 22, 2017, Greitens granted a stay of execution to Marcellus Williams, who had been set to be executed that day. DNA tests, using technology unavailable at the time of the killing, on the knife used in the killing matched an unknown male, not Williams. Greitens appointed a board of five retired judges to investigate the case and recommend commutation or execution. The panel has no deadline for its report.[100][101]

Greitens meeting with Vice President Mike Pence, January 2017

On October 27, 2017, the governor's office announced that 30 women had been appointed to state boards and commissions, joining "a majority-female cabinet". First Lady Sheena Greitens had announced on October 3 that the Greitens administration would appoint 25 women in the next 25 days, in honor of the 25th anniversary of the Women's Foundation of Kansas City.[102]

Judicial appointments

Greitens appointed Jackson County Circuit Judge W. Brent Powell to the Missouri Supreme Court in April 2017.[103][104] He also made the following judicial appointments: Kevin Walden was appointed Circuit Judge for the 8th Judicial Circuit; Katherine ("Katie") M. Fowler as Circuit Court Judge for the 22nd Judicial Circuit; Lynne R. Perkins as Associate Circuit Court Judge for the 22nd Judicial Circuit; Brouck Jacobs as Circuit Judge for the 13th Judicial Circuit; and Melissa Lawyer as Circuit Judge for the 5th Judicial Circuit.[105]

Tort reform

In 2017 Harris Insights & Analytics surveyed 1,300 corporate litigators and senior executives for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Institute for Legal Reform. Missouri's overall state liability system ranked 49th out of 50. As part of his “More Jobs, Higher Pay” plan, Greitens pushed for more tort reform than any state in the country. In 2017 the American Tort Reform Association criticized St. Louis as the "worst Judicial Hellhole™" in the country, and said “judicial hellholes” like St. Louis are known for systematically misapplying the law in ways that expand liability and ratchet up the cost of doing business in the state. Greitens signed legislation that the Property Casualty Insurers Association of America said would help improve Missouri's legal climate by curbing abuses associated with §537.065 and the time-limited demand settlement process.[106]

Other tort reform bills Greitens signed include:

Missouri SB31, which makes changes to the collateral source rule (paid v. billed damages) so parties can introduce only evidence of the actual cost of the medical care rendered, not the value of that care.

Missouri SB43, which brings standards for lawsuits in Missouri in line with 38 other states and the federal government. The bill requires the use of the “motivating factor” standard for employment discrimination cases. The “motivating factor” standard is used by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) in analyzing claims under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title VII) and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

Missouri SB 88, which gives veterinarians the same malpractice coverage as doctors, dentists, and other medical professionals.

Greitens speaking to Fox 4 News at the 2017 MLB Opening Day for the Kansas City Royals in August 2017.

Missouri HB 452, which says that, with certain exceptions, no healthcare provider shall be liable for the negligence of another entity or person who is not an employee of the healthcare provider.

Missouri HB153, which creates a higher standard for expert evidence, improves the reliability of expert witness testimony, and puts Missouri in line with a majority of states regarding the standard used for expert testimony.[107]

Ethics reform and government efficiency

Within an hour of his inauguration, Greitens signed an executive order banning state employees in his administration from accepting or soliciting gifts from lobbyists. The order also banned employees in the governor's office from lobbying the executive branch while Greitens was in office. The order was later loosened by Governor Mike Parson, who allowed gifts to members of the executive branch. As Lieutenant Governor, Parson received meals and gifts from lobbyists worth $2,752 in his first six months in office, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported, citing Missouri Ethics Commission records.[108]

Fox 2 News St. Louis accused Greitens of “lashing out against two Republican senators who didn’t vote against a pay raise for themselves and other elected officials.” Only Republican State Senators Denny Hoskins and Paul Wieland cast votes to allow the raise to take effect, but six other senators recused themselves and didn't vote. Greitens had personally pressured lawmakers to vote down the raise. Hoskins and Wieland described their meetings with him as tense. Wieland described it as intimidation and said he felt insulted.[109]

Greitens approved a plan to reduce the number of people that can be appointed to political positions. A 2017 Boards and Commissions Task Force report outlined ways to eliminate 439 gubernatorial appointments and cut or merge numerous state boards and commissions, more than 200 of which currently exist. The recommendations aligned with Greitens's goal to make Missouri's government smaller and reduce state regulators' reach. The report included recommendations to cut more than two dozen commissions.[110]

During his 2017 State of the State address, Greitens announced: "We found 30 cars the government didn't need, and we're getting rid of them. That's going to save Missourians over $500,000." Greitens sold one of the state's two passenger planes used by his predecessor, Jay Nixon. The 2018 Department of Public Safety spending proposal called for a $37,000 reduction in aircraft maintenance costs due to the sale of the twin-engine, six-passenger plane.[111][112]

Greitens released funding for biodiesel facilities that was originally withheld because of concerns that state revenues could fall short. The released $4 million was the amount necessary to pay off a backlog of subsidies called for under a 2002 state law that provided incentives for biodiesel plants that began operating by 2009. Fox 2 St. Louis reported that members of the soybean industry said that releasing the incentives “helped launch the industry.”[113]

Economic effect

On November 21, 2017, Greitens announced that Sedalia, Missouri, would be home to a $250 million Nucor steel-bar mill.[114] Missouri was chosen over Kansas, Nebraska, South Carolina and Florida for the facility, which created 255 jobs with a median annual salary of $65,000 in addition to 450 temporary construction jobs.[115] Missouri moved up nine spaces, from 31st to 22nd, in CNBC's annual list of America's Top States for Business published on July 11, 2017.[116] In 2018 Missouri also had its lowest unemployment rate in 18 years.[117]

Regulatory reform

In January 2017 Greitens signed Executive Order 17-03, which froze implementation of all new regulations for over 30 days and required each agency to review its rules and remove "needless and burdensome regulations.”[118] A 2017 audit of state regulations found more than seven million words of regulations on the books. Greitens declared plans to remove nearly one-third of these, equal to approximately 33,000 regulations.[119]

Greitens signed into law a bill removing regulations on ride-sharing services like Uber and Lyft, allowing them to work freely in Missouri. Uber said the legislation would lead to 10,000 additional jobs in the state.[120] Greitens posted on Facebook a video of himself signing the bill in a Lyft in a Taco Bell parking lot, which earned him a shout-out from Taco Bell.[121]

Senior officials in Greitens's administration supported state and national agricultural advocacy groups’ efforts to rewrite the Obama Administration's "Waters of the United States" (WOTUS) rule.[122] Missouri Farm Bureau President Blake Hurst said, "we appreciate Gov. Greitens' comments to EPA asserting that the WOTUS rule was too broad an interpretation of law and that it should be redefined."[122]

In March 2017 Greitens announced that the Missouri Board of Nursing approved the Air Force's practical nurse education program. He said the agreement, designed to allow military nurses to practice in the civilian sector following military service, would be the first of its kind in the country.[123]

Hundreds of workers from southeast Missouri rally outside the Governor's Office in support of Greitens and the 2017 Steel Mill Bill.

2017 steel mill special session

Greitens supported the Missouri Steel Mill Bill, legislation that allowed utility regulators to approve lower electricity rates for industrial companies using large amounts of energy.

The legislation was drafted in response to the March 2016 Noranda smelter closure, in which nearly 900 people lost their jobs and the average household income in New Madrid County fell by $6,000.[124] During the final weeks of the regular 2017 legislative session, the Missouri House of Representatives passed an amendment by State Representative Don Rone designed to help bring industrial jobs to the state. The bill, however, was met with opposition in the Senate led by Senator Doug Libla, and ultimately failed. Greitens called a special legislative session in May 2017, bringing the Missouri General Assembly back to the Capitol one week after its regular session adjourned to pass the legislation.

Following a rally, Greitens led workers to the offices of state senators to urge them to pass the 2017 Steel Mill Bill.

“And people are sick of having to drive to Kentucky, having to drive to Tennessee, having to drive to Arkansas,” Greitens said in an interview with MissouriNet. “Watching their friends have to get in trucks and go across the border to find a quality job. And we promised during the (gubernatorial) campaign we were going to fight for them.”[125]

After calling the session, Greitens held rallies in Southeast Missouri in New Madrid, Poplar Bluff, Dexter and Sikeston and hosted hundreds of Bootheel residents at the Capitol in Jefferson City for a rally urging lawmakers to approve the bill.[125] Following the rally, Greitens encouraged the crowd to join him in walking to every state senator's office. Participants taped messages to the doors of Senate offices, including phrases such as “we don’t want welfare” and “bring back American jobs.”[126] Rone praised Greitens, saying “we finally have a governor who knows where southeast Missouri is."[126]

Ultimately, the General Assembly passed the legislation and Greitens signed the bill in to law on June 16, 2017.[127] Following the special session, Magnitude 7 Metals LLC announced that the firm would restart two of the plant's three production lines, which brought over 450 jobs to the region with an average salary of $95,000, with the potential for another 900 jobs in the future.[128][129]

Following the announcement, Greitens accepted an invitation to meet with President Donald Trump at the White House to discuss workforce development and job creation.[130]

2017 pro-life special session

Nearly a thousand supporters of the pro-life movement attend Governor Greitens' rally during the pro-life special session in June 2017.

Following the extraordinary session on the Steel Mill Bill, Greitens called a second special session to pass pro-life legislation. He went on a statewide tour with former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee and said "we had some radical politicians in St. Louis who passed legislation to make St. Louis an abortion sanctuary city, where it would make it illegal ... for organizations like Our Lady's Inn and other pro-life groups just to hire pro-life workers. So we're out here to protect pregnancy care centers."[131] The bill also required that doctors explain the risks of abortion to a patient 72 hours before performing an abortion, called for annual inspections of clinics, added new whistle-blower protections for clinic employees, and heightened requirements for pathologists who provide services to abortion facilities. Executive director of NARAL Pro Choice Missouri Alison Dreith said the session was "political theater."[132]

On July 26, 2017, Greitens signed HCS SB 5, a wide-ranging pro-life measure, into law.[133] Missouri Right to Life said, "We are especially grateful to Governor Greitens for calling this special session and for his support of this pro-life legislation." NRLC's state affiliate called the measure "one of the strongest pro-life bills to be passed by the Missouri Legislature in many years."[133]

In 2018 The Satanic Temple delivered oral arguments in front of the Missouri State Court Western Appellate District in an effort to challenge Greitens's pro-life legislation, claiming that it "violated the religious beliefs of one of its members."[134]

In September 2018 Greitens was featured in the Netflix documentary film "Reversing Roe".[135][better source needed]

Changes to Missouri's foster care system

In June 2017 Greitens signed Missouri's first Foster Care Bill of Rights, which outlined specific measures designed to improve the safety and quality of life of children in Missouri's foster care system.[136]

In October 2018 Greitens ordered that Missouri children in foster care no longer have to pay $15 to get copies of their birth certificates. The move was hailed as removing a key obstacle for many to apply for driver's licenses, jobs, or higher education. “For the children who are involved in this system, it’s everything to them,” said Colleen Polak, director of legal services for Voices for Children in St. Louis.[137]

In November 2017 Greitens appointed 27 advocates to the Child Abuse and Neglect Review Boards, Children's Trust Fund Board, and Missouri State Foster Care and Adoption Board. Many of those boards had been unable to operate because no one had been appointed to them to make quorum.[138]

In December 2017, Sheena Greitens announced that the administration's Children's Division had enrolled in a new National Council For Adoption (NCFA) study of foster parent recruitment and retention. Its goal was to find ways to more effectively train and support foster parents.[139] Sheena Greitens also distributed over 3,200 books in state storage Missouri's foster families and foster children.[140] She then announced that Missouri had joined the National Electronic Interstate Compact Enterprise, a multistate collaboration designed to make adoption and fostering across state lines easier.[137]

Council of Governors

In May 2017 President Trump appointed Greitens to the Council of Governors.[141] A bipartisan organization of state governors, the council advises on matters of national defense, the national guard and defense support to local authorities. Greitens served alongside Rick Scott of Florida, Bill Walker of Alaska, Mark Dayton of Minnesota, Steve Bullock of Montana, Dannel Malloy of Connecticut, and Mary Fallin of Oklahoma. Greitens was the only newly elected governor Trump appointed.[142]

Public safety and law enforcement support

Greitens signed a “Blue Alert” law modeled after the Amber Alert system for missing children. He pursued the idea to allow public broadcasts with information that could assist in the apprehension of individuals who commit violence against police officers. The measure was part of a package of crime-related changes to state law the Missouri House and Senate approved in May 2017. It also enhanced penalties for assaults on law enforcement officers and created the crime of illegal re-entry. People deported from the United States for committing a crime who return and commit a felony would also be guilty of illegal re-entry in Missouri.[143][144]

Greitens announced a special operations unit of the State Highway Patrol to target violent felons on interstate highways. The task force collected better intelligence to aid local police and pushed to stop drug trafficking. The Missouri Department of Public Safety worked with the FBI and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration to go after violent criminals.[145]

Greitens changed the state's emergency response philosophy, adopting a “go early, go big” approach in which the operating response was to go before disaster strikes and be overprepared throughout the emergency to minimize human casualties. He activated the State Emergency Operations Center prior to several major events, including instances of massive flooding, tornadoes, and winter storms. The center operates 24 hours a day to coordinate the response by the National Weather Service, The Department of Public Safety, the State Emergency Management Agency, Missouri State Highway Patrol, MoDOT, Electric Utilities and Power Companies/Power, and faith-based and volunteer response partners, including Convoy of Hope and the Red Cross.[146]

Officials in the Greitens administration sent notices to 8,000 doctors who weren't following best practices for prescribing opioids within the state's Medicaid program, instructing them to change their prescribing patterns and consider referring people on long-term opioids to addiction programs. The Kansas City Star reported that Greitens also started filling vacancies on the medical licensing board with physicians who were “willing to get tough on colleagues who contribute to the opioid crisis.”[147]

Greitens issued an executive order to create a prescription drug monitoring program, addressing the concern that Missouri was the only state in the U.S. without a program. The order directed the Department of Health and Senior Services to build the database, which was designed to help identify suspicious patterns of prescriptions of controlled substances, including opioids.[148]

Greitens created the Firefighter Veterans Initiative to connect veterans to public safety careers. The program introduces participants to firefighting through physical skills training through basic classroom instruction and pairing students with mentors.[149]

Second year

On February 24, 2018, Greitens declared a state of emergency and activated the Missouri National Guard in response to severe weather that began on February 23.[150]

Tax reform

Governor Greitens and Kansas City Chiefs Coach Andy Reid on the field at KC Chiefs Training Camp in St. Joseph, Missouri in July 2017.

On January 18, 2018, Greitens announced tax cuts to be proposed in the state legislature. More information on the cuts was released in the following weeks. The plan was to cut individual and corporate taxes by approximately $800 million. The overhaul would reduce the top individual income tax rate by 10% and the corporate income tax rate by nearly a third. The top individual income tax rate would drop from 5.9% to 5.3%. The proposal would also create a non-refundable state tax credit for low-income workers, which Greitens said would essentially eliminate income taxes for 380,000 people. He said the bill would drop taxes 51%, from $920 to $449 annually for a married couple with two children earning $40,000. Greitens also said the plan would drop taxes down 2.9%, from $6,917 to $6,716 annually, for a married couple with two children who earn $150,000. The plan also intended to cut corporate tax rates from 6.25% to 4.25%.[151][152] It simplified the tax code and eliminated special rules that rewarded companies that hired employees outside of Missouri. As a result, Missouri would have the country's second-lowest corporate tax rate.[153]

Greitens's $28.8 billion fiscal 2019 budget proposal estimated a 2.5% growth rate in net general revenue, with 70% coming from personal income taxes. To balance the operating budget, Greitens also proposed changes to the tax code that would increase state revenue. One of these was removing the timely filing discount. The discount offers vendors up to a 2% discount for filing sales taxes on time. The Missouri Department of Revenue projected state savings of $57.4 million by eliminating the discount.[154]

Greitens signed legislation that simplified Missouri's tax code, eliminated special rules that rewarded companies that hired employees outside of Missouri, and reduced Missouri's business tax rate from 6.25% to 4.0%, making it the second lowest in the country.[155]

Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia v. Comer

Greitens ended a longstanding state policy against using tax dollars to aid religious groups. His decision came a week before the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in the case of Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia v. Comer. The lawsuit challenged a 2012 decision by the Missouri Department of Natural Resources to deny the Columbia church a grant to replace the gravel on its playground with softer, safer material. Greitens instructed the Department of Natural Resources to allow religious organizations to apply for and be eligible to receive those grants.[156]

Jason Stockley protests

On September 15, 2017, St. Louis police officer Jason Stockley was found not guilty of first-degree murder for shooting Anthony Lamar Smith in 2011. Protests erupted in St. Louis. Prior to the verdict, a group of clergy publicly stated that an acquittal would result in "mass disruption" in the city. Greitens, who was openly critical of his predecessor Jay Nixon's response to the Ferguson unrest, preemptively activated the Missouri National Guard and scheduled 12-hour shifts for the St. Louis municipal police.

Before the judge's decision in Stockley's trial, Greitens and Smith's fiancée, Christina Wilson, made a call for peace. "If you feel like you want to speak out, speak how you feel and whatever comes to you,"

Wilson said. "Just do it in a peaceful way."[157][158] Greitens said, "Whatever the verdict is, we will protect every single person's right to peacefully protest". "And whatever the verdict is, we will also protect people's lives, their homes and our communities."[157] Following the verdict, Greitens oversaw the Department of Public Safety's plan to protect city infrastructure like firehouses. After declaring the protests an "unlawful assembly", police officers were pelted with water bottles and rocks. Protesters also descended upon Mayor Lyda Krewson's home, and threw bricks at and vandalized it. Police deployed tear gas to break up the crowd and two officers were injured by bricks thrown by protesters. Over the night, ten police officers were injured and 32 protesters arrested. Greitens said, "In the past, our leaders let people break windows, loot, start fires. They let them do it. Not this time.” Within 48 hours, major threats of violence were thwarted and it was reported that the St. Louis police made 300 arrests. Greitens garnered national attention for his response to the protest. “We had leaders who wanted to give people a safe space to loot and to burn,” Greitens told Fox News. “Now in Missouri if you loot the only safe space you’re going to have is in a jail cell.”[159]

Low-income housing tax credits

In 2017 the Missouri Housing Development Commission voted 8 to 2 to zero out the state's low-income housing tax credit for 2018.[160] Greitens phoned into the meeting and voted to zero out the tax credits while then Lt. Governor Mike Parson voted to keep them. Greitens said in a written statement that "special interests abused low income housing tax breaks to make themselves rich."[160] Following Greitens's appointments to the commission and the 2017 vote, Missouri did not issue $140 million in state low-income housing tax credits. The low-income housing tax credit program was cut from over $1.3 billion over the previous decade to zero. Greitens accused the low-income housing industry of conspiring to upend his political career though legal troubles and the threat of impeachment.[161] It was later determined that a month after he orchestrated the demise of the tax credit, local newspaper publisher Scott Faughn paid $50,000 in cash to the attorney for the ex-husband of the woman who accused Greitens of sexual misconduct.[161] The Kansas City Star reported on July 8, 2019, that Faughn eventually paid the attorney another $70,000 in cash, keeping the transactions secret for months while continuing to cover Greitens both in his newspaper and on his TV show, which is sponsored by Sterling Bank, a Poplar Bluff-based bank highly involved in low-income housing tax credits. When the payments were eventually revealed, Faughn fled the state to avoid a subpoena from Greitens's lawyers. The attorney who received the payments testified that he was told the cash came from a GOP donor who wanted to oust Greitens.[161]

Greitens training with firefighters at the St. Louis Fire Academy in February 2017.

When Parson took over as governor following Greitens's resignation in June 2018, he was adamant that the $150 million program remain dormant until the legislature passed reforms. In May 2019, after the legislature was unable to reconcile differences between the two chambers in a bill to restart the program, Parson's office announced that he would consider restoring the credits without the legislature, but he ultimately decided against doing so.

Changes to the Missouri National Guard and veterans' rights

On June 14, 2017, Greitens signed legislation (S.B. 108) guaranteeing state and federal reemployment rights to Missouri employees who are members of any reserve component of the U.S. Armed Forces called to active duty. The law also extended reemployment rights to Missouri employees who are members of the National Guard of another state called to active duty in that state.[162]

On October 10, 2017, Greitens announced the Missouri Army National Guard would add nearly 800 soldiers by 2019. The expansion brought units to Missouri from around the country. The new units' economic impact was estimated around $15 million, including direct payroll and access to benefits for healthcare and education for the soldiers.[163]

In February 2018, Greitens announced that members of the Missouri National Guard would train with the Israeli Home Front Command. Missouri is one of four states—along with Colorado, Illinois and Massachusetts—to train with the command, a branch of the Israel Defense Forces that focuses on civilian protection during a war or crisis.[164][165]

In April 2018, Greitens signed into law legislation allowing those in the Missouri National Guard and the armed forces reserves to deduct their military income from their state taxes.[166]

On April 27, 2018, Greitens announced an initiative in the Department of Natural Resources to recruit and hire more veterans at Missouri State Parks. DNR began recruiting veterans to serve in the department in June 2017. That effort was expanded by opening additional positions to veteran recruits including Park Ranger, Park/Historic Site Specialist and maintenance classifications. In response to the initiative, the Missouri Department of Natural Resources developed a new website devoted to veteran recruitment.[167]

Confide app ruling

In December 2017, Democrats accused Greitens and senior members of his staff of subverting Missouri's open records laws after the Kansas City Star reported that they used Confide, a messaging app that erases texts after they have been read, on their personal phones.[168] Attorney General Hawley at first claimed conflict of interest, but on December 20 announced his office would investigate, saying that the matter was legally complex because the state Sunshine Law "was written decades and decades ago and has not been updated to take into account" technological changes.[169][170][171] In March 2018, Hawley cleared Greitens, finding no evidence of wrongdoing.[172]

In late December, two attorneys filed suit, claiming that use of such "self-immolating" apps by elected officials and government employees violates Missouri's public records laws.[173][174] On January 3, 2018, Rep. Gina Mitten filed House Bill 1817, which would ban use of apps like Confide in conducting public business, and Speaker Richardson told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that in its 2018 session the legislature might consider modernizing the state's current open records laws.[171]

On July 9, 2019, Cole County Circuit Judge Jon Beetem sided with Greitens, dismissing the claims that Greitens's office had subverted or violated any laws. Beetem also ruled that as a private citizen, Sansone cannot sue Greitens over alleged Sunshine Law violations.[175]

Affair and invasion of privacy charge

On January 10, 2018, ahead of an investigative report released by St. Louis CBS affiliate KMOV the same evening, Greitens publicly disclosed that he had engaged in an extramarital affair with his hairstylist in 2015 (before running for governor).[176] Greitens and his wife issued a joint statement in which he acknowledged the affair, called it "a deeply personal mistake", and said that "we dealt with this together honestly and privately."[177] KMOV played a recording made by the hairstylist's then-husband in which she said that Greitens had invited her to his home, where she consented to having her hands taped to exercise rings above her head while she was undressed and blindfolded. In the recording, the hairstylist added that while she was blindfolded, Greitens took pictures of her without her consent and threatened to share them if she ever went public with the affair.[178]

Greitens denied the blackmail accusation.[178] After initially not commenting on the question, his attorney appeared to deny that any pictures were taken; in an email, he wrote, "No violence. No picture taken. No threat of blackmail."[176][179] Greitens also denied taking any such photos.[180]

After Attorney General Josh Hawley's office said in a statement that it did not have jurisdiction to look into the matter, the circuit attorney for the City of St. Louis opened an investigation into the blackmail allegations.[181][182]

On January 20, 2018, CNN reported that two unnamed sources alleged that the FBI was investigating Greitens. Following its usual practice, the FBI did not confirm or deny the existence of an inquiry, and the sources could not confirm whether the blackmail allegations were its focus.[183] In response, Greitens's attorney, Jim Bennett, said in an email that he and his colleagues had not seen any indication that an FBI investigation was underway. Bennett added that they saw nothing worthy of investigation, and that "Governor Greitens has not been contacted at any time by the FBI and we are not aware of any interest by the FBI."[184]

"I have notified CNN that this story should be retracted," Bennett said. "Without getting into the details, it is sufficient to say the named source has a history of profane and aberrant behavior toward people associated with Governor Greitens dating back to last year to such a degree that Governor Greitens’ press secretary had to block his calls and other members of the Missouri Republican Party staff felt threatened to the degree that senior leadership attempted to intervene with his family." The named source was former Greitens supporter Eli Karabell.[184] On January 20, 2018, Greitens told the AP he didn’t know Karabell. Greitens’s spokesman, Parker Briden, said Karabell was a “serial liar” who had called Briden multiple times “acting crazy,” including claiming he would donate millions to Greitens if he could meet with him.[185]

Indictment

On February 22, 2018, a St. Louis grand jury indicted Greitens on felony invasion of privacy charges.[186] He was released on his own recognizance[187][188] and waived his first appearance.[189]

On March 26, the judge denied defense motions to have a bench trial rather than a jury trial, refused to dismiss the assistant prosecutor, kept the jury trial date as scheduled, and refused to dismiss the indictment.[190]

On April 9, 2018, Fox News reported that the woman with whom Greitens had the affair, identified only as "K.S.", testified that she could not say whether she saw Greitens with a camera or phone on the day he allegedly took the photo. Court records say that the woman told prosecutors, "I don't know if it's because I'm remembering it through a dream or I—I'm not sure, but yes, I feel like I saw it after it happened, but I haven't spoken about it because of that".[191]

On March 14, 2018, Dwight Warren, a former prosecutor who served in the St. Louis Circuit Attorney's Office from 1977 to 2017 under five different circuit attorneys including Gardner, publicly accused Gardner of “gross misconduct” in the decision to charge Greitens.[192] Warren wrote, “This prosecution has been and continues to be motivated by politics and not by the evidence. I have never seen a Grand Jury be led to return an indictment without evidence of all of the elements of the crime being committed by the accused. The only exception is the case of the indictment brought against Governor Eric Greitens.”[192]

In pre-trial depositions, William Tisaby, a former FBI agent who assisted Gardner with the Greitens investigations, affirmed to defense attorneys that he had taken notes during his interview of K.S. After attorneys pressed him to turn over the notes, he changed his testimony and asserted that he had not taken notes during the interview. Video footage, initially withheld from defense attorneys but later tendered, showed Tisaby taking notes during his interview with the woman while in Gardner's presence.[193]

On April 20, 2018, the circuit court attorney charged Greitens with a second felony for tampering with a computer in taking email and donor lists from The Mission Continues for fundraising purposes.[194] The Associated Press first reported on the donor list in October 2016. Greitens initially denied using the list, but in April 2017 he acknowledged its use. Greitens said the list was provided by his then-campaign manager, but the former manager denied that.[195]

Voluntary dismissal of criminal charges

Both charges against Greitens were dropped in May 2018.[196] Prosecutors withdrew the felony invasion of privacy charge on May 14, 2018, after investigators failed to find the alleged photo that formed the basis of the charge.[197] The prosecutor's office agreed that if Greitens resigned, it would withdraw the felony charges relating to the charity email list.[198] Greitens resigned effective June 1, 2018.[199]

The circuit attorney referred the case to a special prosecutor, Jean Peters Baker of Kansas City. Baker declined to refile charges, citing the statutes of limitations and insufficient evidence.[200][201] The Kansas City Star confirmed that at the conclusion of Gardner's and Baker's investigations, evidence of an alleged photo was never produced.[202]

On May 18, 2018, Cole County Prosecutor Mark Richardson announced he would not file any additional charges against Greitens, as suggested by Attorney General Hawley, related to how his gubernatorial campaign reported the receipt of a charity donor list used for political fundraising.[203][204]

Special Investigative Committee report

Several Republican members of the Missouri House of Representatives called on Greitens to resign after the allegations were made public.[205] Hawley, a Republican running for the U.S. Senate, called the situation "very grave".[206] Illinois Governor Bruce Rauner, a Greitens campaign contributor and ally, called on Greitens to resign.[207]

On April 11, 2018, a Special Investigative Committee (SIC) of the Missouri House of Representatives released an initial 24-page report detailing allegations against Greitens by the hairstylist with whom he had had an affair.[208] The stylist accused him of unwanted kissing and sexual touching, violently slapping and spanking her, coercing her into performing oral sex on him, and threatening to blackmail her.[209][210] In a four-page report issued on April 30, 2018 the SIC chair, Republican Representative Jay Barnes, said it found that the Greitens defense claims, that the woman's testimony was inconsistent, were groundless.[194]

Impeachment session and resignation

On May 3, the Missouri House and Senate collected enough signatures from members to call a special session to consider impeachment.[211] House Speaker Todd Richardson, a Republican, said 29 senators and 138 House members, more than the three-fourths required in each chamber, supported convening a 30-day special session. It began on May 18, the last day of the regular session.[212][213]

On May 29, 2018, Greitens announced that he would resign effective June 1, 2018.[199] The St. Louis prosecutor's office had made a deal with Greitens that if he resigned, it would withdraw the felony charges for using the veterans' charity email list in his campaign.[198]

Aftermath

On December 31, 2018, the Special Investigative Committee on Oversight that was investigating Greitens released its final report.[214] The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported, "Documents and testimony showed that Greitens ran an off-the-books gubernatorial campaign in 2014 and 2015, and lied about his campaign's acceptance of a charity donor list from the Mission Continues, a veterans charity Greitens founded in 2007."[214]

On July 18, 2019, KFVS televised an interview with Greitens about a leaked draft audit of former Missouri Director of Public Safety Drew Juden by Democratic State Auditor Nicole Galloway, rumored to be planning a run for governor in 2020.[215] Greitens can be seen leaving a building in his U.S. Navy uniform before changing clothes to speak to the station.[215] He appointed Juden in January 2017 as Director of Missouri Department of Public Safety. Governor Mike Parson announced that Juden would leave the department in August 2018.[216] Shortly after the appointment of former State Patrol Superintendent Sandra Karsten as Juden's replacement, Auditor Nicole Galloway announced a departmental audit of DPS at Parson's request.[217] KFVS's investigation found that Galloway's audit covered only Juden's time as Director.[215] The first draft of the audit KFVS obtained alleged that Juden had taken unreported time off while Director.[215]

Final days in office

At 508 days, Greitens's gubernatorial tenure is the 10th-shortest in Missouri history. Among elected governors, his tenure is the shortest of any Missouri governor since 1861, and the fourth-shortest overall (behind only Frederick Bates, Claiborne Fox Jackson, and Trusten Polk).[218]

In the final days of his administration, Greitens signed 77 pieces of legislation into law. Among these was a bill that cut the corporate tax rate and changed how utility companies receive rate adjustments. He also signed a law making revenge porn illegal in Missouri. He banned lab-grown meats, provided a 5% rate reduction for utility companies, and allowed monopoly utility companies to increase fees for water services if they don't make the expected amount from utility rates. Greitens also signed bills to:

  • allow telephone companies to choose a different way to be taxed;
  • pare a program intended to entice developers to restore dilapidated buildings;
  • raise the minimum age to be tried as an adult from 17 to 18;
  • give state regulatory control over disposal of industrial waste;
  • codify consumer protections for Missourians to ensure they're not stuck with large bills for emergency services;
  • reclassify state workers as at-will employees;
  • allow businesses to grow and harvest hemp;
  • decrease the corporate tax rate from 6.25% to 4%; and
  • expand medicaid coverage for new mothers struggling with addiction.[219]

Greitens also issued four commutations and five pardons.[220]

Pardon of Judy Henderson

On December 20, 2017, Judy Henderson was released from the Chillicothe Correctional Center in northwest Missouri after 35 years on Greitens's orders.[221] Greitens went to Chillicothe to meet with Henderson and sign the papers commuting her life sentence for her role in the July 1981 robbery-turned-murder of jeweler Harry Klein. Greitens's office said that Henderson could have been out of prison decades earlier.[221] Following her release, the 68-year-old Henderson gave her version of the events on "The Real Story with María Elena Salinas."[221] Authorities believe her boyfriend, Greg Cruzen, shot Klein and paid four witnesses to lie about Henderson's role, according to the Springfield News-Leader.[222] At trial, Henderson and Cruzen were represented by the same defense attorney. "I remember Jimmy McMullin, the attorney, telling us to not say a word, not to talk to anyone about anything. I was so confused, I felt like we were both going to be O.K. That's what Greg kept telling me," she told Salinas. Henderson claims she wanted to take the stand to defend herself "but Jimmy McMullin said I cannot, and I did not know what my defense was until every witness walked in the courtroom and I would tell Jimmy when they would come in, I said, 'Who are they and why are they here?'" She was found guilty. Cruzen was acquitted.[221]

Greitens's office said it reviewed thousands of documents related to the case before Greitens commuted her sentence and subsequently pardoned her. She told the News-Leader that Greitens called her on his last day in office to tell her she was pardoned. "The loss of a life and the pain that it caused his family is something that will stick with me for the rest of my life," Henderson said in June 2018.[222]

Appointment of special prosecutor to investigate St. Louis Circuit Attorney

Following the dismissal of all charges against Greitens, his defense attorneys filed a police report with the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department alleging criminal misconduct by Gardner's office in his case.[223]

On June 29, 2018, St. Louis Circuit Judge Michael Mullen appointed Gerard Carmody as special prosecutor to investigate the alleged misconduct by Gardner's office.[5][224] On June 17, 2019, a 7-count felony indictment of William Tisaby was unsealed. Tisaby had been charged with six counts of felony perjury and one count of felony tampering with evidence.[6] According to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the 30-page indictment accused Tisaby of concealing a series of documents from defense attorneys and lying under oath during the deposition “about matters that could substantially affect, or did substantially affect, the course or outcome of the Greitens case."[225] The Washington Times reported that Tisaby surrendered to authorities on the same day the indictment against him was unsealed. He pleaded not guilty at his arraignment and was released on his own recognizance on the conditions that he surrender his passport and inform a probation officer of any travel.[226] In a press conference following Tisaby's release from custody on June 17, 2018, Tisaby's attorney, Jermaine Wooten, told reporters that “Ms. Gardner is probably the actual target here, not Mr. Tisaby."[227]

The indictment also lodged a series of claims against Gardner, stating "that she failed to correct Tisaby’s lies, failed to report them to police, and made incorrect statements to defense lawyers and the judge." The alleged misconduct in the unsuccessful prosecution of Greitens has placed Gardner at risk of losing her law license and facing criminal charges.[225]

On July 10, 2019, the grand jury that indicted Tisaby disbanded without any other indictments.[228] The next day, Gardner held a press conference outside the St. Louis Circuit Attorney's Office denying any wrongdoing in Greitens's case. The press conference marked Gardner's first public statement on the matter since the appointment of the special prosecutor, as a gag order had been placed on the case for the duration of the grand jury. Fox 2 Now reported that Gardner claimed that it was time for the city to "move on".[229] Following the press conference, Carmody took the unusual step of putting out a statement clarifying that the grand jury disbanded not because the investigation was complete but because it had reached its expiration and its term could not be extended.[230] “Notwithstanding the expiration of that Grand Jury’s term, the investigation into possible criminal activity will continue,” Carmody said in the statement.[230]

During an August 15, 2019 hearing, Carmody said the ongoing probe was focused on the failed prosecution of Greitens and confirmed that Gardner was under "active criminal investigation."[231]

Post-gubernatorial career

On June 2, 2019, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported that Greitens had returned to the U.S. Navy as a Naval Reserve Officer. Since leaving office, he has worked on a book about his Jewish faith.[232]

Investigation and exoneration

In February 2020, after a nearly 18-month investigation into Greitens's 2016 gubernatorial campaign, the Missouri Ethics Commission (MEC) "found no evidence of any wrongdoing" by him, but required the campaign to update its reports with in-kind contributions from two groups, and to pay the commission about $178,000 in fees. In a statement, Greitens called the result an exoneration and vindication.[233][234]

Personal life

Sheena Greitens in 2017
Eric and Sheena Greitens dancing at the inaugural ball

Greitens's marriage to his first wife ended in divorce in 2003.[235]

He married Sheena Elise Chestnut on August 7, 2011, in Spokane, Washington,[7] and they have two sons.[236][237][7] Sheena Greitens is an assistant professor of political science at the University of Missouri, focused primarily on China and North Korea.[238]

In 2015, Greitens had an extramarital affair with his hairstylist.[176]

The first Jewish governor of Missouri, Greitens attends the Reform B’nai El synagogue.[239][240]

In December 2016, before Greitens took office, Sheena Greitens was robbed at gunpoint at a St. Louis-area coffee shop. She was unharmed. Three suspects, ages 14, 15 and 19, were arrested a short time later. Eric Greitens said at the time that he was glad “the men and women of law enforcement found these young men before I did.”[241] After the incident, Missouri State Highway Patrol Captain John Hotz said the patrol would begin providing security for Sheena Greitens. The patrol provided security for the governor-elect immediately after the election, but Hotz said security detail for the spouse typically begins only after a governor takes office.[241]

Honors and awards

On October 3, 2008, President George W. Bush awarded Greitens the President's Volunteer Service Award outside Air Force One at Lambert International Airport in St. Louis, Missouri, for his work at The Mission Continues.[242][243]

In 2009, Greitens received the HOOAH Award, commissioned by the Major George A. Smith Memorial Fund and presented by the National Conference on Citizenship to recognize "a notable veteran who defines their citizenship through service to our country".[244][245] He was also named the 2010 Reader of the Year by Outside magazine.[246][247]

In June 2010, Major League Baseball and People announced Greitens as a winner in People's All-Stars Among Us competition. He was selected to represent the city of St. Louis and the Cardinals at the 2010 All-Star Game in Anaheim, California.[248][249]

On May 20, 2012, Greitens was awarded an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from Tufts University when he gave the commencement speech at the school's 156th commencement.[250] That same year he received the Bronfman Prize, which recognizes dynamic leaders whose innovation and impact serve as inspiration for the next generations.[251]

On April 18, 2013, Time named Greitens to its list of the 100 Most Influential People in the World.[252] In 2014 Fortune featured him as one of the World's 50 Greatest Leaders.[253]

Military award ribbons and badges

  Bronze Star Medal

  Purple Heart

  Joint Service Commendation Medal

  Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal

  Navy Combat Action Ribbon

  Joint Service Achievement Medal

  Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal

  National Defense Service Medal

  Afghanistan Campaign Medal

  Iraq Campaign Medal

  Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal

  Global War on Terrorism Service Medal

  Navy Sea Service Deployment Ribbon

  Armed Forces Reserve Medal

  Outstanding Volunteer Service Medal

  Navy Expert Rifleman Medal

  Navy Expert Pistol Shot Medal

Publications

  • Greitens, Eric R. (1996). On Courage (AB). Duke University.
  • Greitens, Eric R. (1998). Intervening on Behalf of Children in War: Challenges for Humanitarian Assistance (M.Phil). Oxford University.
  • Greitens, Eric R. (2000). Children First: Ideas and the Dynamics of Aid in Western Voluntary Assistance Programs for War-Affected Children Abroad (PhD). Oxford University.
  • Greitens, Eric (2008). Strength & Compassion: Photographs and Essays. Leading Authorities Press. ISBN 978-0971007802.
  • Greitens, Eric (2011). The Heart and the Fist: The Education of a Humanitarian, the Making of a Navy SEAL. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0547424859. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Greitens, Eric (2012). The Warrior's Heart: Becoming a Man of Compassion and Courage. HMH Books for Young Readers. ISBN 978-0547868523.
  • Greitens, Eric (2015). Resilience: Hard-Won Wisdom for Living a Better Life. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0544323988.

References

  1. ^ Greitens, Eric (June 6, 2016). Eric Greitens: Taking Aim (video). Retrieved April 12, 2018.
  2. ^ Mullen, Mike. "The 2013 TIME 100". Time. Retrieved May 10, 2017.
  3. ^ Suntrup, Jack; Erickson, Kurt. "Embattled Gov. Eric Greitens resigns". St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
  4. ^ Fenske, Sarah. "Greitens Blasts 'Political Witch Hunt' Just Before Impeachment Report Drops". Riverfront Times. Retrieved October 7, 2019.
  5. ^ a b Lippmann, Rachel. "Special prosecutor appointed in William Tisaby investigation". kbia.org. Retrieved July 2, 2019.
  6. ^ a b By. "Former FBI agent who investigated Greitens indicted for perjury, evidence tampering". kansascity. Retrieved July 2, 2019.
  7. ^ a b c "Sheena Chestnut, Eric Greitens", The New York Times, August 5, 2011.
  8. ^ "Can This Jewish Republican Outsider Change the Face of Missouri?". The Tower. Retrieved May 10, 2017.
  9. ^ Miller, John J. (July 10, 2017). "Eric Greitens's Rising Star". National Review.
  10. ^ "Sheena Chestnut, Eric Greitens: Weddings". The New York Times. August 5, 2011. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved June 28, 2019.
  11. ^ "Home of the Parkway Alumni Association". Parkway Alumni Association. Archived from the original on March 24, 2012. Retrieved May 11, 2017.
  12. ^ a b Eric Greitens (July 13, 2015). "Former Navy SEAL: Why I am no longer a Democrat". Fox News.
  13. ^ "Featured Profiles". A.B. Duke Foundation. Archived from the original on December 26, 2008. Retrieved March 19, 2018.
  14. ^ Children in War: Community Strategies for Healing, ed.gov; accessed May 11, 2017.
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External links

Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for Governor of Missouri
2016
Most recent
Political offices
Preceded by Governor of Missouri
2017–2018
Succeeded by