The governor of Alabama,Robert Bentley has resigned his governorship seat after
pleading guilty to two misdemeanors related to campaign finance violations and
linked to his relationship with a former adviser, ending a year-long scandal
that has enveloped the state's government.
The guilty pleas were part of an agreement with prosecutors
that called for him to step down, said Ellen Brooks, special prosecutor
appointed by the state Attorney General Steve Marshall to investigate Bentley.
"I have decided it is time for me to step down as
Alabama governor," said Bentley at a news conference in the state capital
of Montgomery, adding that his service "was a calling that God placed on
my life."
He said he would work with his replacement, Lieutenant
Governor Kay Ivey, who was sworn in as governor about an hour after his resignation.
Ivey, a Republican, becomes the second woman to serve as
Alabama's governor after Lurleen Wallace, wife of George Wallace, who served
from January 1967 until her death in May 1968.
"The Ivey administration will be open, it will be
transparent, and it will be honest," Ivey said during a short speech after
her swearing in by the minister at her Montgomery Baptist church.
"What we have done today is to put an end to this
administration," Brooks told reporters. "It states to all of us that
no one is above the law, even the governor."
The Alabama Ethics Commission last week found Bentley
probably violated ethics and campaign finance laws after it completed an
investigation into allegations that he used public funds to conceal his
relationship with Rebekah Mason, a senior adviser who later resigned.
It accused Bentley of ordering law enforcement officers to
track down recordings that suggested he had had an affair with Mason and
accused him of retaliating against an official who discovered the relationship.
Bentley has denied having a physical relationship with
Mason, who is married, and had repeatedly vowed not to resign, saying he had
done nothing illegal. His marriage of 50 years also ended as the scandal
unfolded.
In his statement on Monday, Bentley apologized for his
actions, but did not mention a relationship with Mason.
After his guilty pleas, an Alabama judge ordered Bentley to
serve one year of unsupervised probation, make restitution and give up his
retirement benefits from the state. He also agreed not to run for another
political office, Brooks said.
-reuters
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