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Colorado Ethics Watch uses high impact legal actions to hold public officials and organizations accountable for unethical activities that undermine the integrity of state and local government.
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"It makes one wonder why a public official made certain decisions, especially ones that benefited certain interests, when just days, months or years later they take a lucrative job lobbying for the same interests."
Craig Holman, a government affairs expert at Public Citizen, commenting on Scott McInnis' voting record, as quoted in The Denver Post, 07/25/2010.

Colorado Ethics Watch Files First Complaint With Colorado Independent Ethics Commission Against Secretary of State Mike Coffman

February 13, 2008

Today, Colorado Ethics Watch (Ethics Watch) filed a complaint with the Independent Ethics Commission asking it to penalize Secretary of State Mike Coffman for his continued egregious pattern of misconduct. This is the first complaint filed with the Independent Ethics Commission since it was approved by voters in November 2006.

Ethics Watch’s complaint details how Secretary Coffman violated his duties under state law and state personnel rules twice in 2007. First, Secretary Coffman allowed at least one employee in his office to operate a partisan side business without proper authorization and disclosure – a business that was patently incompatible with the official duties of that employee. Secondly, Secretary Coffman failed to disclose a conflict of interest between him and one of the voting system vendors seeking certification from the secretary of state’s office – the only vendor that Secretary Coffman agreed to certify.

“How can Coloradoans trust Secretary Coffman to manage a fair and accurate election this fall when he has demonstrated a disturbing pattern of disregard for the law?” questioned Chantell Taylor, director of Colorado Ethics Watch.

The Independent Ethics Commission was established in 2006 as this state’s primary recourse for ethics complaints and investigations. It is authorized to conduct investigations, hold public hearings, and render findings on complaints regarding allegations that any public official failed to comply with appropriate standards of conduct under state law.

“The Commission needs to show the public that it will take ethics complaints against Colorado’s top officials seriously. Ethics Watch’s complaint against Secretary Coffman is a great first step,” said Taylor.

More information about the complaint filed by Ethics Watch to the Independent Ethics Commission is available online at www.coloradoforethics.org.

Colorado Ethics Watch is a non-profit, legal watchdog group dedicated to identifying and exposing ethics issues in city, county and state governments in Colorado, ultimately holding public officials accountable. For more information, please visit www.coloradoforethics.org or contact Chantell Taylor at (303) 626-2100 or ctaylor@coloradoforethics.org.



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