Summary
The state Senate majority leader and co-chairman of the Ethics Committee, Sheldon Killpack, resigned on Saturday, a day after his arrest on DUI allegations. But if he chose, that single day would've given him enough time to tap his war chest -- brimming with tens of thousands donated mainly to further the narrow bottom-line interests of corporations -- for his personal use. Thanks to a loophole in an ethics law enacted last year, sitting officeholders can use the money for any reason. Former officeholders are out of luck.
He could've bought a very nice car, invested in real estate, paid down on a resort condo or even helped fund a campaign to prevent Utahns from voting on an initiative that would prevent lawmakers from doing what he could've done.See the full content of this document
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Devil Is in the Details
If lawmakers con...
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