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Aaron Reardon recall, Snohomish County, Washington (2012)

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Snohomish County Executive recall
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Officeholders
Aaron Reardon
Recall status
Resigned
See also
Recall overview
Political recall efforts, 2012
Recalls in Washington
Washington recall laws
County official recalls
Recall reports

An effort to recall Aaron Reardon from his position as Snohomish County Executive in the state of Washington was launched in June 2012.[1] The recall effort was put on hold in December 2012.[2] In February 2013, Reardon announced his resignation, effective in May 2013.[3]

Reasons for recall

The initial recall petition against Reardon claimed that Reardon misused county resources to advance his personal and political ambitions. Anne Block filed the recall petitions after the state Public Disclosure Commission launched a civil probe against Reardon. A state patrol investigation looked into sex scandal allegations involving claims that Reardon took a woman on trips and to expensive dinners at taxpayer expense. The investigation found that there was not sufficient evidence to support criminal charges.[1] An abridged recall petition, submitted in October 2012, accused Reardon of using county cellphones and staff time for political fundraising.[4]

Path to the ballot

In accordance with the laws governing recall in Washington, a judge was required to review the recall petition to determine if it met the legal qualifications to move forward. Had the petition been approved, recall organizers would have had six months to gather signatures.[1] A hearing about the validity of the grounds for recall took place on July 10.[5] A judge ruled that the recall petition was improperly filed because its author had failed to allege under oath that Reardon had engaged in misconduct. The petition was later re-filed.[6][7] The second recall petition was withdrawn due to difficulties scheduling a hearing date. On October 5, a third recall petition was submitted. It was nearly identical to previous versions of the petition. The county had 15 days to process the paperwork and move forward with a petition hearing.[8]

On October 25, Judge Anita Farris signed an order moving the case from Snohomish County Superior Court to Skagit County Superior Court.[4] As of December 2012, the recall petition was stalled in court. The legal proceedings became a moot point in February 2013, when Reardon announced his resignation, effective in May 2013.[3]

See also

Footnotes