Seeking to have
his guilty plea in a bathroom sex sting erased, the
attorneys for Sen. Larry Craig of Idaho argue in a new court
filing that the underlying act wasn't criminal because
it didn't involve multiple victims.
An appeals brief
filed Tuesday contends that Minnesota's disorderly
conduct law ''requires that the conduct at issue have a
tendency to alarm or anger 'others''' -- underscoring
the plural nature of the term.
Craig's brief
goes on to cite other convictions that were overturned
because the multiple-victim test wasn't met. His lawyers
apply the same logic to his case.
The Republican
senator pleaded guilty in August after his arrest two
months earlier at the Minneapolis airport. It was part of a
broader undercover push targeting men soliciting sex
in public restrooms.
Craig was
arrested June 11 by an undercover officer, Sgt. Dave
Karsnia, who said Craig tapped his feet and swiped his
hand under a stall divider in a way that signaled he
wanted sex. Craig has denied that, saying his actions
were misconstrued.
''Appellant's
alleged conduct in this case affected only a single
individual -- Sergeant Karsnia,'' the Craig brief says. ''It
did not -- and could not -- affect 'others' as the
disorderly conduct statute requires, and therefore,
does not satisfy that element of the statute.''
The brief also
argues that Karsnia himself could not have been offended
by the alleged conduct because ''he invited it.'' The
alleged conduct, Craig's lawyers added, doesn't rise
to the level of being ''offensive, obscene, abusive,
boisterous, or noisy.''
Craig's earlier
attempt to withdraw his plea was turned down by a
district court judge, and the case is now before the
Minnesota court of appeals.
Besides attacking
the law he was prosecuted under, Craig's legal team
argues that the hand signal allegedly used to communicate a
desire to engage in sexual conduct would be
constitutionally protected speech. They also say the
plea is technically flawed because it lacked a judicial
signature.
Patrick Hogan, a
spokesman for the Metropolitan Airports Commission,
which oversees the Minneapolis airport and which brought the
charges, said he was confident the guilty plea will
stand.
''Facts are
resilient, and Senator Craig's continued, transparent
efforts to escape them don't change the truth of his
behavior in an airport restroom or the fact that he
admitted guilt last August,'' Hogan said.
Prosecutors have
45 days to respond, and then the case will be scheduled
for oral arguments. Once heard, a ruling is required within
90 days.
Craig has said he
will finish his term, which ends in January 2009. (AP)