Better days for Baugh
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Eron Ben-Yehuda
Assemblyman Scott Baugh (R-Huntington Beach) enjoyed remarkable success
this year as criminal charges against him were dismissed and fellow
Republicans named him their leader.
Suspicions that he violated campaign laws had dogged Baugh since his
election in 1995. The state attorney general had filed criminal charges
against him alleging, among other things, that Baugh had illegally
accepted an $8,800 cash contribution and failed to properly report the
source of a $1,000 contribution -- then illegally returned that
contribution in cash. State law forbids cash transactions of $100 or
more.
If convicted, Baugh could have faced time in prison, removal from the
Legislature and loss of his license to practice law. But in March, Atty.
General Bill Lockyer’s office dropped the charges after a key prosecution
witness admitted to lying and an appellate court ruled that a similar
case should not be criminally prosecuted. Baugh’s case was referred to
the state’s Fair Political Practices Commission, which imposed a civil
fine of $47,900, an amount that can be paid out of campaign funds.
In April, Baugh’s political standing rose as his colleagues asked him to
head the minority GOP delegation.
The final feather in his cap may come at the end of his term next year.
His chosen successor, John Righeimer, is in the best position to take
over for him.
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