By Charles D. Perry · The Herald - Updated
01/18/07 - 12:53 AM
COLUMBIA --
The ethics hearing for suspended York County Coroner Doug McKown was
called off Tuesday afternoon after McKown agreed to admit to four
violations of state ethics laws.
With his admission, McKown will receive a public reprimand and
have to pay the S.C. State Ethics Commission for the cost of its
investigation, said Cathy Hazelwood, the commission's general
counsel. She did not know how much McKown will have to pay.
McKown was scheduled to have a hearing before a three-member
panel at the ethics commission's office in Columbia. After the
hearing was delayed for about an hour, McKown spoke with Hazelwood
and the two reached the agreement.
McKown said he will sign a consent order, which is an admission
of guilt but allows him to offer an explanation for the violations
in writing. McKown said he will admit he unknowingly broke the
state's ethics laws when he worked for two companies that contracted
with the county and used his county vehicle to drive to those
outside jobs.
"The long and the short of it is, an honest person made an honest
mistake," McKown said after the agreement was reached. "I may have
violated the ethics law, but we all agree that I didn't use my
position of power or authority to gain financially from anybody."
Hazelwood said McKown had been completely cooperative. She also
said the result is not uncommon with ethics proceedings.
"He's getting a public reprimand," she said, "which is about what
everyone else gets for this."
The ethics commission alleges McKown used his position as an
elected official to garner financial benefits for York Pathology
Associates and Carolina Mortuary Transportation Service. The two
businesses paid McKown for work unrelated to his official duties.
McKown maintains he never kept his off-the-clock jobs hidden. For
years, he worked for York Pathology performing autopsies unrelated
to his official duties. In 1998, he sent a letter to the ethics
commission asking if that work was permitted.
The commission replied that he should not be working for the
business because it was paid by the county to perform autopsies for
the coroner's office. But McKown has said he did not believe he
violated the standards spelled out in the letter because York
Pathology had no formal, written contract with the county.
With Carolina Mortuary, McKown recommended the Charlotte business
for a county contract in 2005. The company had been paying McKown to
embalm bodies since 2000. McKown has said he doesn't know how his
off-duty work in another state impacted his job as coroner.
As for the allegations of using his county vehicle for outside
work, McKown has said there are no laws that govern how and when an
elected official uses a county vehicle. He also says he reimbursed
the county for gasoline on trips he made to personal events.
However, in a 1997 letter to the ethics commission, McKown asked
if he could use his county vehicle on personal trips because he is
always on call. The answer was no.
Although he admits he broke the ethics laws, McKown says the
accusations were exaggerated by people who relayed such information
to reporters in an attempt to damage his reputation. The director of
the ethics commission has said the commission filed a complaint
against McKown after learning of his outside work from the media.
"There's a certain sub-group of people that tried to make those
actions into something criminal," McKown said. "And to that group of
people, I would just say that I hope you're satisfied with the
results that came out of this. ... The truth is that honest people
make honest mistakes. They (ethics commission officials) realize
that. I realize that. And the matter's been resolved. And all these
things people said about me taking money under the table or
illegally or bribing people are false."
While the ethics charges should soon be resolved, the suspended
coroner's greatest challenge lies ahead. McKown and then-girlfriend
Erin Jenkins were arrested in May on drug charges. Gov. Mark Sanford
suspended McKown from office in July after McKown was indicted on
those charges.
No trial date has been set for either defendant.