Craig lawyers argue to overturn plea in sex sting

Sen. Larry Craig
Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho, at the Capitol in October 2007.
Alex Wong/Getty Images

(AP) - Idaho Sen. Larry Craig, seeking to wipe away an embarrassing criminal conviction in an airport men's room sex sting, put his hope Wednesday in the Minnesota Court of Appeals.

An attorney for the retiring Republican argued that he should be able to withdraw a misdemeanor disorderly conduct plea he quietly entered last year following an arrest during a flight layover.

The attorney, Billy Martin, told the three-judge panel that Craig's behavior was "as consistent with innocence as it is with guilt."

The appeals court has 90 days to issue a ruling, which means it will come before Craig leaves the Senate. After initially saying he would resign after the incident became public, Craig decided to remain in the Senate until his term ends this January.

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Craig's legal team
Sen. Larry Craig's legal team, Minneapolis attorney Tom Kelly, left, and Billy Martin, right.
MPR Photo/Elizabeth Stawicki

A district court judge refused to invalidate the plea last year, prompting the appeal.

Craig didn't appear at the St. Paul court building where oral arguments were held, and the only time his name was mentioned was when the lead judge announced the case.

On the senator's behalf, Martin described the encounter in the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport bathroom in which Craig first stood outside an occupied stall and then made allegedly suggestive motions from an adjacent stall.

Martin refuted the conclusions of an undercover police officer conducting a sting of men cruising for gay sex. The officer said Craig peered inside his stall, tapped a foot next to his and swiped a hand beneath the divider - all perceived invitations for a sexual encounter.

Craig's fidgety behavior, Martin said, was merely reflective of a man "anxious to go to the bathroom."

He attacked the disorderly conduct law, saying it requires "others" to be affected and not just one person.

Prosecutor Christopher Renz rebutted each of Martin's arguments and concluded that the record shows Craig committed "multiple instrusions" of another person's private space. Craig's decision to loiter outside the occupied stall was part of a pattern, Renz said.

"Upon one check it's occupied," Renz told the court. "You can wait until the stall is open."

Martin also took aim at the mail-in guilty plea bearing Craig's signature and said a judge should have determined whether there was a sufficient basis for arrest before permitting the senator to enter the plea.

Judge Thomas Kalitowski pointedly asked whether Craig lost his chance to contest the arrest on the record by going through the long-distance plea process.

"Didn't appellant waive the right to a colloquy when he signed the form?" Kalitowski asked, going on to imply that Craig "waived his right to appear. He waived his right to speak."

After the hearing, Martin told reporters that Craig's position shouldn't hamper his ability to clear his name.

"We would hope that the fact here that the case involves a sitting United States senator would make it no different than a case involving an average citizen," he said. "Every citizen deserves the protection of our laws."

(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)