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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Probe hits hardest at Palin’s husband

Report documents pressure from Alaska’s ‘first dude’

Todd Palin makes an appearance at the Grass Drags and Water Crossing snowmobile event in Fremont, N.H., on Saturday.  (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
By MATT APUZZO Associated Press

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – A month after she became governor, Sarah Palin’s staff ushered Alaska’s public safety commissioner into her private office.

But Palin wasn’t there. Her husband, Todd, had called the meeting. He was frustrated that his former brother-in-law remained on the job as a state trooper, and he prevailed upon the commissioner to get rid of him.

“I thought that was odd and made me a little uncomfortable,” said Walter Monegan, the commissioner, who later was fired by Gov. Palin. “We’re having it in the governor’s office, and he’s not the governor. I think he was trying to use state trappings to handle a personal issue.”

The January 2007 meeting was part of a long pattern of pressure that she and her husband applied on state officials to try to get the trooper fired, according to an Alaska legislative report released Friday. The report said those contacts amounted to an abuse of power and a violation of the state’s ethics laws, which prohibit using public office for personal benefit.

But while the condemnation of now-vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin was the conclusion, the nearly 300-page report by investigator Stephen Branchflower was more about her husband. Todd Palin, the self-described “first dude” of Alaska, had extraordinary access to his wife’s office, her staff and her power.

Todd Palin spent about 50 percent of his time in the governor’s office, making phone calls, participating in meetings or just hanging out, said Gary Wheeler, a member of Gov. Palin’s security detail.

“He had a significant influence, in that he was always interacting with the, the employees there,” Wheeler told state investigators. “Any time I needed to get information to the governor, I would always go through Todd.”

The governor and her staff kept Todd Palin in the loop on a wide range of issues, copying him on e-mails about union matters, public relations and a bill requiring parental consent for abortions.

His efforts to get Mike Wooten, Sarah Palin’s sister’s ex-husband, fired were extensive. Todd Palin held dozens of meetings and phone calls with state officials, alleging that Wooten threatened the Palin family, was too unstable to be a trooper and was cheating the worker’s compensation system.

Todd Palin would not answer a question about the report during a campaign stop Saturday.

But in an affidavit he provided to investigators, he made no apologies.

“I have heard criticism that I am too involved in my wife’s administration,” he wrote. “My wife and I are very close. We are each other’s best friend. I have helped her in her career the best I can, and she has helped me.”

Taylor Griffin, a spokesman for John McCain’s presidential campaign, compared Todd Palin’s role to that of other political spouses.

First lady Eleanor Roosevelt was a vocal player in labor civil rights issues, Hillary Rodham Clinton took on health care while first lady, and Nancy Reagan was a close adviser to her husband.

“The role that Todd has played, I don’t think is dissimilar from other spouses, and I think it’s an entirely appropriate role,” Griffin said.

The legislative probe began as an investigation into whether Palin improperly fired Monegan for resisting efforts to fire Wooten. The report concluded that Monegan’s firing was legal, because Palin had the right to choose her top administrators, but that the pressure Palin and her husband exerted to try to get Wooten fired was improper.