Accuser of Seattle mayor wants to drop sex abuse lawsuit

By Associated Press 15 June 2017, 12:00AM

SEATTLE (AP) — A man who accused Seattle Mayor Ed Murray of sexually abusing him when he was a teenager has asked a court to dismiss the lawsuit he filed against the mayor.

"Delvonn Heckard is only delaying his lawsuit until the mayor is out of power," Heckard's lawyer, Lincoln Beauregard, said Wednesday on Twitter.

In a motion filed Tuesday, Beauregard said Heckard feels it would be wise to complete his extensive counseling and recovery before moving forward with the case.

He said in the motion that Heckard determined it would be better for the success of the case and the citizens of Seattle if it went forward after Murray was out of office next year.

In an email to The Associated Press Wednesday, the lawyer said, "we look forward to winning."

Murray dropped his re-election bid because of the lawsuit that claimed he paid Heckard for sex in the 1980s. Murray said it was better for the city if he didn't run for a second term.

At a news conference Wednesday, Murray said the sex abuse allegations were not true.

He said the lawsuit was a painful experience for him, his husband, his family, the city of Seattle and the "vulnerable people who seem to have been exploited by a lawyer" with a political agenda.

"I believe the withdrawal of this lawsuit vindicates me," Murray said, adding he was considering his options, legally and politically.

At this point, his only option for seeking a new term as mayor would be as a write-in candidate. He said he has not had time to seriously consider that possibility.

His lawyers, Malaika Eaton and Robert Sulkin, filed a motion on May 24 saying the lawsuit should be dismissed.

They argued that Heckard had failed to state a legitimate claim and that his sex-abuse claims are barred by Washington's statute of limitations. They also said Murray should be reimbursed for legal costs.

Heckard's lawsuit, filed in April, claims Murray paid Heckard, now 46 and living in suburban Seattle, for sex three decades ago.

Two other men claimed in interviews with The Seattle Times that Murray abused them in the 1980s when they lived in an Oregon center for troubled children.

After Heckard filed his lawsuit a third man also said Murray paid him for sex when he was a teenager decades ago.

Those three men were not part of the Heckard lawsuit and Murray's spokesman has said that Murray never had "inappropriate relations with any minor."

The suit was filed as Murray became a high-profile critic of President Donald Trump. At the time, Murray spokesman Jeff Reading said the case was politically motivated and timed to derail the mayor's re-election bid.

Beauregard's motion claims Murray's lawyers and his former campaign team "have successfully tainted the jury pool with false information about the accusers." A judge previously rejected Beauregard's request to move the trial out of the city.

The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are a victim of sex abuse, but Heckard has said he wanted his name made public.

By Associated Press 15 June 2017, 12:00AM
Samoa Observer

Upgrade to Premium

Subscribe to
Samoa Observer Online

Enjoy unlimited access to all our articles on any device + free trial to e-Edition. You can cancel anytime.

>