|
News
Bennington Comes Out With Pride
Openly Gay and Lesbian Candidates Campaign in VT
Four Vie for Two Legislative Seats
VT Equal Marriage Advocates Hail Advance in NJ
R.U.1.2?, SafeSpace Hold Open House
Vermont Briefs
Passings
Rhode Islanders May Marry in Mass.
Rita Phelps Opposes Jim Mongeon
The Rest of Our World
Features
Editorial
Letters
to the Editor
Arts
Community
Compass
Comics
|

Vermont Elections: Rita Phelps Opposes Jim Mongeon Gay Supporters on Opposite Sides in Rutland Co. State's Attorney Race
by
Lynn McNicol
BRANDON - Political newcomer Rita
Phelps wants to stomp out crime in Rutland County, and she's running
for office to do just that. Phelps is opposing incumbent Republican
Jim Mongeon who is state's attorney for this central Vermont county.
Phelps has the support of Leo Porter,
a Brandon resident who was stalked and harassed for years by a neighbor
who used abusive language and homophobic slurs against him. Neither
the Brandon police and nor the Rutland County state's attorney managed
to remedy the situation, Porter charges, and he's ready for a change.
Mongeon is also supported by a campaigner
who is gay: Steve Howard, a Democratic representative from Rutland.
Howard is working on behalf of Mongeon, an incumbent he believes is
still the best person for the job.
Phelps, who is running as an Independent, says she is "an avid
victims' advocate." She emphasizes that drug-related crimes are
on the increase in Rutland County, and she plans if elected to hold
more trials instead of settling so many cases. Although not an attorney,
Phelps, as a paralegal, says she has worked on behalf of crime victims
in many areas including domestic violence, child abuse and disability
law.
Born in Brandon, Phelps studied
at Johnson State College and focused on paralegal studies at Woodbury
College. She says she became involved in victims' rights legislation
as a volunteer after her divorce and subsequent discovery of sexual
abuse within her own family. Phelps later remarried and moved with her
second husband to Florida for a time, then returned to Brandon.
Phelps now works for Vermont Protection
and Advocacy, a nonprofit that works for the rights of people living
with disabilities.
If elected, Phelps said she will support
police departments, negotiate for long sentences for drug dealers, and
enforce domestic violence restraining orders and truancy laws.
"The Rutland County State's
Attorneys Office, under James Mongeon's leadership, is notorious among
attorneys who defend criminals, as being easier to settle a case with
than any other state's attorney's office in the region," Phelp's
Web site charges.
Leo Porter, the homophobically harassed
Brandon resident, works as Phelp's campaign publicist, and supports
her contention that Mongeon has not been tough enough on criminals.
"I myself [...] was victimized
by neighbors with years of hate crimes that were never prosecuted even
though piles of affidavits and evidence that was delivered to his office;
that is why I am so dedicated to this cause," Porter told OITM.
Porter's story was reported in Seven
Days newspaper ("Bullied in Brandon," Sept. 29-Oct. 6, 2004).
Porter, who lived with his mother, uncle and brother, said when the
Martels moved in next door a number of years before, everything seemed
to be fine. But within a couple of years, harassment, primarily from
David Martel, Sr., suddenly began, then escalated and persisted for
years.
"We have no clue," Porter
told Seven Days. "The only conclusion we can come to is that he
[David Martel] assumed I was a homosexual." Much of Martel's language
repeated in the news story is threatening and homophobic toward Porter.
Despite numerous phone calls to Brandon
police over the three-year period, only Sgt. Laurie Krupp responded
by thoroughly investigating the complaints. Krupp said that other officers
not only refused to take Porter's complaints seriously, but verbalized
"unprofessional comments" in regard to Leo Porter, the report
said.
Porter, who eventually won a hate-crimes
protection order, and later came out as a gay man, said that order was
also violated. After his mother died, he did not feel like pursuing
the violations, he said. He said the Martels have since moved out of
state.
Phelps said she was not living in Vermont
at the time of Porter's ordeal. However, when she was a crime victim
herself in Rutland County, Phelps said that the state's attorney office
didn't provide the help she needed. "The state's attorney office
does not respond to you."
"Only since I've started running
[for office] have they stood up in court and asked for lengthier sentences,"
Phelps maintained. While acknowledging that trials are expensive, Phelps
said she is especially concerned that the arrival of "major drug
dealers" arriving from New York and Massachusetts are "having
a devastating impact" on Rutland County. She cited increases in
crimes involving credit cards, burglaries, and armed robberies that
"didn't used to exist" in the area.
Mongeon has faced election opposition
only one other time in his 26 years as state's attorney. He is running
on both the Republican and Democratic tickets this year.
Rep. Steve Howard introduced a resolution
in the state legislature honoring Mongeon's service to the community.
Howard spoke of Mongeon as someone very involved in the community, including
joining Green-Up Days and working with the Rutland United Neighborhood
as a way to combat crime.
"My experience with him is
that he's very responsible and very eager to help victims of crime,"
Howard said. "I believe Jim does the best job he can with the resources
provided." Asked about the harassment against Porter and his family,
Howard said it was "the first I've heard of it," and he could
not comment on the case.
7 Days reported in its story that the
attorney general's office was involved with the case. Mongeon also would
not comment on Porter's case. "I don't comment on attorney general
cases," he told OITM. "I don't recall how the attorney general
(became) involved," he said.
Mongeon has four attorneys in his office.
He said one attorney handles mostly motor vehicle and DUI cases; one
takes care of juvenile, family and domestic abuse cases; a third handles
the remainder of domestic abuse and sexual assault cases, and misdemeanors,
and the fourth attorney primarily covers drug court, felonies and misdemeanors.
"I handle all of the homicide and
death" cases, Mongeon said, plus escapes, other felonies and aggravated
assault cases.
He said in working together with the
U.S. Attorney General's office on drug-related crimes, "dozens
of persons" have been indicted and sent to federal prison.
As for settling cases, Mongeon said "we
look at where the issues are" when reviewing cases brought to him
by police. Many times, cases don't need to go to trial. It's also a
matter of resources, as trials take time and money from other work that
needs to be done.
He said a victim's advocate works in
the state's attorneys office and helps victims of crimes "depending
on what the person needs."
Mongeon said it's "very clear the
state's attorney needs to be an attorney."
"I think the people in any county
need to have a state's attorney ... an attorney who can go into court,
present cases and argue motions," Mongeon said. If the state's
attorney was not an attorney, "that would have a major negative
impact on the office," he said.
Phelps said if she is elected state's
attorney, she will be handling the agenda and decisions about sending
cases to reparative justice and diversion. She said she will reassign
cases within the office, and that there may be staff changes, as well
as budget considerations that may permit the hiring of a part-time attorney.
Phelps said she is not simply running
against Mongeon, but because she wants to work to stop the growing problem
of crime in the Rutland area.
"It's the larger issue of what's
going on in the county," she said.
|