PHOENIX â The chair of the House Ethics Committee wonât pursue a complaint by Rep. Mark Finchem against Democratic lawmakers.
Rep. Becky Nutt, R-Clifton, pointed out on Friday how she had dismissed 82 complaints filed against Finchem, concluding there was nothing there meriting further examination. They all raised allegations about his activities leading up to the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol and what he did there that day.
Finchem, an Oro Valley Republican, responded with his own complaint earlier this week, saying the Democrats acted improperly in a separate move where they asked the FBI and the U.S. Justice Department to investigate him.
Nutt, in a letter to Finchem, said his complaint suffers from the same shortcomings as the ones leveled against him.
âThe ethics committee is not an arena for waging political contests,â she wrote. âThat is true whether the subject of a complaint are individual Republicans (as before) or nearly the entire Democratic caucus (as here).â
Nutt was careful to say she was reaching no conclusion on Finchemâs contention that the Democrats, in seeking a federal inquiry, had violated federal laws about public officials making false statements.
âThe ethics committee also is not a court of law,â she told Finchem.
âSo, while I express no view on the legal merits of Rep. Finchemâs claims, I also conclude that the ethics committee should take no action.â
Nuttâs decision does not entirely end the matter.
Finchem filed the same complaint with the Senate Ethics Committee against the 14 Democrats in that chamber who signed the request to the FBI and Justice Department for an investigation.
Sen. Sine Kerr, R-Buckeye, who chairs that panel, is not expected to respond until next week.
But the Senate has slightly different rules. Even if Kerr were to decide not to pursue the matter, she could be overruled if three of the five members of the committee â made up of three Republicans and two Democrats â vote to pursue it.
Finchem did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Photos: After Rescue, Red-Tailed Hawk Released back into Wild in Tucson
Red-Tailed Hawk Release
Updated
Chris Hatfield watches the red-tailed hawk he rescued on January 25 along the I-10 highway fly away at the Rancho Valencia Recreation Area, 6964 S Silverweed Lane in Tucson, Ariz., on February 18, 2021. Hatfield noticed the injured hawk as he was driving by and turned around to investigate. He brought the hawk home for a couple of days before contacting Tucson Wildlife Center. The hawk had suffered severe head trauma, bleeding from the right ear and blood in the right eye. The female adult may have been struck by a car.
Red-Tailed Hawk Release
Updated
Ashley Kramer, an associate veterinarian, right, carries a red-tailed hawk in an animal carrier as Chris Hatfield, follows behind before releasing the hawk at the Rancho Valencia Recreation Area, 6964 S Silverweed Lane in Tucson, Ariz., on February 18, 2021.
Red-Tailed Hawk Release
Updated
Ashley Kramer, an associate veterinarian, left, helps Chris Hatfield release a red-tailed hawk at the Rancho Valencia Recreation Area, 6964 S Silverweed Lane in Tucson, Ariz., on February 18, 2021.
Red-Tailed Hawk Release
Updated
Chris Hatfield watches the red-tailed hawk he rescued on January 25 along the I-10 highway come out of the animal carrier at the Rancho Valencia Recreation Area, 6964 S Silverweed Lane in Tucson, Ariz., on February 18, 2021.
Red-Tailed Hawk Release
Updated
Chris Hatfield watches the red-tailed hawk he rescued on January 25 along the I-10 highway fly away at the Rancho Valencia Recreation Area, 6964 S Silverweed Lane in Tucson, Ariz., on February 18, 2021.
Red-Tailed Hawk Release
Updated
After being released, the red-tailed hawk rescued from the side of the road by Chris Hatfield, sits in a nearby tree for about 10 minutes before flying away at the Rancho Valencia Recreation Area, 6964 S Silverweed Lane in Tucson, Ariz., on February 18, 2021.



