A Bemidji woman who works as an advocate for a sexual violence center has filed a sex assault report with St. Paul police accusing state Rep. Rod Hamilton of touching her without her consent at his apartment.
The St. Paul Police Department confirmed the report was filed last Friday against Hamilton, a Republican from Mountain Lake in southwestern Minnesota, and that an investigation is ongoing. A spokesman for the Ramsey County Attorney said the office spoke informally to a St. Paul police investigator regarding the allegations, and advised the investigator that more information was necessary before charges could be considered.
"The case is still open and active, but based on the information we currently have we do not feel that there is enough for a criminal case," St. Paul Police spokesman Sgt. Mike Ernster said.
State law says it's a crime for anyone to engage in "nonconsensual sexual contact" that includes touching of a victim's "intimate parts." Emily Schlecht, 23, who filed the police report, told the Star Tribune in an interview that Hamilton did not touch her intimate body parts on the night of April 13, when she stayed at his St. Paul apartment at his invitation.
In an interview Tuesday night with the Star Tribune, Hamilton said the woman misconstrued his actions and that they were not sexual in nature. On Wednesday, Hamilton said he had reported the incident to the human resources department of the state House.
"I will be completely transparent and forthcoming," said Hamilton, 50.
Hamilton released a statement to the media on Thursday in which he said that "I categorically deny accusations of sexual assault." It also said: "I deeply regret the effect my actions had on Ms. Schlecht," saying he now recognized "that it may have caused additional pain and hardship."
In her own statement after the story went public, Schlecht called herself "deeply hurt but also extremely disappointed. I first want to point out that Rep. Hamilton did not sexually assault me in the act of rape or penetration, but he touched me in unwanted ways without my consent." She added that "consent is not just an issue in sexual assault cases, consent is an issue in any form of touch and it was not asked for nor was it granted."