Fung Death Incident Not Alone in Politics

Victor Paul Alvarez, GoLocalProv Contributor

Fung Death Incident Not Alone in Politics

Cranston Mayor Allan Fung is among the few American politicians to seek high office with an accidental death in their past. So few, in fact, that he's almost alone.

When asked for relevant examples to the Fung case, Cook Political Report Senior Editor Jennifer Duffy said "Apart from Ted Kennedy, I can't think of anyone else. No charges/indictment and an expunged record? I'm not sure there is any there, there….."

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Adlai Stevenson (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)
A little digging, however, revealed the "there." To wit:

U.S. political leader and Democratic presidential hopeful Adlai Stevenson shot and killed a 16-year-old girl named Ruth Merwin when he was 12. At a family party in his Bloomington, Ill., home, Stevenson was demonstrating a drill technique he learned at the military academy. Holding an old repeating rifle he didn't know was loaded, he accidentally shot the girl in the forehead. After a formal inquest was held the jury declared the incident was an accident. In 1948 Stevenson was elected governor of Illinois.

Bill Janklow (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)
Bill Janklow, a Republican who holds the record for longest tenure as Governor of South Dakota (16 years), served little more than a year in the United States House of Representatives before resigning in 2004 after being convicted of manslaughter in a car accident. In August of the previous year, Janklow was driving 70 MPH in a 55 MPH zone when he ran a stop sign at a rural intersection near Trent, South Dakota. Motorcyclist Randolph E. Scott, 55, struck Janklow's vehicle, was thrown from the bike and died instantly.

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"I don’t think the two cases are comparable to Allan Fung’s situation," said Darrell M. West of the Brookings Institution.

"The Janklow case had him stepping down because it was a contemporary case involving a legal conviction. Fung’s case was many years ago and there were no legal charges filed against him. The Stevenson case is an accidental shooting, not a car accident."

Better known in these parts is the Chappaquiddick incident that occurred on July 18, 1969. Mary Jo Kopechne, a passenger of the late U.S. Senator Edward M. "Ted" Kennedy, was killed when Kennedy drove his car off a bridge and into a tidal channel on Chappaquiddick Island. Kennedy survived and left the scene, but Kopechne died in the vehicle. Kennedy pleaded guilty to a charge of leaving the scene of an accident after causing injury and received a two-month suspended jail sentence.

Fung, a Candidate for the Republican nomination for Governor, admitted over the weekend that he was responsible for a 1989 traffic accident that killed a man. Fung later had the record expunged, leaving no public record of the arrest or charge. He said the case went to a grand jury and he was not indicted. According to Amy Kempe of the Attorney General's office, this is common. Any individual – convicted of a crime or not – may petition the court to have the record expunged.


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