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"Posted on Tue, May. 03, 2005
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Exclusive: Republicans rallying to help Sherwood get past report

Local political observer advises facing issue linked to D.C. ‘domestic incident.’

By BRETT MARCY bmarcy@leader.net

Republicans are circling the wagons around U.S. Rep. Don Sherwood, R-Tunkhannock, in the wake of an incident involving a 29-year-old woman in his Washington, D.C., apartment last September.

“The only thing you have in life is your reputation,” said Marge Matisko, an activist with the Luzerne County Republican Party. “Don Sherwood has always been very well-respected, and he always valued that. This has hurt him personally and professionally, and that’s a shame.”

No one was charged in what police termed a domestic incident.

Despite an absence of charges, Sherwood may have suffered severe political damage, one pundit says.

“He’s sitting on a hot issue, and one that is potentially damaging,” said Thomas Baldino, a political science professor at Wilkes University. “If he’s smart, he’ll just come clean.”

Sherwood did not return calls for comment Monday.

Matisko defended Sherwood’s reputation, saying it may not be necessary for the congressman to disclose everything that happened to the public.

“I don’t know the whole story, and I don’t know that we need to know the whole story,” she said. “I think we need to hold judgment.”

Officials with the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which finances Democratic congressional campaigns, refused to comment.

Sherwood is unlikely to experience much political fallout from the incident, say officials of the Republican National Congressional Committee.

“I’m not sure there are any (repercussions),” said Carl Fonti, RNCC spokesman. “You have an allegation in an incident where there were no charges filed, where the allegations were withdrawn, and it was sent to the newspaper by a political opponent of the congressman who obviously has an ax to grind.”

Baldino, however, argued that Sherwood would be wise to face the controversy head-on, rather than let it fester.

“Truth is the best antidote for a scandal like this,” Baldino said. “If there is no scandal, he should have no problem coming clean. ... You can die by 1,000 cuts from something like this. Until he puts it to rest, it’ll keep coming up. This is a self-inflicted type of wound.”

The incident occurred seven months ago. A partial police report was faxed to numerous newspapers and TV stations last week.

The Times Leader obtained the full report from the Metropolitan Police Department in Washington, which verified the incident.

According to the report:

Police responded to a 911 call on Sept. 15 from Cynthia Ore, 29, of Rockville, Md. She locked herself in a bathroom in Sherwood’s D Street apartment and told operators that Sherwood “choked her for no apparent reason” while giving her a backrub.

Sherwood, 64, told police he was giving Ore a backrub when she “jumped up” and ran to the bathroom.

Police said they saw no visible injuries on Ore’s neck, and Ore later backed off her story when questioned by police.

“Both parties have left out significant information or are not willing to discuss in detail what actually happened,” Washington Metropolitan Police stated in the incident report.

Ore said that she and Sherwood, who is married, have had an ongoing relationship since 1999, when the two met at a Young Republicans meeting. Sherwood has refused to specify the nature of their relationship, calling Ore “an acquaintance.”

Matisko and Sherwood both said they believe the story was leaked as part of a political smear campaign.

Veronica Hannevig, a Constitution Party candidate who faced Sherwood in the 2004 congressional race, faxed some information about the report to the Times Leader. She said someone from Washington mailed her the first page of the incident report on April 26 in an envelope with no return address.

Hannevig, of Simpson, Pa., said she forwarded the report to local media, believing news outlets already had the documents in hand.

Her intent, she said, was to determine why the media had held off on the story.

“I thought you already had it,” Hannevig said Monday. “I do agree with Congressman Sherwood that it’s probably a political thing, maybe someone either in the Democratic or Republican parties who want his seat, that let this loose.”

The 2002 redistricting plan carved out a relatively safe Republican seat for Sherwood’s far-flung 10th Congressional District, with the GOP holding a decided advantage in registered voters.

For that reason, Baldino said it’s more likely that Sherwood could see a Republican upstart in the 2006 primary election rather than a viable Democratic challenger.

“He is inviting a challenge in the primary,” Baldino said. “It’s all in Sherwood’s hands.”

If a Republican challenger does arise, Fonti said RNCC would not back the candidate.

“Ultimately, the RNCC is an incumbent-retention committee, and incumbents have our support,” he said.

Come what may, Matisko stands by Sherwood.

“The congressman is a family man,” she said. “When I think about family values, I think about the Don Sherwoods and Rick Santorums of the world. I have complete faith in Congressman Sherwood.”"
http://www.timesleader.com/mld/timesleader/11549677.htm
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Posted on Thu, Jun. 16, 2005
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Woman alleges congressman abused her in $5.5 million lawsuit

BY KEVIN AMERMAN

Knight Ridder Newspapers

WILKES-BARRE, Pa. - (KRT) - U.S. Rep. Don Sherwood repeatedly punched and choked a Maryland woman during a "five-year intimate relationship" with her, according to a lawsuit filed Wednesday.

Cynthia Ore, 29, of Rockville, Md., says that after each "unprovoked and vicious attack" Sherwood, 64, promised he wouldn't do it again and begged her not to leave him, according to the four-count lawsuit filed by Patrick M. Regan, a prominent Washington, D.C., attorney.

The lawsuit, filed in Superior Court of the District of Columbia, asks for $5.5 million in compensatory and punitive damages and accuses the congressman of assault and battery, gross negligence and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

It also says Ore plans to pursue obtaining a restraining order against Sherwood, R-Pa., forbidding him from having contact with her.

The complaint states that throughout the long-term relationship, Sherwood repeatedly struck Ore on her face, neck, chest and back; violently yanked her hair; and tried to strangle her by placing his hands around her neck.

In the complaint, Ore states she lived with Sherwood in a Washington apartment for much of the relationship and that he repeatedly promised to marry her and start a family.

Ore has previously stated she met Sherwood in 1999 at a Young Republicans event.

Sherwood would not comment on the lawsuit Wednesday. "He hasn't seen the suit and won't have any comment on it tonight," said Sherwood's spokesman, Jake O'Donnell.

According to the suit:

Sherwood assaulted Ore inside his Hill House apartment, a complex occupied mostly by members of Congress, on the morning of June 24, 2004.

Sherwood, who is married and has three daughters, struck Ore on her face and body with a closed fist while she attempted to sleep and he began "violently choking her." "This unprovoked, cowardly, brutal and vicious attack occurred without warning," the suit states. "As a result of this violent assault, the plaintiff suffered substantial physical and emotional injuries."

The lawsuit also describes an alleged attack that caused Ore to call 911 on Sept. 15. It states the attack occurred at about 2:25 p.m. inside the Hill House apartment. Sherwood started an argument with Ore, then "suddenly and without any provocation or justification," Sherwood punched her in the face and body with a closed fist, then choked her, the complaint states.

Ore says she screamed, wiggled away from Sherwood and went into the bathroom, where she turned on the shower in an attempt to hide the sound of the 911 call.

Police responded to the 911 call, but did not file charges. Capitol Police, who are "responsible for protecting members of Congress, officers of the United States Senate, United States House of Representatives, and their families," according to the Capitol Police Web site, arrived at the scene first, but handed the matter over to the Metropolitan Police Department.

Metropolitan Police said they saw no physical evidence of injury to Ore and noted that "both parties have left out significant information or are not willing to discuss in detail what actually happened." Police said Ore "did not appear to be of sound mind" and initially said she was choked, then changed her story, saying "nothing happened."

Ore admits she was dazed and distressed, but denies ever changing her story. She said police seemed more interested in protecting Sherwood than her.

Sherwood has denied choking Ore and has referred to her as a "casual acquaintance." He told police he was giving her a backrub when she "jumped up" and ran to the bathroom.

Sherwood has not returned phone calls to the Wilkes-Barre Times Leader about the incident since April 29, when he tried to convince an editor not to publish a story on Ore's contentions. Three days after the story ran, Sherwood issued a faxed statement apologizing for causing his family and supporters "pain and embarrassment."

The lawsuit also says on Sept. 22, Sherwood threatened Ore, saying he'd harm her if she made any further attempts to tell police about the assaults. Ore has been required to seek hospital attention "as a result of many of the assaults," and has incurred medical expenses, the lawsuit states.

Ore has had lacerations on her face, bruises on her head, neck and other parts of her body and injuries to her teeth, mouth, gums, back, neck and scalp, according to the suit. Ore "has feared and continues to fear for her life and has suffered serious emotional and physical injuries," the complaint states.

Ore recently hired Regan to take the case. She previously hired the Stein Sperling law firm based in Rockville to obtain medical records and police documents, but is no longer working with the firm.

Sherwood represents the 10th Congressional District, which includes all of Bradford, Montour, Northumberland, Pike, Snyder, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Union, Wayne and Wyoming counties and parts of Lackawanna, Luzerne and Lycoming counties.

Sherwood has been a supporter of conservative family values since he was first elected to the seat in 1998. While he has hardly led the conservative charge on social issues, GOP leaders in the House have come to rely upon his vote when bills pertaining to "traditional family values" come to the floor.


http://www.macon.com/mld/macon/news/nation/11908988.htm
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Scandal shadows Northeast Pa. congressman, hometown
Saturday, July 30, 2005

By Bill Toland, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/05211/546213.stm

TUNKHANNOCK, Pa. -- In this old lumber town, part of the state's conservative northeast, the Sherwoods are the local version of the Kennedys: wealthy, iconic and, now, because of U.S. Rep. Donald L. Sherwood, knee-deep in scandal.

Sherwood, 64, a Republican, is embroiled in a salacious, he-said, she-said affair with a Peruvian-born woman named Cynthia Ore, 29. Ore alleges that her five-year relationship with Sherwood, who is married with three grown daughters, turned violent.

News of the relationship began to dribble out of Washington, D.C., at the end of April, when a political foe sent a copy of a police report to the Times Leader of Wilkes-Barre and other papers. The report, and the newspaper story that followed, said police visited Sherwood's Washington apartment in September after Ore called 911 to tell police that, during the course of a back rub, Sherwood had tried to choke her.

He denied that, saying he never choked her, and that she was the one who interrupted the back rub when she "jumped up" and went to the bathroom to call 911.

No criminal charges were filed, but a civil suit has been. In June, Ore sued Sherwood for $5.5 million, saying he bruised her, punched her and yanked her hair, and that police didn't take her charges seriously. She stayed with him through the abuse, the suit says, because Sherwood promised to marry her. Sherwood, while saying Ore's lawsuit, in general, and the accusations of abuse, in particular, are without merit, has admitted to the affair.

He'd kept quiet, offering only a quick apology for the "pain" he's caused, until 10 days ago, when he filed his response to Ore's lawsuit and issued a more in-depth statement:

"For about five years, I had an affair I deeply regret," the statement says. "Although it was intermittent and ended last year, nothing I say can diminish the pain and hurt I have caused my wife and family. While I can't change or erase what I did, I accept full responsibility for my behavior, and I apologize to my wife, my family and to the people I represent in Congress."

He added, "I want to be absolutely clear that I never physically hurt or abused Ms. Ore. I will defend myself to the fullest extent possible against these malicious and baseless allegations." In the court papers, filed in Washington, D.C., Sherwood says he can't remember how he met Ore, while Ore says they met at a Young Republicans meeting in 1999.

Ore's attorney, Patrick Regan, declined to comment on Sherwood's statement.

Around Sherwood's rural, 13-county congressional district, people are just as likely to be suspicious as they are to be sympathetic. Sherwood's reputation as an upstanding, family-values politician is now sullied by the scent of hypocrisy, some say.

"My problem is not with the fact that the guy decided to fool around. Guys do that," said John Braun, a retiree and registered Republican who lives 15 miles west of Tunkhannock. Braun's problem, he said, is that he feels his intelligence has been insulted by Sherwood's story that Ore abruptly "jumped up" and ran to the bathroom in mid-back rub, for no good reason.

"To me, that doesn't ring like an event that could have actually occurred that way," Braun said.

But in leafy Tunkhannock, where Sherwood's name still graces the wall of a main street car dealership, the man is more likely to be given doubt's benefit.

"He's human," said Paul Litwin III, a lawyer with an office on Tunkhannock's short business strip. He noted that police had investigated Ore's September phone call and declined to press charges. "If she's lying about that, there's a possibility that she's lying about the abuse," Litwin said. He added that "any type of abuse" would be unforgiveable if Ore's accounts were proven true.

But if they're not true, Sherwood's affair was private, Litwin said, and shouldn't have played out in the papers. "Most people I speak with are more sympathetic toward the family than disgusted toward him," he said.

[What about Clinton's private affair with Lewinsky? He was impeached over it!]

Many defenders in this town were reluctant to talk about Sherwood's fortunes, protective of one of their own. The Sherwoods still keep a home and do business here, eating at in-town restaurants and buying arrangements from the local florist.

In his pre-Congress life, Sherwood lived by the all-American model of service and hard work. He went to Dartmouth College, joined the Army, opened a car dealership at age 26. When his father died, Sherwood inherited part of the family estate, worth $1.4 million at the time.

Sherwood's supporters think so much of him here that a local media chain, Times Shamrock Communications, initially declined to cover the Sherwood saga, which most newspapers or TV outlets would have considered newsworthy. After the police report became public, The Scranton Times, one of three papers in the chain, criticized the Times Leader for writing about it.

"Where is the connection between the politician's private moral life and his public performance?" Lawrence Beaupre, managing editor of The Scranton Times, wrote in a letter to his readers. The Times Leader, he said, was guilty of "sanctimonious self-righteousness" in its decision to publish a story.

Times Leader Managing Editor David Iseman answered in a column of his own, saying that the "alliance" of papers and TV stations that initially declined to report on the hubbub was neglecting its duty. He said the inter-media sparring "kind of wasted a little bit of our time."

The papers are 20 miles away from each other. The Tribune and The Citizens' Voice of Wilkes-Barre, the two other Shamrock papers, also refused to write about Sherwood, at first.

Whether the allegations affect Sherwood's political career is unclear. His district is heavily Republican, and no Democrat has challenged him since his second congressional race in 2000, when he defeated Pat Casey, son of the late governor and brother of state Treasurer Robert P. Casey Jr.

GOP colleagues are offering support, with U.S. Sen. Rick Santorum, of Penn Hills, doing so during a recent visit to the area.

[This should be run in ads against Santorum]

"I don't know how that's going to shake out," Santorum said, quoted by the Times Leader. "All I would suggest is that, again, until we know all the facts, [we] look at the job that Congressman Sherwood is doing and make decisions based on the facts."

Some Democrats are lining up to challenge Sherwood, believing that he's weakened. And at least one Republican politician, state Rep. Jerry Birmelin, R-Wayne, said he would consider a run at the seat, but only if Sherwood stepped aside. (Sherwood has no plans to do so, saying he's running for re-election next year.)

Tunkhannock's parable on lust and fallibility wouldn't be complete without a lesson in mercy. Heather Johns, who owns Reese Florist and the next-door bridal boutique, said even if Ore's abuse charges prove to be true, Sherwood ought to be forgiven by his town. "I don't think anybody should be judging him on one incident," she said.
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(Bill Toland can be reached at btoland@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1889.)
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