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Tim Eyman Charged with Misdemeanor Theft; His Attorneys Calls it an Accident

Politics

Tim Eyman Charged with Misdemeanor Theft; His Attorneys Calls it an Accident

City prosecutors on Tuesday filed a misdemeanor theft charge against anti-tax crusader Tim Eyman six days after store surveillance video showed him wheeling a chair out of an Office Depot in Lacey.

Responding to the charge, Eyman’s attorneys quickly issued a news release and statement from their client, contending the entire episode was an honest mistake caused partly by Eyman receiving a phone call that distracted him after he returned to the store to pay for merchandise and services.

“I did not, shortly after giving legislative testimony in Olympia, walk into an Office Depot in Lacey wearing a bright red `Let The Voters Decide’ t-shirt, smile for the cameras, and steal a $70 chair just moments before spending $300 on 2 printers and after getting some life-changing good news,” Eyman said in the statement issued by the Puget Law Group. “The reason that doesn’t make any sense is because it doesn’t make any sense. It’s ridiculous; it’s insane, it’s completely unbelievable.”

Lacey City Prosecutor Joseph Svoboda has filed one count of theft against Eyman early Tuesday in Thurston District Court. The offense is a gross misdemeanor, carries a maximum of 364 days in jail and/or a $5,000 fine. A hearing is yet to be scheduled.

Lacey Police referred the allegation to public prosecutors after Office Depot employees noticed a display chair missing from the store’s entryway, reviewed surveillance video, recognized Eyman and called the police.

As per the video, Eyman — wearing the bright-red “Let The Voters Decide” shirt — looking around and circling the store’s lobby, before walking through the store’s anti-theft devices into the entry vestibule. In the video, Eyman can be watched sitting, reclining and spinning around three times in a rolling office chair, before he stands up and wheels it out of the store.

After a minute of wheeling the chair out, Eyman returned to the store, where he printed and scanned some documents, exchanged a printer and bought two new ones for $249, according to the police report.

“He acted wary when I told him I would help him take the printers out to the car,” a store employee told police. “When we got to his vehicle, he insisted I leave the printers on the ground next to his vehicle.”

Eyman got to know about this when he was on vacation in Florida with his family after the story hit the news Friday and “his phone started blowing up,” according to his lawyer, Casey Arbenz.

But the way Eyman and his attorney is explaining it seems like an accident.

Eyman has been filing anti-tax initiatives for more than two decades. He says he’s been struggling financially since being sued by state Attorney General Bob Ferguson, who alleges that Eyman has used money donated to his initiative campaigns to enrich himself. Eyman’s company, Watchdog for Taxpayers, has been held in contempt of court and fined $500 a day for nearly a year for not handing over documents relevant to the lawsuit.

Last year, he also filed for bankruptcy and divorce and claimed that the lawsuit and legal costs had pushed his finances to the breaking point.

Last week, Eyman had been testifying before the state Legislature in Olympia, and afterward, went to the Office Depot that he regularly patronizes for printing and other services, Arbenz said.

“Tim was buying multiple things and getting some copying and printing done there, and while waiting, he saw the chair, he sat down in it, and he liked the chair,” Arbenz said. “He didn’t want anyone else to get the chair, so he wheeled it outside and put it in his truck. But then he went back in, fully intending to pay for it as he was buying a couple of hundred dollars worth of stuff.”

As per Eyman’s statement, while he was waiting in the checkout line, he took a call from “the prestigious Institute of Free Speech out of Virginia about representing me for free” in his legal defense to Ferguson’s lawsuit.

“As we talked, I went through the process of paying (this weekend I checked it out — my cell phone records show our phone conversation started before and ended after the purchase),” Eyman said in his statement. “As I left the store, I thought all was paid for and was focused on the phenomenal news that I might finally have legal counsel the State couldn’t veto. I was ecstatic.”

Arbenz also said Eyman tried to contend that before leaving the store. He told the checkout employee to add the chair onto his purchases, “but apparently the employee didn’t hear him.”

“Tim thought he had bought the chair,” Arbenz said. “So he went out to his truck and left. The next day, he and his family got on a plane to Florida.”

After the news broke in, Arbenz and his law firm agreed to handle the case for Eyman for free. The law firm also tried to contact Office Depot to offer to return the chair or pay for it, and the lawyers also unsuccessfully attempted to reach the Lacey city prosecutor to relate Eyman’s account of what happened.

“Unfortunately, nobody got back to us,” Arbenz said. “We had hoped to head this off before they filed charges.”

Upon asking why Eyman would do that, Arbenz responded: “That’s a fair question. That’s not something I would normally do. But I get the impression that Tim was buying a lot of stuff there already, and also he’s in that Office Depot a fair amount. I mean, he knows the store manager by his first name.”

John Rivera

John Rivera joined WashingtonNewsZ as a multimedia journalist last year. He grew up in Washington and holds Master Degree in English language and literature. Before joining our team, he worked as a freelance news writer and have written a number of news posts with a background of crime scenes. But from last year, he contributes articles of different categories like finance, education, lifestyle and more.

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