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Aqua
10-31-2007, 03:17 PM
By CHET BROKAW

PIERRE, S.D. — A former state lawmaker was wrong to tell two foster daughters he could help them make money by selling their reproductive eggs, but his physical examinations of the girls did not amount to rape, his defense lawyer said Tuesday as the trial opened.

The girls allowed former state Rep. Ted Klaudt to conduct the exams, and both were older than 16 — the age of consent — at the time, defense lawyer Tim Rensch told jurors in his opening statement at Klaudt's rape trial.

"This was not the product of force. This was not the product of coercion," Rensch said. "It's something that was immoral and wrong, but it was not forcible rape."

Assistant Attorney General Patricia DeVaney said Klaudt used lies and manipulation to rape the girls under the pretense that he was determining whether they were healthy enough to sell their eggs to infertile couples.

Klaudt committed second-degree rape when he used coercion to touch the girls' breasts and penetrate them with his fingers and a sex toy, DeVaney told jurors.

The 49-year-old farmer and rancher is charged with four counts of second-degree rape in Hughes County for offenses alleged to have happened while he was in Pierre, the capital, during the 2005 and 2006 legislative sessions. If convicted, he could face as many as 25 years in prison on each count.

Klaudt also faces charges of rape, other sex offenses, witness tampering and stalking in Corson County, where he lives. The trial on those charges is scheduled to begin Nov. 13.

A law enforcement officer testified Tuesday about his initial questioning of Klaudt in February in Klaudt's home.

The jury listened to a two-hour recording of the interview in which Klaudt initially denies conducting any of the exams involved in the egg-donation scheme. By the end of the interview, Klaudt admitted that he had done the tests, touched the girls' breasts and helped obtain vaginal fluid.

Klaudt also acknowledged that he sent one of the girls e-mails from a woman who purportedly worked for an egg-donation organization. The e-mails urged the girl to let Klaudt do the exams, but Klaudt said he created an e-mail account to pose as the woman.

Klaudt denied an agent's suggestion that he had developed a sexual attraction for one of the girls. "I had no sexual feelings" for the girl, he said in the recording.

Prosecutors say the offenses occurred over several years when the girls ranged in age from 15 to 19 and were under foster care provided by Klaudt and his wife. The teens were among a number of girls sent to Klaudt's home as part of a program that provides foster care for young people who have no safe home to return to after completing time in South Dakota's juvenile corrections programs.

The girls told law officers that the physical exams were part of a scheme by which they could sell their eggs for $10,000 or more, according to court documents.

Klaudt, a Republican, served eight years in the South Dakota House from 1999 to 2006. After reaching his term limit last year, he ran for state Senate but lost to his Democratic challenger.

WildIrish
11-01-2007, 11:55 AM
Klaudt, a Republican, served eight years in the South Dakota House from 1999 to 2006. After reaching his term limit last year, he ran for state Senate but lost to his Democratic challenger.



Well...now he has another kind of term to look forward to. :p