Jim Gibbons (U.S. politician)

Jim Gibbons
28th Governor of Nevada
In office
January 1, 2007  January 3, 2011
Lieutenant Lorraine Hunt
Brian Krolicki
Preceded by Kenny Guinn
Succeeded by Brian Sandoval
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Nevada's 2nd district
In office
January 3, 1997  December 31, 2006
Preceded by Barbara Vucanovich
Succeeded by Dean Heller
Personal details
Born James Arthur Gibbons
(1944-12-16) December 16, 1944
Sparks, Nevada, U.S.
Political party Republican
Spouse(s) Dawn Snelling (1985–2010)
Children 3
Alma mater University of Nevada, Reno
Southwestern University
University of Southern California
Air Command and Staff College
Air University
Religion Mormonism
Military service
Allegiance  United States
Service/branch  United States Air Force
Years of service 1967–1971
1975–1996
Rank Colonel[1]
Unit Air National Guard
Battles/wars Vietnam War
Gulf War
Awards Legion of Merit
Distinguished Flying Cross

James Arthur "Jim" Gibbons (born December 16, 1944) is an American attorney, aviator, geologist, hydrologist and politician. He served as the 28th Governor of the U.S. state of Nevada from 2007 to 2011. He is a former member of the United States House of Representatives, having served from 1997 to 2006. He is a member of the Republican Party.

Biography

Gibbons was born in Sparks, Nevada. Gibbons interrupted his studies at the University of Nevada, Reno, during the Vietnam War to serve in the United States Air Force (1967–1971). He also attended Southwestern Law School in Los Angeles, California and the University of Southern California for post-graduate studies. A graduate of the U.S. Air Force Air Command and Staff College and the Air War College, he joined the Nevada Air National Guard in 1975 and served as its vice commander from 1990 to 1996, participating in the first Gulf War. During his military career, Gibbons earned nineteen service medals, including the Legion of Merit and Distinguished Flying Cross. In civilian life, he has worked as a lawyer in private practice, an airline pilot for both Western Airlines and Delta Air Lines, a hydrologist and a geologist. Gibbons is a nonpracticing Latter-day Saint.[2]

Personal life

Gibbons has been married twice and has three children. He married Dawn Gibbons in 1985; they have a son, born in 1987. Dawn Gibbons did not move to Washington to live with her husband while he served in Congress, saying she preferred to raise their son in Nevada. She herself was elected to the Nevada State Assembly in 1998, two years after Jim Gibbons was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. On May 2, 2008, Gibbons filed for divorce,[3][4] citing grounds of incompatibility stemming from an undisclosed event in Reno, Nevada and requesting the court to determine whether Gibbons or his wife would live at the governor's mansion.

In April 2009, Gibbons was living in Reno; his wife, Dawn, remained in the governor's mansion in Carson City. An 1866 state law requires that governor must "keep his office and reside at the seat of government". A spokesman for Gibbons described the move by the governor back to the couple's Reno home, which they had owned since 1989, as a temporary situation and said there was no violation of the law.[5] By April 2009, Dawn was living in an apartment near the mansion rather than in it.[6]

Divorce proceedings were stayed upon agreement of living separately pending the suit. Dawn accused Jim of "infatuation and involvement with the wife of a Reno doctor”, but he stated the woman is just a friend. In March–April 2007, he sent 860 text messages in one month to the woman.[7] He later reimbursed the state $130 for the cost of the messages.[6] In June 2008, he was seen with former Playboy model Leslie Durant at the Reno Rodeo.[8] Durant is particularly prominent not solely because of her nude Playboy appearance, because she was once married to Pete Sferrazza, the former mayor of Reno.[6]

On April 6, 2009, a judge in Washoe County Family Court ordered the records of the divorce proceedings unsealed. Dawn's papers alleged that Jim was unfaithful with Durant and with the woman who received the 860 messages and "has had similar relationships with many other women during the marriage".[6] She also referenced her humiliation at standing beside him when her husband attempted to defend himself from allegations of attempted sexual assault shortly before the 2006 election.[6] See "sexual assault allegation" below.

Jim Gibbons' divorce filings stated that he wanted his wife out of the Governor's Mansion because she was aggressive: "It was once said in another context that being in close quarters with such a volatile person was like being locked in a phone booth with an enraged ferret".[6]

In January 2010, the couple negotiated and completed an out-of-court divorce agreement. The divorce was finalized on July 21, 2010.

On September 21, 2010, Gibbons fell off and was kicked by a horse, resulting in a broken pelvis. Surgeons implanted temporary ten-inch and eight-inch (203 mm) bolts to assist in the healing, and Gibbons was forced to conduct official business via telephone conferences in a rehabilitation center in Reno.[9]

Political career

Gibbons served in the Nevada State Assembly from 1989 to 1993, during which time he and his Nevada Air National Guard unit was called to active service in the U.S. Air Force for the Gulf War. During this period, he served as a pilot and Flight Leader flying the RF-4C Phantom II reconnaissance aircraft. During the conflict, he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for extraordinary achievement while participating in a mission in which he flew his unarmed aircraft on a reconnaissance mission to acquire politically sensitive imagery of enemy targets in Kuwait.

1994 gubernatorial election

While working as a pilot for Delta Air Lines and serving as an assemblyman in the Nevada House, Gibbons ran for Nevada governor in 1994. As the Republican nominee, he lost to Democratic incumbent Bob Miller, having received 156,875 votes to Miller's 200,026.

U.S. Congress

In 1996, Barbara Vucanovich, the only representative that the 2nd District had known since Nevada was split into districts in 1983, announced her retirement. Gibbons won a crowded eight-way Republican primary—the real contest in this heavily Republican district—and breezed to victory in November. He was reelected four times with no substantive opposition, including a 1998 run in which he faced no major-party opposition.

Gibbons served as vice chairman of the House Resources Committee, and he was a member of the Armed Services Committee, the Homeland Security Committee and the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. His long-time congressional Chief of Staff, Michael Dayton, was replaced in 2002 by legislative director Robert Uithoven. Uithoven served on Gibbons' staff for many years, including four years as chief of staff. He later served as campaign manager for Gibbons' successful 2006 Gubernatorial campaign. Uithoven was not given a gubernatorial position. His predecessor, Michael Dayton, was named as the governor's top aide.

2006 gubernatorial election

Gibbons announced in late 2004 that he would not run for a sixth term in the U.S. House of Representatives in 2006, instead opting to run for Governor of Nevada. He won the August 15, 2006, Republican primary handily, defeating state senator Bob Beers and Lieutenant Governor Lorraine Hunt. In the general election (described as "most contentious, ugly and negative in history"[10]) he faced Democratic nominee Dina Titus, who was the Minority Leader in the Nevada State Senate. Gibbons received 278,984 votes to Titus's 255,675. Titus won Clark County, Nevada's most populous, but Gibbons won every other county. Gibbons called Titus "an admirable opponent", although Titus declined to echo his sentiments, saying "We disagree on basic policies, and neither one of us is going to change our minds for the other".[10]

Gibbons resigned his House seat on New Year's Eve, and was sworn in as governor just after midnight on New Year's Day, a highly irregular event in Nevada history. Many believe Gibbons did this in order to undo a late term appointment to the position of Nevada's Gaming Control Board Chairman by his predecessor, Governor Kenny Guinn.[11]

2010 gubernatorial election

Gibbons has been the subject of a number of scandals and controversies, both professional and personal, that caused speculation that he would not seek a second term as governor.[12] Gibbons did file for re-election in March 2010. On June 9, 2010, he lost the Republican nomination for his re-election bid to former federal judge Brian Sandoval—who went on to win the general election and become the 29th Governor of Nevada.[13][14][15][16] Upon leaving office his official portrait, painted by artist Michele Rushworth was unveiled and installed at the state capitol in Carson City, Nevada.

Gubernatorial initiatives

Support for the Yucca Mountain nuclear repository

In July 2007, Gibbons approved a plan to let the U.S. Department of Energy use the state's water to explore the planned Yucca Mountain nuclear waste site.[17] According to the Las Vegas Sun, "Neither Gibbons nor his aides have offered public explanations for the governor’s perplexing moves. In particular, they have not explained how giving federal authorities more time to build a case for Yucca Mountain or appointing a Yucca advocate to the nuclear projects board could possibly be interpreted as being in line with the state’s opposition to the plan."[18] Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV) said "this amounts to surrendering in Nevada's decades-long fight against the project".[17] Rep. Shelley Berkley (D-NV) said “This demonstrates to me that he either doesn’t know what he’s doing or he’s reversed his position.”[18]

During an April 23, 2010, debate for the Republican gubernatorial primary, Gibbons further confused his actual stance on Yucca Mountain by taking positions both favoring and opposing the federal waste dump over a two-minute period of time.[19] "Gibbons then said he believed nuclear waste can be transported safely and that 'I can tell you, you can store it safely.'"[19] However, when questioned by the moderator, Gibbons said he supported shutting down the Yucca Mountain facility.[19]

Mexican reimbursement

In August 2007, Governor Gibbons attempted to obtain reimbursement for the health care of Mexican nationals from the Mexican government. He did not succeed.[20]

State budget

In October 2007, Gibbons proposed cutting funding for state services by 5% and ordered state agencies to submit lists of the services to be cut. Among the state agencies that were ordered to cut their budgets were the Nevada System of Higher Education, Nevada Department of Taxation, child welfare agencies and the juvenile justice agency.[21] Gibbons expected an 80 million dollar cut to come directly from the Health and Human services agency alone.[21] Most of these agencies refused to submit revised budgets to Governor Gibbons, citing already "threadbare" budgets.[21] The Nevada Department of Taxation closed the Elko, Nevada tax office in June 2010 in response to the requested cuts.

On November 21, 2007, Gibbons revised his proposal upward for cutting state budgets. Nevada agencies were then told to plan for 8% cuts.[22]

In 2008, Gibbons suggested that the Nevada legislature cut the state budget for elementary, secondary and higher education by 14%.,[23][24][25][26] Jim Rogers, Nevada Chancellor for Education, said of the budget cuts, "We’re talking about something that is going to cripple us financially and competitively. The effects will be felt on our economy for the next 50 to 100 years.".[27] The Nevada Policy Research Institute criticized the governor's office for the budget, when the administration claimed that the state was facing a crisis, despite a 1% decrease in state spending.[28]

Criticism while Congressman

Plagiarism

A speech given in February 2005 by then-Congressman Gibbons in Elko, Nevada, was plagiarized from a copyrighted speech delivered in 2003 by then-Alabama State Auditor Beth Chapman at a "Stand up America" rally.[29]

Employing illegal immigrant housekeeper/nanny

As Gibbons was campaigning for governor in October 2006, it was brought to light that more than ten years earlier, his wife Dawn had employed Martha Patricia Pastor Sandoval, a then-illegal immigrant from Peru, as a housekeeper and babysitter. Since the Nannygate matter of 1993, politicians have been deeply concerned about the impact of such revelations on their careers.

Dawn, who had become a member of the Nevada Assembly in 1998, denied the allegations in 2006, claiming that Sandoval had merely been a friend who had helped out around the house and was given clothing and household goods, but was not an employee. An employment contract between Dawn Gibbons and Sandoval, however, appeared to disprove that assertion, as it clearly laid out the terms and conditions of Sandoval's hiring. Documents filed during Sandoval's 1988 application for working papers also contradicted earlier statements by Dawn Gibbons that the family had not known that the woman was in the United States illegally.[30]

Sandoval stated that she was employed from approximately 1987 to 1993, four years before Gibbons left for Washington in 1997, after his 1996 election as a Congressman and five years before Dawn Gibbons became a state legislator. Sandoval also stated that she was asked to hide in the basement and refrain from answering doors at certain times in order to ensure that her illegal status did not become public knowledge and jeopardize Gibbons' political career.

In 1995, Dawn Gibbons filed a police complaint against Sandoval, alleging that she was attempting to extort money by threatening to go to the media with a story involving her illegal employment. Jim and Dawn Gibbons did not pursue the matter further.[30]

In response to the 2006 revelations, Jim Gibbons' campaign issued a statement accusing Democratic candidate Dina Titus of fomenting the controversy to distract from the real issues of the race, but did not issue a denial of Sandoval's claims.[30]

Sexual assault civil suit

In October 2006, near the conclusion of his successful campaign for governor, a woman accused Jim Gibbons of attempted sexual assault in a parking garage. Gibbons claimed he was helping her to her car. They both admitted to drinking alcohol at McCormick and Schmick's restaurant in Las Vegas.

In the initial aftermath of the event, Las Vegas Sheriff Bill Young, a long time supporter of Jim Gibbons and donor to his gubernatorial campaign, cited lack of evidence in the case and refused to bring evidence of the attack to the District Attorney. The accuser did not initially want to pursue pressing charges, saying she just wanted "to be left alone." But when the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department was forced to open the incident case file after inquiries by the Las Vegas media, the Las Vegas Review Journal and the Las Vegas Sun released her name and she was thrust into the public eye. She later said she was being pressured to not talk to the police about the incident by people close to Jim Gibbons.[31] In fact, the Gibbons campaign hired a private investigator to talk to the woman shortly after the incident occurred.[32]

The evidence was given to the Las Vegas District Attorney, David Roger, who had also donated to the Gibbons campaign. Criminal charges were never filed in the case.[33]

Gibbons' gubernatorial campaign manager, Robert Uithoven, speculated in an e-mail to Gibbons' supporters that Dina Titus, Gibbons' opponent, hired the woman to entice Gibbons. Titus retorted that to do this she would have had to control where Gibbons went, who he was with, and even the weather (Gibbons claimed he was helping the woman to her car in part because of the weather).[34]

By 2009, the alleged victim had filed a civil suit against Jim Gibbons, specifically alleging battery, false imprisonment and second-degree kidnapping as well as deceit about the episode. The lawsuit was settled in July 2013 for $50,000.[35]

Federal bribery investigation

On November 1, 2006, the Wall Street Journal published a story stating that Gibbons had earmarked several millions of dollars to a company owned by Warren Trepp, as well as added additional funds to a pre-existing government contract with Trepp's company. The report noted that Trepp had paid for a $10,000 cruise for Gibbons and his wife, which Gibbons failed to report in his U.S. House of Representatives ethics filings, and $100,000 in campaign contributions. Dennis L. Montgomery, a former Trepp business partner, claimed that Gibbons was also given gambling chips  convertible into cash  and cash directly.[36][37][38]

On February 15, 2007, the Journal reported that Gibbons was under federal investigation for allegedly accepting unreported gifts and/or payments from Trepp in exchange for official acts while he served in Congress (1997–2007).[36][37][39]

According to reports, on March 22, 2005, days before Trepp and his wife left for the Caribbean cruise with Gibbons and his family, Jalé Trepp, Warren’s wife, sent a reminder to her husband. It said, “Please don't forget to bring the money you promised Jim and Dawn (Gibbons).” Minutes later, Trepp responded, “Don't you ever send this kind of message to me! Erase this message from your computer right now!”[36][37][39]

Gibbons was cleared in each of these investigations.

The ethics probe into Gibbons expanded to include another company that paid Gibbons' wife Dawn $35,000 in consulting fees in 2004, while Gibbons helped the company receive a no-bid federal contract.[40]

The U.S. Attorney for Nevada at time of the investigation was Daniel Bogden and was one of seven federal prosecutors dismissed by the Bush administration in December 2006. Bogden was hired by the same administration in September 2001.[36][37][39]

Criticism while governor

Undeclared donations

Gibbons set up a legal defense fund just before the November, 2006 gubernatorial election to help pay for legal expenses incurred after a woman accused him of attempted sexual assault. Gibbons neither reported the legal defense fund to the appropriate U.S. House of Representatives committee (even though he was a sitting congressman at the time and was required by House rules to do so), nor did he report donations to his legal defense fund as contributions to his gubernatorial campaign, citing the money was for "personal use" and not for "political purposes".[41]

In January 2008, it was reported that Gibbons raised $256,000 for his legal defense fund during 2007, including a $61,000 personal loan Gibbons gave to his own fund, as well as $10,000 from The Palms hotel and casino, and $40,000 from various companies connected to Las Vegas Sands Corporation Chief Executive Sheldon Adelson.[42] The defense fund has spent money to defend Gibbons in cases which include:

Interference with an ongoing investigation

On August 3, 2007, the Las Vegas Review Journal printed the following:

A newly available document states that Gov. Jim Gibbons "has admitted" that he urged federal authorities to pursue criminal action against a software developer whose business dispute with a friend of Gibbons has prompted a federal investigation. The statement is made in a legal motion filed last year, but kept secret until Tuesday, when it was unsealed at a judge's order.[43]

Dennis Montgomery was convicted and sent to Federal Prison.

Lamoille land deal

In 2007, Gibbons and his wife Dawn purchased 40 acres (160,000 m2) of land in the ranch country near Lamoille, Nevada, approximately 20 miles South of Elko, Nevada. The land belonged to former Nevada Judge Jerry Carr Whitehead. The Elko County Assessor said he felt pressure from the governor, governor's lawyer and a member of the Nevada Tax Commission to lower the tax liability. Under state law, such an agricultural tax break goes only to legitimate farm and ranch operations, and must generate at least $5,000 a year in income. If such a land is developed by million-dollar homes, property taxes would go up. "To say I was put in an awkward position I think is an understatement", Joe Aguirre, a Republican, told The Associated Press in 2008.[44] The opinion page of the Las Vegas Review-Journal said on the allegations that the deal might constitute fraud.[45] Aguirre later admitted that his previous statements were made up on the Las Vegas Sun saying that he wasn't pressured into Gibbons tax break by Gibbons himself.[46]

Dedication to office

While the state faced an economic slowdown and steep budget cuts, Gibbons faced criticism from officials for spending less time at his office. The Las Vegas Sun reviewed Gibbons’ attendance and discovered that he was only in his Capitol office five days in August 2008 and never for a full eight hours. In September, he was in his office a total of seven days.

In an interview with Las Vegas Sun reporters, Gibbons said “I never knew this job had a time frame on it that requires me to be sitting behind a desk at a certain hour.” He also said that he works about 60 hours a week for the state. Previous Nevada governors were also interviewed and they said that they felt it was necessary that they spent most of their time in the office.[47]

Gibbons' dedication to his office was called into question again six months later. On April 2, 2009, while appearing before a legislative panel to promote his renewable energy bill, Gibbons pulled out his cellphone and began texting. News stories used this incident to revisit the 860 messages he sent to his alleged paramour, and a 37-second video of him introducing himself to the panel, with a 17-second break in order to send the text message and refocus on the hearing was posted on YouTube.[48]

Popularity

Polling conducted in June 2008 indicated an all-time low 10% approval rating, with 59% disapproving.[49]

Broken tax pledge

Prior to running for Governor of Nevada, Gibbons signed the Taxpayer Protection Pledge (tax pledge) that is promoted at the national level by Americans for Tax Reform and at the state level by Citizen Outreach PAC—whose CEO is Chuck Muth.[50][51][52] On at least three separate occasions, Americans for Tax Reform and/or Muth took Gibbons to task for breaking the tax pledge.[53][54][55] Each time, in addition to the actual violation of the pledge, they had to correct the record about Gibbons' "misinformation", "fibs", "falsehoods" and "doublespeak".[53][54][55]

Muth even went as far to say "the non-stop parsing and telling of falsehoods about breaking the Pledge are worse than breaking the Pledge itself".[55]

Ethics group named Gibbons one of America's worst governors

In its April 2010 report, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), a progressive organization, named Gibbons one of 11 "worst governors" in the United States because of various ethics issues throughout Gibbons term as governor and his time in Congress.[56][57] Some of Gibbons' ethics lapses cited by CREW include:

Beliefs and ideologies

Civil liberties

Education

As governor

In January 2007, Gibbons asked Nevada lawmakers to approve his budget that cut the percentage of education funding in Nevada to increase the percentage for public safety and human services programs.[60]

In 2008, Gibbons suggested that the Nevada legislature cut the state general fund budget for elementary, secondary and higher education by 14% (this does not include federal or local revenues, or funds for construction or teacher pensions).[23][24][25][26] Jim Rogers, Nevada Chancellor for Education, founder of the Intermountain West Communications Company and station owner of KSNV, said of the budget cuts, "We’re talking about something that is going to cripple us financially and competitively. The effects will be felt on our economy for the next 50 to 100 years.".[27]

As congressman

Taxes

As governor

Gibbons pledged during his 1996 campaign for governor to not impose new taxes on businesses or individuals in Nevada.[63] Gibbons broke his tax pledge on several occasions. The state's Business Tax on employer's payrolls which was initiated in 1992 was increased under Gibbon's term and renamed the "Modified Business Tax". Various mandatory fees and licenses administered by the Nevada Department of Taxation were also significantly increased under Gibbon's term. Most particularly was the State of Nevada's yearly business license fee. This license fee was doubled from $100.00 to $200.00. Due to the additional tax burden of the increased Modified Business Tax on Nevada's small businesses during a downward business cycle, this tax was readjusted to a lesser rate by the 2011 Nevada legislative session during the leadership of Governor Brian Sandoval who later broke his promises on not raising fees and taxes in 2015.

It was also discovered during the 2011 Nevada Legislative hearings that the Nevada Department of Taxation's director, Dino DiCianno, never had the Tax Department under Gibbon's leadership conduct Net Proceeds of Minerals (NPM) tax audits of mining operations within Nevada. Mr. DiCianno's claim was that the Tax Department did not have qualified auditors capable of performing NPM audits. During Gibbon's term market prices of precious minerals were at historical and significant high levels. The market selling price of Gold was in the $1,300 to $1,500+ per ounce range during Gibbon's term. Gibbons was also a geologist and lawyer.

During Gibbons term Nevada lead North America in Gold and Silver production. Also Nevada was ranked No. 3 in the world for Gold production. After Mr. DiCianno's testimony to the Nevada legislature that no NPM audits were conducted while Gibbon's was governor he resigned the following day. Governor Sandoval latter appointed William Chissel, a CPA with an auditing background as the replacement director of the Nevada Tax Department.

In the release of the Nevada's Department of Taxation's annual report in January 2012 which represented the fiscal year of July 1, 2010 through June 30, 2011, it was presented that the audit penetration rate (percentage of Nevada taxpayers audited of the total population of registered Nevada businesses) was the lowest amount in 6 years. The Tax Department during this 6-year period in the years 2006 and 2007, made a significant investment in new tax administration and audit software along with employee training to provide increased efficiency and audit performance. Accenture Consulting Services formerly a unit of Arthur Anderson & Co. was selected to design and implement the tax administration software. Revenue Solutions Inc. of Boston, Massachusetts was selected as a subcontractor by Accenture to design and implement the tax auditing software system.

Approximately $40,000,000.00 was invested in new tax administration and audit software. The results of this investment after implementation of this system as shown in Tax Department's annual reports (2008, 2009, 2010) have been abysmal.

During the first full year of leadership under the new Director William Chissel the Tax Department was fraught with turmoil and discontent. Mr. Chissel exited the director's position and was replaced by a former Deputy Attorney General assigned to the Department, Christopher G. Nielsen. Mr. Nielsen assumed the Executive Director's duties on July 1, 2012. Mr. Nielsen was previously a Deputy Director of the Tax Department and was also an Acting Director after the termination of Dino DiCianno. Mr. Nielsen was in the position of Acting Director for several months prior to the appointment of William Chissel as Executive Director.

As congressman

Electoral history

Nevada Gubernatorial Election 2006
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Jim Gibbons 278,998 47.9
Democratic Dina Titus 255,684 43.9

References

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  2. Inaccuracy Fixed: Gibbons Mystified by Inaccurate Listing  Las Vegas Review Journal 5/19/06
  3. Law: Where Gibbons calls home crucial – News – ReviewJournal.com. Lvrj.com. Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
  4. Nev. Gov.'s house move raises legal questions. Usatoday.Com (April 28, 2008). Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
  5. Riley, Brendan (May 2, 2008). "Nevada governor files for divorce, cites incompatibility". USA Today. Retrieved August 11, 2011.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Divorce filings accuse Nevada governor of affairs, April 7, 2009, Associated Press report by Sandra Chereb and Scott Sonner.
  7. "Paper: Nev. gov. sent 860 texts to woman in month". USA Today. 10 June 2008. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  8. Does the governor's personal behavior matter?. NevadaAppeal.com (June 27, 2008). Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
  9. Governor thankful horse-riding accident didn't leave him paralyzed – News – ReviewJournal.com. Lvrj.com. Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
  10. 1 2 Jim Gibbons wins Governor over Dina Titus with the help of rural voters, Ely News, November 8, 2006
  11. Smith, John L.. (January 11, 2007) Gibbons vs. Guinn spat aside, one Gaming appointee is superior. NevadaAppeal.com. Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
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  19. 1 2 3 Myers, Dennis (April 29, 2010). "Gibbons changes Yucca stance. Twice". Reno News & Review.
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  24. 1 2 As troubles mount, Gibbons disengages Las Vegas Sun'
  25. 1 2 Tension builds as Gibbons cloaks budget cuts in secrecy Las Vegas Sun.
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  27. 1 2 Rogers boils over: Chancellor says governor wounds education, won’t return his calls, Las Vegas Sun, May 30, 2008.
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  29. News: Gibbons' speech plagiarism. reviewjournal.com. Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
  30. 1 2 3 Exclusive: Former Employee Says Gibbons Knew of Her Illegal Status. Klas-tv.com (January 1, 2010). Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
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  32. News – Phone calls numerous between Mazzeo, friend. reviewjournal.com (November 5, 2006). Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
  33. News – GIBBONS SCANDAL: Accuser alleges cover-up attempt. reviewjournal.com. Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
  34. Reporter Steve Sebelius, October 23, 2006.
  35. Ritter, Ken (July 19, 2013). "Jim Gibbons Lawsuit From Former Cocktail Waitress Settled". Huffington Post. Retrieved August 27, 2014.
  36. 1 2 3 4 Rood, Justin. Mr. Montgomery was later convicted of perjury and sentenced to Federal Prison. Mr. Gibbons was exonerated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. (November 1, 2006) Talking Points Memo | WSJ: Gibbons Does the Donor-Favor Two-Step. TPMmuckraker. Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
  37. 1 2 3 4 Steinhauer, Jennifer. (May 30, 2007) STATEHOUSE JOURNAL – A Rocky Start for Nevada's Chief – NYTimes.com. Select.nytimes.com. Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
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  53. 1 2 Muth, Chuck (February 5, 2009). "ATR Slams Gibbo for Breaking Tax Pledge". Muth's Truths. Archived from the original on January 3, 2010. Retrieved May 6, 2010.
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  55. 1 2 3 Muth, Chuck (April 24, 2010). "Mini-Muth's Truths: April 24, 2010". Muth's Truths. Retrieved May 6, 2010.
  56. "Gibbons named on list of worst governors". Las Vegas Review-Journal. April 21, 2010. Retrieved May 5, 2010.
  57. "Scandals Land Gibbons On 'Worst Governors' List". KVVU-TV (Fox 5, Las Vegas). April 21, 2010. Retrieved May 5, 2010.
  58. "Crew's Worst Governors". Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. Retrieved May 5, 2010.
  59. Jim Gibbons on the Issues. Ontheissues.org (December 14, 2010). Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
  60. Governor Gibbons Delivers First 'State of the State'. Klas-tv.com (January 1, 2010). Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
  61. 1 2 3 4 5 Jim Gibbons on Education. Ontheissues.org. Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
  62. Steinhauer, Jennifer. (March 23, 2009) Jim Gibbons News – The New York Times. Topics.nytimes.com. Retrieved on 2011-01-09.
  63. Governor is upholding his promise of no new taxes. NevadaAppeal.com (June 24, 2007). Retrieved on 2011-01-09.

External links

Party political offices
Preceded by
Jim Gallaway
Republican nominee for Governor of Nevada
1994
Succeeded by
Kenny Guinn
Preceded by
Kenny Guinn
Republican nominee for Governor of Nevada
2006
Succeeded by
Brian Sandoval
United States House of Representatives
Preceded by
Barbara Vucanovich
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Nevada's 2nd congressional district

1997–2006
Succeeded by
Dean Heller
Political offices
Preceded by
Kenny Guinn
Governor of Nevada
2007–2011
Succeeded by
Brian Sandoval
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