Eagle Mountain Mayor Resigns From UHP

Eagle Mountain Mayor Resigns From UHP


Save Story
Leer en espaƱol

Estimated read time: 3-4 minutes

This archived news story is available only for your personal, non-commercial use. Information in the story may be outdated or superseded by additional information. Reading or replaying the story in its archived form does not constitute a republication of the story.

EAGLE MOUNTAIN, Utah (AP) -- Mayor Brian Olsen, under fire for falsely claiming he had a master's degree, has resigned from the Utah Highway Patrol amid an investigation into his wearing a ribbon on his uniform that indicated he had earned the degree.

Olsen resigned from his job as a trooper, from which he'd taken a leave of absence to be a full-time mayor, nearly two weeks ago. In his resignation letter, he cited the desire to focus on his "mayoralship."

UHP spokesman Lt. Doug McCleve said the patrol was doing an internal investigation of Olsen after he admitted to lying about having a master's of public administration.

"He resigned in the process, but we were pretty much done," McCleve said, "We did determine he did use that information internally, he represented to the Highway Patrol that he had a master's degree as well. ... Everybody here thought he did, which by the way may create some big issues for us."

McCleve said those issues are credibility, honesty and integrity.

"If we testify in a court of law, honesty and integrity is of the utmost importance and not just in court, everything that we do every day," he said. "Credibility to a trooper's career is probably one of the most important things that we do."

Olsen said he should not have worn the ribbon.

Olsen said he submitted documentation from a public management program in 2003, which he initially believed would give him credit toward a master's degree.

"When they sent me the pin, it was in my box one day, I shouldn't have put it on," he said. "I should have looked into it further. At the time that I received the ribbon I thought that my course work upon completion would transfer over to a master program."

All but one member of the City Council said they would continue to support Olsen, although with caution. Councilman Vincent Liddiard said he thought the mayor should resign.

"I'm not being vindictive. I'm not mad at Brian. I'm very disappointed and I think the only way for the city to recover is for him to step down," Liddiard said. "I'm willing to work with whoever sits on the council. I'm willing to move forward."

Councilwoman Heather Jackson said Olsen has her full confidence in being able to conduct city affairs, but, "I won't just be taking something that the mayor says as absolutely true, I will be checking it as well."

Olsen is the second Eagle Mountain mayor to have been caught lying. In 2003, then Mayor Kelvin Bailey told his wife he had been abducted, and she contacted authorities. He eventually admitted making up the story.

"I sincerely hope that that is not the general or major trend," Councilman David Blackburn said of Eagle Mountain's record.

"As elected officials, we should be a literal representation of the best of our community, not the opposite. Sadly, we have had the worst and poorer actions receive the most press. All of our officials and staff usually put in great work and efforts for the betterment of our community."

Olsen has said he intends to stay.

"I am committed in serving Eagle Mountain city as their mayor," Olsen said. "I'm showing the citizens that I'm not going to fall back on the patrol as a scapegoat for a job when I'm completed."

(Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

Most recent Utah stories

Related topics

Utah
KSL.com Beyond Series

KSL Weather Forecast

KSL Weather Forecast
Play button