Lawrence Roberts (politician) explained

Lawrence Roberts
State House:Pennsylvania
District:51st
Constituency:Part of Fayette County
Term Start:January 5, 1993[1]
Term End:November 30, 2006[2]
Predecessor:Fred Taylor
Successor:Timothy S. Mahoney
Party:Democratic
Birth Date:18 November 1941[3]
Birth Place:Uniontown, Pennsylvania, United States
Occupation:Legislator-Arbitrator/Mediator
Spouse:Nataliya

Lawrence "Larry" Roberts is a former Democratic member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.

Roberts attended Uniontown High School, graduating in 1959. He attended the Community College of the Air Force and Bowie State College before earning a master's at Central Michigan University in 1981.

Roberts was first elected to represent the 51st legislative district in 1992.[4] The Herald-Standard newspaper sued in 2000 to gain access to Roberts's cellular and long-distance phone records, citing the fact that the calls were paid for with state money.[5] The suit was dismissed, but in 2003 the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ordered the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania to reconsider whether a Herald-Standard reporter's civil rights were violated when Roberts showed the sought-after phone records to another reporter, but not to the original reporter. The full case was dismissed in 2006.

He retired prior to the 2006 election. Activists had targeted him because of his support for the controversial 2005 legislative pay raise[6] Roberts accepted the optional "unvouchered expense account" money, which were used by the legislature to "skirt a [constitutional] prohibition on midterm raises."[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: SESSION OF 1993 – 177TH OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY – No. 1. Legislative Journal. Pennsylvania House of Representatives . 1993-01-05.
  2. Per Article II, Section 2 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, the legislative session ended on November 30, 2006
  3. Web site: The Pennsylvania Manual. 1997.
  4. Web site: Lawrence Roberts (Democrat). Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Pennsylvania House of Representatives. https://web.archive.org/web/20040603040826/http://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/legis/home/member_information/house_bio.cfm?districtnumber=51. 2004-06-03. 2009-01-22 .
  5. News: The Associated Press. Pa. Paper's Phone-Records Suit Dismissed. FOXNews.com. FOX News Network, LLC. 2006-11-30. 2009-01-22.
  6. News: Kroeger. Judy. 'Vote 'em all out'. Daily Courier. The Tribune-Review Publishing Co.. 2006-02-20. 2009-01-22. https://archive.today/20120913140612/http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/dailycourier/news/uniontown/s_425732.html. 2012-09-13. dead.
  7. News: Barnes. Tom. Tom Barnes (American journalist). Tracie Mauriello. Pa. Supreme Court decides judges can keep controversial pay raises. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. PG Publishing Co., Inc.. 2006-09-15. 2009-01-22.