Honorific-Prefix: | Hon. |
Scott Bundgaard | |
State Senate: | Arizona |
State: | Arizona |
District: | 4th |
Term Start: | January 10, 2011 |
Term End: | January 6, 2012 |
Successor: | Judy Burges |
State Senate2: | Arizona |
State2: | Arizona |
District2: | 19th |
Term Start2: | January 13, 1997 |
Term End2: | January 13, 2003 |
Predecessor2: | Jan Brewer |
State House3: | Arizona |
State3: | Arizona |
District3: | 19th |
Term Start3: | January 9, 1995 |
Term End3: | January 13, 1997 |
Predecessor3: | Nancy Wessel John Keegan |
Successor3: | Roberta Voss |
Birth Date: | 11 January 1968 |
Birth Place: | Oklahoma City, Oklahoma |
Nationality: | American |
Spouse: | Stephanie |
Party: | Republican |
Alma Mater: | Grand Canyon University, Thunderbird School of Global Management |
Website: | http://www.scottbundgaard.com |
Scott Bundgaard (born January 11, 1968) is a Republican politician who served in the Arizona House of Representatives and in the Arizona State Senate. Bundgaard was elected in 2010 as Majority Leader of the Arizona State Senate,[1] and later served as Vice-Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee.[2]
During an Ethics Investigation for "improper conduct" stemming from a public incident of domestic violence, Budgaard abruptly resigned.[3]
Scott Bundgaard was born in Oklahoma City, OK, while his parents were moving to Phoenix, Arizona from Omaha, Nebraska. Scott graduated with a BS degree from Grand Canyon University in 1990. Scott received his MBA in 2005 from Thunderbird School of Global Management.
Scott married Stephanie Moore on July 11, 2013, and the couple lives in Peoria, Arizona.
Scott received the "Friend of the Taxpayer" Award every year for the seven years he served in the state legislature, according to the Arizona Federation of Taxpayers Associations (AFTA). AFTA is a statewide non-profit, non-partisan organization that rates elected officials according to their voting record.[8]
In 2000, Bundgaard was a prime sponsor of Senate Bill 1220[9] which created the Arizona Sports and Tourism Authority to build taxpayer-funded stadiums for National Football League and major league baseball teams and youth sports. Arizona voters approved the project.[10]
He ran unsuccessfully in 2002 for the Republican nomination for the United States House of Representatives in Arizona's second congressional district, receiving only 16.1% of the vote among a field of seven candidates.[11] He was fined $3,500 by the Federal Elections Commission for failure to timely file a campaign finance report during the 2002 congressional campaign.[12]
Bundgaard was elected as the Majority Leader of the Arizona State Senate in a 17–4 vote.
On the evening of February 25, 2011 police responded to a call regarding a man, later identified as Bundgaard, pulling a woman out of a car in Phoenix Arizona.[13] [14] Both Bundgaard and his then girlfriend, Aubry Ballard, showed signs of a physical altercation. Both were taken into custody at the roadside, but only his girlfriend was arrested and charged with domestic violence assault. Police who responded to the call said Bundgaard was not arrested because he claimed he had immunity while the Arizona legislature was in session.[15] [16] On June 10, 2011 he was served with a summons[17] and complaint[18] for assault (ARS 13-1203A), endangerment (ARS 13-1201A), and domestic violence (ARS 13-3601A).
On August 16, 2011, after lengthy negotiations between both the Senator's attorneys and prosecutors, he pleaded guilty, no contest, to a misdemeanor, attended domestic violence counseling and was ordered to pay his victim $1,336 in criminal retribution.[19] [20] [21]
Two months after becoming Majority Leader, Bundgaard was involved in a physical altercation by the side of the road with his then girlfriend . He was charged with reckless endangerment, pled guilty to a misdemeanor, attended domestic violence counseling and paid $1,336 retribution.[19]
Democrats and Republicans in the State Senate demanded that Bundgaard step down as Majority Leader, but the Republican caucus refused to vote to replace him.[19] One week later, Bundgaard asked for a vote from his colleagues and was removed as Majority Leader on March 15, 2011 by a vote of 13-11 of the Senate Republican caucus. Bundgaard said, "I serve at the pleasure of the caucus and have emphasized that fact to my caucus for the past two weeks," Bundgaard told Reuters. "I did not want my personal life, which has been sensationalized in the media, to be a distraction at this critical time."[22]
He was then investigated by the senate Ethics Committee for improper conduct. Before the committee could investigate, Bundgaard resigned in January 2012.[23] [24] [25]
He was the prime sponsor of SB 1412 in 2000, which was a bill that died in committee.[26]
Bundgaard was tasked by Governor Jane Hull to lead a committee to dissolve a controversial alternative fuels program that cost the Arizona taxpayers over $100 million.[27] As a legislator who chaired that committee, he personally went through the alt fuels program in an attempt to buy five vehicles to demonstrate the lunacy and ineffectiveness of the program.[27]
In 1995, Bundgaard introduced a bill that would have allowed the death penalty to be applied to drug dealers. In response to the proposal, his colleague Senator Patti Noland stated: "This is so bizarre. It is not appropriate. That is ridiculous. How are we going to do this for a gram of cocaine?"[28]
In 1999, Bundgaard intervened on behalf of a dump owner in West Valley to prevent further litigation for illegal practices and reduce the owner's legal liability.[29]
Scott Bundgaard has a long history of civil litigation.[30] In 1986, he was convicted of one count of third degree burglary. After two years, his class four felony conviction was "expunged."[31]
In 2003, the brokerage company he worked for was sued by a client for a loss of funds. The client was upset that he lost money that he had placed into a technology mutual fund. A settlement agreement was reached. Bundgaard sold his book of business several years later and voluntarily left the securities industry.[31]
In 2006, he was married in a covenant marriage but his wife had to call the police during the honeymoon, because she wanted to return home to her parents.[32]
In December 2012 Bundgaard filed a $10,000,000 lawsuit against the City of Phoenix alleging that three police officers, the mayor of Phoenix, the chief of police, five civilian witnesses and the victim of his domestic violence attack conspired to defame his character.[33] The case was transferred to federal district court. In March 2014, Bundgaard requested the lawsuit be dismissed without a judgement, and ultimately received nothing from the City of Phoenix.[34]