DENVER – Republican U.S. Senate candidate Darryl Glenn says he was telling the truth when he said he was not arrested in connection with a domestic incident more than 30 years ago.
Glenn says he can’t remember being arrested on Nov. 20, 1983, in Colorado Springs, when he “got between” his mother and father after his father allegedly struck Glenn’s mother.
“The police were called. He claimed to the police that I hit him. I do not believe I ever hit him. My mother swears I did not hit him either, but it wouldn’t have been beyond him at the time to claim I did. I do not remember ever talking to a police officer. I certainly do not remember signing anything for the police,” Glenn said in a statement.
His explanation comes after Denver Post reporter Joey Bunch analyzed a police report and other documents that suggested that Glenn hit his father in the face.
The 1983 complaint has a signature of the name Darryl L. Glenn that has similarities to Glenn’s current signature, seen on recent campaign and other documents, according to the Post, which consulted with a handwriting expert.
In February 1984, the assault charge was dropped after Ernest Glenn, believed to be Darryl Glenn’s father, chose not to pursue the case. Ernest Glenn died in 2006.
“I think it’s likely that the police showed up and took everyone’s information,” Glenn explained in the statement Wednesday evening. “I think my dad initially wanted to press charges that night, and a report was filed. I know that a few weeks later my mother and I were called into a meeting in a judge’s chambers. He asked us a few questions, and then sent us home. That’s the last thing we definitively know.”
If the allegations and account are true, then Glenn, as an 18-year-old, was simply trying to defend his mother from abuse.
The issue is that Glenn and his campaign repeatedly said it had no knowledge of the incident. Glenn even suggested to reporters that the incident could have involved another Darryl Glenn, or his dead half-brother, Cedric.
The Glenn campaign would not make him available to answer reporters’ questions, including a request by The Durango Herald on Wednesday.
“If you’re going to be a major party candidate for the U.S. Senate, you need to be ready for this,” said Eric Sondermann, a well-known Colorado political analyst. “The first opposition research you always want to do is on yourself, so you know what the other side has, then you want to be completely ready to respond and get ahead of this story as opposed to being a victim of this story.
“I thought the statement put out yesterday was a very, very powerful and well-done statement, but it was two days too late.”
Glenn said further details were revealed to him after speaking with his mother in the past week. He said it was the first time they spoke of the incident in 32 years.
“When you grow up in a violent home, the fights, the screaming, the pain all blur together,” Glenn said. “To survive, you block as much of it out of your head as you can in the moment. You try to forget it going forward.”
He added that he has never been handcuffed or fingerprinted, and that he has never appeared in court as a defendant.
Glenn also took the opportunity to highlight the crisis of domestic violence, pointing out that the incident in 1983 was one of many between his parents.
“We have to do so much better,” Glenn said. “We have to stop the cycle of violence affecting so many of our communities. We have to love each other.”
pmarcus@durangoherald.com