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Republican will plead not guilty to child sex
GOP activist is accused of session with 13-year-old


By Lynn Bartels, News Capitol Bureau

He named his dogs after Presidents Reagan and Nixon. He tirelessly campaigned
for Republican candidates. He signed on as one of Gov. Bill Owens'
re-election coordinators.

Randy Ankeney, 30, was a fixture in El Paso County Republican politics until
his arrest in July in a sex scandal involving a young girl.

"I think Randy worked on just about every campaign down here," said Sen. Andy
McElhany, R-Colorado Springs.

The Colorado Springs attorney and former state employee is accused of giving
alcohol and marijuana to a 13-year-old Fountain girl he met through the
Internet, using the moniker "coloradofella."

She told police she allowed him to photograph her topless, but became
frightened when he tried to take off her pants and asked her to touch him.

"She began to cry, begging him to leave her alone," an arrest affidavit
states.

Ankeney's lawyer, Kevin Donovan, said Wednesday the affidavit contains a
"number of misstatements" made to police.

"I'm confident that we're going to win this once all the facts are out,"
Donovan said. "There are things that will show that he's not guilty."

Ankeney, who declined to comment, is scheduled to appear in El Paso County
District Court today.

Donovan said Ankeney will waive his right to a preliminary hearing and plead
not guilty to a variety of charges, including sexual assault on a child,
contributing to the delinquency of a minor and possession of drug
paraphernalia.

A trial date will be set today.

Ankeney had worked since November as one of the governor's economic
development representatives. He resigned his $63,000-a-year state job after
the arrest.

Owens' spokesman, Dick Wadmans, said he had no idea that Ankeney was listed
on Owens' 2002 re-election Web site as the El Paso County coordinator until
after the arrest.

McElhany said he was surprised to learn his colleagues considered him
Ankeney's "mentor."

"Really?" he said. "I knew him, of course, but that's because he was involved
in a lot of campaigns around here."

By all accounts, Ankeney is closest to Rep. Bill Cadman, R-Colorado Springs,
a freshman lawmaker. Cadman said he was reluctant to comment.

Ankeney had once worked as an intern for U.S. Rep. Joel Hefley. His wife,
state Rep. Lynn Hefley, said she cried when she heard about the arrest, both
for Ankeney and for the girl.

"Randy is such a talented young man," she said. "If the charges are true, he
threw his life and his career away."

The 13-year-old told police that she and her friend were chatting via the
Internet on July 21. The friend asked her to message a man with the screen
name "coloradofella" and tell him to leave her alone.

The 13-year-old said she messaged "coloradofella" and they chatted. She told
him she was "around 14" and he said he was 25, according to the arrest
affidavit. He then got her phone number, called her at home and asked about
her sexual preferences, she told police.

"He thought they would be good in bed," the affidavit states.

"Coloradofella" arranged to pick up the teen-ager several houses away from
her home, police said. The girl said she then told him she was 13 and planned
to run away. They drove to his house in the 600 block of East Vrain Street,
where she said she saw numerous pictures of President Bush, according to the
affidavit.

The girl said she and the man, who called himself "Ron," watched television,
drank and smoked marijuana. He photographed her topless and she fell asleep,
according to the affidavit.

The girl told police she awoke to find "Ron" rubbing her back with lotion.
When he tried to undress her, she became upset and he apologized.

She said he told her if she told anyone "he would ruin her life."




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