Bryon Hefner, whose sexual assault and misconduct case resulted in the resignation of his husband, former Bay State Senate President Stanley C. Rosenberg, pleaded guilty today to one count of indecent assault and battery, one count of assault and battery and one count of disseminating a nude photo.
According to The Boston Globe, Hefner was then given three years probation and a suspended one-year jail sentence, plus he must register as a sex offender. A series of other related charges were dismissed.
In a story last week predicting his plea, the Globe reported:
Hefner, the husband of former Senate president Stanley C. Rosenberg, ha[d] pleaded not guilty to nine counts of sexual assault and other misconduct, including allegations he repeatedly groped two men against their will and forcibly kissed a third. …
Jury selection [was] slated to start Sept. 11. Hefner, 32, is also charged with circulating nude photos of a fourth man who never agreed to having the pictures taken, though those charges will be addressed at a separate trial. According to a civil lawsuit filed by another of Hefner’s accusers — that has since been dropped — the fourth man was an elected official.
The accusations against Hefner upended state politics, beginning in November 2017 when the Globe detailed allegations from four men who said Hefner had sexually assaulted or harassed them. Within days, Rosenberg — then Senate president and consequently one of the state’s most powerful officials — stepped down from his leadership post as a Senate committee investigated his conduct.
[Attorney General Maura] Healey and the Suffolk district attorney’s office indicted Hefner in March 2018, and months later, Rosenberg, a 31-year veteran on Beacon Hill, resigned his seat after the Senate’s Ethics Committee found that he gave Hefner unfettered access to his official e-mail and failed to protect the Senate and its staff from a spouse he knew had harassed them.
But even then, Hefner’s criminal case never strayed far from Beacon Hill’s view. The Senate successfully fought a bid by Healey’s office for the names of witnesses who cooperated with the chamber’s internal probe.
Hefner also faced further legal trouble, pleading guilty in August 2018 to charges he made hundreds of harassing phone calls to a Lincoln treatment facility when he was a patient there.
Not a subscriber? Sign up today for a free subscription to Boston Spirit magazine, New England’s premier LGBT magazine. We will send you a copy of Boston Spirit 6 times per year and we never sell/rent our subscriber information. Click HERE to sign up!