South Dakota AG had glasses of a dead man in a car accident after the incident

A South Dakota attorney general allegedly had the glasses of a man who crashed and killed in a car accident, according to interviews released Tuesday by the South Dakota Department of Public Security.

News of the interview comes after South Dakota Attorney General Jason Ravnsborg (R) said he did not know he had hit the man until the following day.

The interview shows detectives in the case questioning Ravnsborg about the glasses they found in his car.

“It’s Joe’s glasses, which means his face came out of his windshield,” said a detective, according to the interview.

However, Ravnsborg seemed to maintain his earlier claim that he believed he hit a deer that night and did not realize that he attacked and allegedly killed Joe Boever, 55.

“He knew there was a dead man in that ditch,” Nick Nemec, Boever’s cousin, told The Washington Post in response to the interview. “He knew what hit and lied.”

In September, Ravnsborg is accused of hitting Boever as he walked along the road to his car that was in a ditch.

Ravnsborg allegedly searched the sheriff that night for a deer, but found nothing. Ravnsborg returned to the scene the next day and that’s when he supposedly found Boever’s body and reported it to the authorities.

Following the launch of the interviews, two articles of impeachment were moved against Ravnsborg, who refused to resign when asked to resign, according to the Post.

Now that the investigation is over and the charges have been made, I believe the attorney general should resign. I have reviewed the material we are launching, starting today, and I encourage others to review it as well, ”Governor of South Dakota Kristi NoemKristi Lynn NoemNoem will raise funds at Mar-a-Lago, hosted by Donald Trump Jr. Trump will participate in the private donor retreat RNC Trump will speak at CPAC in his first public appearance since he left the White House MORE (R) tweeted.

“At no time did this problem hinder his ability to do the office’s work,” Mike Deaver, a private spokesman for Ravnsborg, told Leader Argus.

Ravnsborg is facing three counts of misdemeanor for operating a vehicle using a mobile or electronic device, a violation of driving on the track and careless driving.

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