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Ayotte says she was unaware of legal sanctions against the husband of her child advocate pick in guardianship case

Gov. Kelly Ayotte said she was unaware of the information that helped compromise her nomination of Diana Fenton, a lawyer at the New Hampshire Department of Education, to lead the New Hampshire Office of the Child Advocate. Fenton withdrew her nomination after a contentious public hearing.
Annmarie Timmins
/
NHPR
Gov. Kelly Ayotte said she was unaware of the information that compromised her nomination of Diana Fenton to lead the New Hampshire Office of the Child Advocate. Fenton withdrew her nomination after a contentious public hearing.

Gov. Kelly Ayotte said Wednesday that she was unaware of the issues that compromised her nominee for New Hampshire’s child advocate, a watchdog over the state’s child welfare system.

Diana Fenton, a lawyer who worked with Ayotte two decades ago at the Department of Justice and is currently with the state Department of Education, withdrew her nomination Tuesday following a bruising confirmation hearing. 

Several people questioned Fenton’s ability to police the state’s child welfare system given her work as a foster parent and her marriage to a family law judge. The fact that her husband was sanctioned two years ago for trying to use his position to expedite the couple’s guardianship case raised further questions.

The Judicial Conduct Committee's order reprimanding Judge Todd Prevett is easily accessible via a Google search. Ayotte said she did not know about it.

“I've known Diana since my time going back to the Attorney General's Office,” said Ayotte, who led that office more than 20 years ago. Ayotte added: “I know Diana and her background. I was unaware of her husband’s background.”

The Judicial Conduct Committee sanction found that Prevett tried to use his judicial position to waive a records check in a guardianship case he and Fenton were pursuing.

That sanction was one of a few questions that dominated Fenton’s public hearing Monday before the Executive Council. Several people who spoke also asked whether Fenton could police the state’s child welfare system given that she has worked as a lawyer defending the state for more than 20 years. Some councilors shared the same concerns with NHPR.

Fenton withdrew her nomination the day after the hearing.

Ayotte said Fenton made the decision to withdraw her candidacy. Fenton has not returned NHPR’s messages.

I write about youth and education in New Hampshire. I believe the experts for a news story are the people living the issue you are writing about, so I’m eager to learn how students and their families are navigating challenges in their daily lives — including childcare, bullying, academic demands and more. I’m also interested in exploring how changes in technology and funding are affecting education in New Hampshire, as well as what young Granite Staters are thinking about their experiences in school and life after graduation.

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Federal funding is gone.

Congress has eliminated all funding for public media.

That means $2.1 million per year that Connecticut Public relied on to deliver you news, information, and entertainment programs you enjoyed is gone.

The future of public media is in your hands.

All donations are appreciated, but we ask in this moment you consider starting a monthly gift as a Sustainer to help replace what’s been lost.

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