“I don’t have any immediate concerns with Stan’s candidacy,” Sydney Asbury, then Patrick’s deputy chief of staff in charge of appointments, wrote to Crosby on April 23. “Do you have any concerns about Stan being tied too closely to the governor?”

McGee, a Rhodes Scholar who was the Patrick administration’s authority on gambling, was seen by many as well qualified to lead the independent commission, which was created to license and regulate three casinos statewide. He was forced to resign as acting director of the commission on May 9 amid the uproar over the assault allegations. Florida prosecutors chose not to pursue the charges, but McGee paid a private settlement to the family of his alleged victim....

After the Globe detailed the episode in the steam room of a Florida ­resort and reported that neither the Gaming Commission nor the governor’s office had ever done an independent review of the case, McGee resigned.

Patrick invited McGee to ­return to his old job as assistant secretary for policy and planning in the Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development.

But McGee never came back to work. After taking several weeks of personal time, he ­decided to resign in June, hoping his departure would end the controversy.

The e-mails obtained by the RedMassGroup under the state public records law make clear that the Gaming Commission had considered the potential public relations backlash from choosing McGee, only to dismiss it.

In late April, public relations consultant Karen Schwartzman drafted a background summary of the allegations against ­McGee and concluded McGee’s history would probably not pose a problem for the fledging commission, as long as the public relations were “managed.”

I don't know which is sicker, the alleged conduct or official reaction. 

***************************

Initial stories did refer to McGee’s arrest deep in the story....

Just as predicted. 

Though the case ended without criminal charges, e-mails to the commission showed that the public was less forgiving.

“McGee? A PR nightmare,” wrote gambling opponent Kathleen Conley Norbut to Crosby two days after McGee was selected. “I’ll be blunt — the [Gaming Commission] did not get that one right. Skills and knowledge agreed, but I don’t think that this will be brushed aside.”