Minnesota Senate Republicans call on GOP colleague to resign after
prostitution arrest
[March 19, 2025]
By STEVE KARNOWSKI
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Fellow Republicans called Tuesday on a Minnesota
state senator to resign after police in suburban Bloomington arrested
him for allegedly soliciting a minor for prostitution.
GOP Sen. Justin Eichorn, 40, of Grand Rapids, was arrested Monday after
detectives communicated with a man who was led to believe that he was
talking to a 16-year-old girl, the department said in a news release. A
detective arranged to meet with him, and he was arrested outside his
vehicle without incident.
He remained jailed in Bloomington on Tuesday afternoon pending his
transfer to the Hennepin County Jail in Minneapolis, Deputy Chief Kim
Clauson said. She said she did not know if he had a lawyer who could
speak on his behalf or if he had spoken with an investigator. Jail staff
would not take a message for him.
The department said a felony charge of soliciting a minor for
prostitution was pending, but the Hennepin County Attorney's Office said
it had not yet received the case.
A message left at Eichorn's Senate office was not immediately returned.
According to his Senate profile, he's married with four children. He
lists his profession as entrepreneur and was first elected in 2016. His
chair on an environment commmittee sat empty during a Tuesday hearing.
Senate Republicans as a group called on Eichorn to step down, as did
House Republicans.
“We are shocked by these reports, and this alleged conduct demands an
immediate resignation," his Senate GOP colleagues said in a statement.
"Justin has a difficult road ahead, and he needs to focus on his
family.”

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The chair for Minnesota state Sen. Justin Eichorn, a Republican from
Grand Rapids, sits empty in a Senate hearing room in the State
Capitol complex in St. Paul on Tuesday, March 18, 2025, a day after
his arrest in Bloomington for allegedly soliciting a minor for
prostitution. (AP Photo/Steve Karnowski)

Senate Democratic leaders stopped short of calling for him to quit. They
have also stood up for Democratic Sen. Nicole Mitchell, of Woodbury, who
was arrested last spring on a felony charge for allegedly burglarizing
her estranged stepmother's home. Senate Democratic leaders have said she
deserves to have the legal process play out first.
“The felony allegation against Senator Eichorn is deeply disturbing, and
raises serious questions that will need to be answered by the court, as
well as his caucus and constituents,” Democratic Senate Majority Leader
Erin Murphy, of St. Paul, said in a statement that echoed what she has
said about Mitchell.
Bloomington Police Chief Booker Hodges leveled sharp criticism of
Eichorn.
“As a 40-year-old man, if you come to the Orange Jumpsuit District
looking to have sex with someone’s child, you can expect that we are
going to lock you up,” Hodges said in a statement. “I have always
advocated stiffer penalties for these types of offenses. ... We need our
state legislature to take this case and this type of conduct more
seriously.”
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