Senator at center of Utah AI data center debate gets physical, slaps phone out of reporter’s hand — reporter covering cases of harassment against his business
The senator's anger turned physical when he was recorded.
Utah State Senator Jerry Stevenson (R.-Layton) got into a heated confrontation with a reporter from ABC4 who was covering the reported harassment of his business, which soon turned physical after he slapped the reporter's phone out of his hand.
Stevenson is one of the lawmakers on the state’s Military Installation Development Authority (MIDA) who approved the 9-GW data center that’s slated to generate and use more than twice the power that the entire state consumes. However, there is swift backlash against his vote, as there have been calls on social media to boycott his business, J&J Nursery and Garden Center, and ABC4 reports that some of its employees have reportedly been harassed by disgruntled community members.
ABC4 Reporter and Anchor Bayan Wang and his photographer were doing a story about the nursery and the threats they were receiving because of the decision of one of its owners. While they were at the business’s parking lot, a man was allegedly agitated and screaming at the photographer. Wang approached the two, and he started recording their interaction as he attempted to explain that they were covering the harassment of the business and its people. However, the man, later identified as Stevenson, approached Wang and slapped his phone out of his hand.
A witness who saw the interaction called the authorities, resulting in the filing of a police report. Once the situation had cooled down, law enforcement officers told Wang that the Senator was apologizing for the incident. However, the crew was also served with a trespassing notice, warning them that they are prohibited from going on the property or premises of the business for a year.
Senator Stevenson has a lot of power in the state of Utah as he sits across multiple boards and even chairs Utah’s Executive Appropriations Committee, the legislative body in charge of the state’s budget and funding. Aside from his membership on the MIDA board, he also sits on the boards of Point of the Mountain State Land Authority and the Utah Inland Port Authority.
Data centers are facing a lot of backlash from the communities surrounding these developments, and many state, city, and town council members are increasingly facing hostility for agreeing to these developments. One of the most alarming incidents is the shooting of the home of an Indiana politician because of their support for a data center project. Aside from this, more than half of the original town council in Archbald, Pennsylvania, have resigned due to community pressure, with some of them fearing for their lives, citing the Indiana incident.
The White House is pushing for more AI development as it races to achieve technological superiority. However, many Americans are now pushing back against this untethered development, especially as data centers’ insatiable power consumption is causing electricity rates to skyrocket. Even though the 9GW Utah data center will not be connected to the grid, many residents are still wary of the potential environmental impact of the site, as it will basically put up a natural gas power plant to power itself.
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Even though the project is moving forward, MIDA is said to be planning more town halls in the near future. Furthermore, construction isn’t expected to start any time soon, as its developer is said to still be raising money for the massive data center campus.
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Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.
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PEnns Now, if the reporter did that to the sweet senator, that's assault and the reporter would be in jail (for assaulting the Untouchables).Reply
But in this case, the senator "apologized" and that should do it!!
PS: The senator though is charging the reporter and crew with "trespassing"...while they were in a business open to the public... -
King_V Let me be sure I'm following this correctly:Reply
Senator's businesses are being harassed as backlash to his vote on the data center
Reporter is reporting on this harassment
Photographer is being screamed at by someone
Reporter starts recording on his phone, and approaches his photographer and the screaming man
Screaming man turns out to be the senator, who, in addition to the screaming now slaps the phone out of the reporter's handThat doesn't sound like someone who's got the sort of professional demeanor to be in charge of anything.
If I'm reading it right, then it seems an awful lot like this guy should be kicked off the multiple boards he's on, and possibly kicked out of the Senate. I also imagine that financial connections being investigated would reveal why he's so agitated about information coming out, even though the reporter was reporting on the harassment his businesses were on the receiving end of. -
King_V This Yahoo link (ultimately from The Hill, it seems) goes into more detail.Reply
Apparently the reporter tried to inform Stevenson that ABC4 had already been in touch with the executive staff at the nusery, the Senator does not seem to care.
That said, I can't tell if police officers are trying to cover for the Senator (badly), or what, because they told Wang that Stevenson wanted the news crew to know that he was sorry for the incident, yet the police then issued them a trespassing citation.
Further detail smells more rotten.