The verdict is in.
Pleasant Valley Highway Superintendent John Baxter has been found guilty of two misdemeanor counts of attempted unlawful surveillance after a bench trial in LaGrange Justice Court. The charges stem from allegations that Baxter placed a hidden camera beneath his secretary’s desk in an apparent attempt to capture intimate images without her knowledge.
Justice Stephen O’Hare’s ruling closes one chapter of a case that has dominated local headlines for nearly a year. Baxter now awaits sentencing in August and faces the possibility of jail time.
But while the legal proceedings may be winding down, the larger questions are only beginning.
Public office is built on trust. Citizens entrust elected officials with power, resources, and authority with the expectation that those powers will be exercised honorably and responsibly. When that trust is violated—particularly in a case involving a subordinate employee and allegations of secret surveillance—the damage extends far beyond the individuals involved.
It reaches every resident who expects integrity from those they elect.
The trial itself featured competing explanations. Baxter acknowledged placing the camera but argued it was intended to monitor file cabinets behind the desk. Prosecutors presented evidence they said demonstrated otherwise, including photographs recovered from Baxter’s phone and text messages that painted a troubling picture of his intentions. In the end, the judge found the prosecution had met its burden.
For many residents, however, another aspect of the case has been equally troubling: Baxter has remained on a voluntary leave of absence while continuing to receive his salary.
New York law affords broad protections to elected officials, limiting the ability of municipalities to suspend pay or remove officeholders absent specific legal circumstances. Those protections exist for good reasons—to prevent political retaliation and preserve the will of voters.
But cases like this force us to ask difficult questions.
Should there be a mechanism to suspend compensation when an elected official is convicted of crimes involving abuses of public trust? Should local governments have greater authority to act when the conduct at issue undermines confidence in public institutions? And where is the balance between protecting democratic elections and protecting the public itself?
Reasonable people can disagree on the answers.
What should not be controversial is this: public trust is fragile.
It is earned slowly, over years of service and countless decisions. Yet it can be lost in an instant. And once broken, it is extraordinarily difficult to restore.
The Baxter verdict is not just about one man or one town department. It is a reminder that character matters. That public service is a privilege, not an entitlement. And that the standards we demand of our leaders should be at least as high as those we expect of ourselves.
Justice in a courtroom is important.
But when public trust is violated, accountability cannot end at the courthouse door. The harder conversation—the one about ethics, oversight, and the expectations we place on those who govern us—is only beginning.
Pleasant Valley deserves to have that conversation.
And so does New York.