Republican Justin Eichorn resigned from the Minnesota Senate on Thursday and made his first appearance in federal court since his arrest in an underage prostitution sting.
Eichorn submitted his letter of resignation less than an hour before the Minnesota Senate was set to take an unprecedented vote to expel him from the chamber.
Minnesota Senate Secretary Tom Bottern read Eichorn’s resignation letter on the Senate floor.
“I must focus on personal matters at this time,” Eichorn’s message said. “It has been an honor to serve in the Minnesota Senate.”
The 40-year-old husband and father of four from Grand Rapids was charged Wednesday in U.S. District Court with attempted coercion and enticement of a minor. Eichorn is accused of soliciting prostitution from a Bloomington police detective posing as a 17-year-old girl.
He was released from the Hennepin County jail to federal officials just before 11 a.m. Thursday, and arrived in court in the early afternoon.
Eichorn entered the courtroom under guard and wearing a black polo shirt and blue jeans. He was represented by a federal public defender but told the court he intends to retain private counsel.
Judge Shannon Elkins ordered that Eichorn be released to a halfway house, but that he remain jailed until a bed is available. Conditions included a prohibition on contact with unaccompanied minors and a restriction on leaving the state. Eichorn did not speak other than to confirm he understood the charges against him and the conditions of his release.