Eric Greitens
Eric Greitens was born in St. Louis, Missouri, United States on April 10th, 1974 and is the Entrepreneur. At the age of 50, Eric Greitens biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Eric Robert Greitens (born April 10, 1974) is an American politician, humanitarian, scholar, and former Navy SEAL who served as Missouri's 56th governor from January 2017 to his resignation in June 2018. Greitens was born and raised in St. Louis, Greitens, and was awarded a doctorate by Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, as a Rhodes scholar.
He rose to the rank of lieutenant commander after four tours of service as a US Navy SEAL officer, led a team combating Al-Qaeda, and was given a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart.
Greitens founded The Mission Continues, a non-profit group to assist veterans after being a White House Fellow.
Greitens revealed in 2015 that he had become a Republican after being a Democrat throughout his early life.
In 2016, he ran for governor of Missouri as a Republican.
Greitens won three Republican primaries and then defeated Democratic state Attorney General Chris Koster in the general election.
Signing of Missouri's right-to-work law, which was later repealed by a statewide referendum, was one of Greitens' most notable accomplishments in office. Greitens was charged with felony invasion of privacy in February 2018 in connection with suspected links with an extramarital affair he had before becoming governor.
Gardner was also charged with campaign-related criminal charges later this year.
All charges were dismissed in May 2018, and Greitens resigned from office on June 1 after the Missouri Legislature convened a special session to discuss impeachment.
Greitens and his allies deny any criminal offense and have described the charges as a "political witch hunt" repeatedly.
Since June 2018, Special Prosecutors Gerard Carmody has been looking at Gardner and revealed a 7-count criminal indictment against the prosecution's lead investigator.
Early life and education
Greitens was born in St. Louis, Missouri, to Becky and Rob Greitens on April 10, 1974. Greitens' mother was a special education teacher and his father was an accountant for the Missouri Department of Agriculture. Greitens was raised Jewish, his mother is Jewish, and his father is Catholic, and his mother is a Jew. He grew up as a Democrat. In 1992, Greitens graduated from Parkway North High School.
Greitens majored in ethics, philosophy, and public policy at Duke University after high school. He earned his A.B. degree in 1996. Summa cum lauded. Greitens was a winner of the Harry S. Truman Scholarship and was selected as a Rhodes scholar, which allowed him to pursue graduate studies at Oxford University. He was a member of Lady Margaret Hall and looked at developmental research, earning a M.Phil. In 1998, a Ph.D. was awarded a Ph.D. degree for research into child charity efforts in war-torn countries.
"I have worked in Cambodia with children who lost limbs to land mines and are survivors of polio," Greitens said during his 2016 campaign for governor. I've worked in Bolivia with children of the street. "I've spent time in one of Mother Teresa's homes for the destitute and dying." Greitens spent six weeks as a college student, the Puntizela camp outside Pula, Croatia, and the Gasinci camp outside Osijek, Croatia. Both are explained in his book. Bosnians were transferred to Croatia by transit camps. Greitens also traveled to Rwanda and Zaire as a UN volunteer photographer.
Personal life
Rebecca Wright, Greitens' first wife, died in divorce in 2003.
Greitens was married to Sheena Elise Chestnut from 2011 to 2020. They have two sons.
Greitens appeared in the science fiction film Star Trek Into Darkness in 2013. He appears in Joe Klein's book Charlie Mike: A True Story of Heroes Who Brought Their Mission Home.
Greitens, Missouri's first Jewish governor, attends the Reform B'nai El synagogue.
Greitens often spoke of his fitness and celebrated physical accomplishments as both a candidate and governor. He was a boxer in college and had a black belt in Taekwondo, and he has a black belt.
Greitens' hairstylist had an extramarital affair in 2015. She accused him of coerceding her to perform oral sex, undressing, kissing, and touching her without her permission, and even threatens to publish a nude snapshot of her mother if she tells anyone about her encounter. A 2018 study by the Missouri House Special Investigative Committee on Oversight, which concluded that the woman's allegations were credible, was discredited, according to Greitens. In a sworn affidavit, Greitens' ex-wife testified that he admitted to photographing them.
Eric and Sheena Greitens announced on April 11, 2020, they were ending their marriage. Sheena Greitens announced shortly that she had accepted a position as an associate professor of political science at the University of Texas's Austin Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs. She focuses mostly on East Asia, American national security, authoritarian politics, and international affairs. Sheena Greitens accused him of physical assault "such as cuffing our now-three-year-old son across the face at the dinner table" and said that "sentering the abuse allowed him to limit their access to firearms." She said she has "photographic proof" of the abuse injuries. According to Greitens' lawyer, the suspected injuries occurred from their son's "roughhousing with his brother."
Greitens denied allegations of violence, arguing that they are politically motivated and that senior Republicans aided his ex-wife write the affidavit.
Navy career
Greitens matriculated at the United States Navy's Officer Candidate School in Pensacola, Florida, in January 2001, graduating in May as an ensign in the United States Navy Reserve. He then started Basic Underwater Demolitions/SEAL (BUD/S) training in Coronado, California, graduating with Class 237 in February 2002.
Greitens rose to become a lieutenant commander in the United States Navy Reserve. He was deployed four times during his active service careers to Iraq, Afghanistan, the Horn of Africa, and Southeast Asia. He was the leader of a joint special operations task unit, a Mark V Special Operations Craft detachment, and an al-Qaeda-target cell.
Greitens resigned from full-time active service in 2005 to begin a one-year White House fellowship. Greitens, one of President George W. Bush's selected architecture and engineering students in rebuilding efforts following Hurricane Katrina, developed a program to bring architecture and engineering students involved in reconstruction efforts. He remained a Navy veteran and supervised a program that recruited consultants for special military operations around the world. He spent time in the Department of Housing and Urban Development as a White House Fellow (HUD).
He volunteered for a six-month tour in Iraq, which began in October 2006. Two suicide bombers detonated trucks carrying chlorine gas at the Fallujah government facility, where Greitens and other military personnel were asleep on March 28, 2007. Al-Qaeda's third chlorine bombing attack in the Al Anbar province of Iraq. Greitens was one of about 15 people wounded, and he was given a Purple Heart after suffering from the bombing. He was also awarded the Bronze Star and Combat Action Ribbon.
"Even if you're 40 percent disabled, they'll give you 100 percent disability in some cases," Greitens said of the Veterans Administration. Veterans in the United States are not paid to support veterans in their lives. They have statistics on how many people sign up for health care. He claims that such overuse places strains the VA system and discourages vets from reintegrating into general society.
Greitens learned of drug use by Navy service members during their deployment in Thailand and started an investigation that culminated in their removal. According to an analysis report, his crew effectively shut down a transit depot for a terrorist group in the Philippines.
Greitens (then in the Individual Ready Reserve) requested to be recalled to the Navy's Selected Reserve in January 2019. Navy officials, including Vice Admiral Robert P. Burke (then the Chief of Naval Personnel) and Brendan McLane (then the Chief of the Navy Recruiting Command), did not want to give Greitens a "significant misconduct waiver" that would allow him to return, but the SEALs informed Navy leadership that "he would not meet the SEAL community's re-entry criteria; rather than disappointable promotion prospects," according to Navy leaders; However, under pressure from Vice President Mike Pence, Greitens was able to return, receiving him a "red carpet" medical license. Upon his return to the SEALs, Greitens was denied admission. He was instead a general unrestricted line officer, a rank for reservists tasked with office duties. Greitens resigned from his service in the Navy Reserve on May 1, 2021, two months after he announced his bid for the Senate.
Subsequent career
Greitens served in public service at the Truman School of Public Affairs and served as an adjunct professor of corporate ethics in the MBA program at Washington University in St. Louis.
Greitens founded The Mission Continues, a non-profit group that places veterans with volunteer groups to foster public service, strengthen community links, and enhance career skills.
Greitens received $700,000 in compensation from the charity as CEO of The Mission Continues. He worked without pay from 2007 to 2011, and was paid $150,000 from mid-2010 to 2011 after receiving a grant from the Draper Richards Kaplan Foundation; and was paid $200,000 in each of the years 2011, 2012, and 2013. In 2014, he stepped down as CEO and left the board of the company in 2015. Greitens' compensation as the administrator of the charity became a point of contention in his subsequent political campaigns. According to experts on nonprofit compensation, his salary as the CEO was higher than similarly situated organizations, but not wealthy in light of the organization's mission, as well as Greitens' education and career experiences.
Greitens had used the charity's email address to schedule political meetings about his gubernatorial bid, which is outlawed by federal tax law, according to the Associated Press in March 2018. He was also accused of using the charity's donor database to raise funds for his campaign, which was a breach of campaign finance law. The Missouri attorney general's probe into the nonprofit was dismissed on December 28, 2018, according to the Kansas City Star.
Greitens' military service fueled his rise to fame as a speaker at corporate functions and as the author of three books:
Greitens was a well-known speaker before his political career. On their covers, his second and third books featured the SEALs insignia, and he charged as much as $75,000 for a speech in Asia. Greitens responded by releasing his military files and releasing testimonials from SEALs and Marines with whom he had served in a YouTube video that he exaggerated his literary and television careers, while still reaping from his time in the SEALs.