1. Mark Sanford Divorce Request Granted
South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford collects his thoughts as he admits to The Associated Press
more encounters with his Argentine mistress than he previously has disclosed, in his office Tuesday,
June 30, 2009, in Columbia, S.C. (AP Photo/Mary Ann Chastain)
AP Photo/Mary Ann Chastian
South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford's divorce will become final next month, just over a year after the
first lady discovered his affair with an Argentine woman he later called his soul mate.
Family Court Judge Jocelyn Cate said Friday she plans to OK Jenny Sanford's request to split from
her husband of 20 years. The divorce will become official in mid-March.
Jenny Sanford attended the 20-minute hearing without her husband. Afterward, she said she
considers it "the beginning of a new chapter for me and for our children."
She filed for divorce in December on the grounds of adultery, saying reconciliation efforts with her
husband had been unsuccessful.
"The dissolution of a 20-year marriage is not a cause for celebration," she said Friday.
Mark Sanford had told his staff he was going hiking along the Appalachian Trail and disappeared for
five days last summer, returning to publicly confess he had been in Argentina visiting Maria Belen
Chapur, his mistress for a year.
Even after the publication of passionate e-mail exchanges between her husband and Chapur, and an
Associated Press interview in which Mark Sanford called Chapur his "soul mate" and admitted
"crossing the line" with other women, Jenny Sanford said she was willing to reconcile with the two-
term governor.
The first lady said she had learned about the affair in January 2008, when she found a copy of a
letter written to Chapur by her husband, once considered a possible 2012 GOP presidential
contender. In the months that followed, he asked several times for permission to visit his mistress.
She said no.
The day his wife filed for divorce, Sanford blamed himself for what he called "the moral failure that
led us to this tragic point." In a reply to the filing last month, the governor admitted the affair and
asked the court to approve his wife's request to end their marriage.
Jenny Sanford spoke briefly in court Friday, reiterating claims that her husband had been unfaithful
to her, explaining her discovery of the letter and the couple's attempts to reconcile.
The couple's divorce agreement was filed under seal.
Jenny Sanford has moved out of the Governor's Mansion in Columbia and is living with the couple's
four sons at their beachside home on Sullivans Island.
Sanford, 49, is the first sitting governor to divorce in South Carolina, which in 1949 became the last