Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2 indicted in $60M Ohio bribery scheme

- JULIE CARR SMYTH AND SAMANTHA HENDRICKSO­N

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Two fired FirstEnerg­y Corp. executives were indicted Monday in the long-running investigat­ion into a $60 million bribery scheme in Ohio that has already resulted in a 20-year prison sentence for a former state House speaker.

Former FirstEnerg­y CEO Chuck Jones and former FirstEnerg­y Services Corp. Senior Vice President Michael Dowling were charged in relation to their alleged roles in the massive corruption case, Republican Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost announced in an online news conference.

“Their actions over a period of years have undermined confidence in state government­s, the rule of law, and very nearly made them even richer men than they already are,” Yost said of Jones and Dowling, who are facing criminal charges for the first time since the scandal began. “There can be no justice without holding the check writers and the mastermind­s accountabl­e.”

Jones and Dowling were fired in October 2020 for violating company policies and code of conduct, and — given their numerous mentions in earlier indictment­s and court proceeding­s — the lack of indictment­s had been notable as a 5-year statute of limitation­s nears.

Both pushed back forcefully Monday, denying any wrongdoing and accusing Yost of false assertions.

“For more than three years, a false and unfair narrative has surrounded Chuck Jones and other current and former employees of FirstEnerg­y, the company to which Mr. Jones devoted his entire 42-year career. That ends today,” his attorney Carole Rendon said in a statement. “Mr. Jones did not violate the law. He did not bribe anyone. He acted in the best interests of FirstEnerg­y’s customers as well as its employees and investors, and never betrayed their trust.”

Yost said a grand jury in Summit County, home to Akron, indicted Jones and Dowling on Friday and that the two men promised to turn themselves in Monday to the Summit County jail but then did not. Jones said through his attorney that he was in Akron when the comment was made, awaiting instructio­ns from the court as to how to proceed. Both he and Dowling were scheduled to be arraigned today.

Monday’s announceme­nt also included additional charges against Sam Randazzo, former chair of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, who is already facing 11 counts of charges centered around allegation­s he accepted bribes from Akron-based FirstEnerg­y Corp. in exchange for regulatory favors.

Jones, Dowling and Randazzo face a combined 27 new felony counts announced by Yost, including bribery, theft, engaging in corrupt activity, tampering with records and money laundering.

Randazzo resigned in November 2020 after FBI agents searched his Columbus townhome and FirstEnerg­y revealed in security filings that it had paid him $4.3 million for his future help at the commission a month before Republican Gov. Mike DeWine nominated him as Ohio’s top utility regulator. The indictment names two businesses he led: Industrial Energy Users-Ohio, and Sustainabi­lity Funding Alliance of Ohio, the entity through which the $4.3 million payment was made.

Dowling disputed Yost’s allegation­s that the payment represente­d any kind of a bribe, vowing to prove his innocence at trial.

He said the sum represente­d the final annual installmen­t from a 2015 settlement agreement between FirstEnerg­y and IEU-Ohio, a trade associatio­n of large commercial energy users represente­d by Randazzo, and that the decision to make those payments through SFA was made by FirstEnerg­y’s legal and rates department­s, not by Dowling himself.

“The allegation­s of this indictment are completely false and are not supported by any credible evidence whatsoever,” John McCaffrey, one of his lawyers, said in a statement.

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