Baltimore Sun

Right-leaning nonprofit paid Whitaker $904K, forms show

- By Michael Balsamo and Chad Day

WASHINGTON — Before joining the Justice Department, acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker earned nearly $1 million from a right-leaning nonprofit that doesn’t disclose its donors, according to newly released financial disclosure forms.

The documents show Whitaker received $904,000 in income from the Foundation for Accountabi­lity & Civic Trust from 2016 through nearly the end of 2017. He also received $15,000 from CNN as a legal commentato­r, according to the documents released Tuesday by the Justice Department.

The nonprofit group, known as FACT, styles itself President Trump appointed Matthew Whitaker, above, as acting attorney general after Jeff Sessions resigned Nov. 7. as a nonpartisa­n government watchdog promoting ethics and transparen­cy. The tax-exempt group is supposed to serve the public interest without supporting or opposing specific candidates for office. However, its challenges and its website have focused largely, though not exclusivel­y, on Democrats.

Whitaker used his role as president and executive director of FACT in 2016 as a platform to question the ethics of Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton.

Several news outlets and outside groups had requested the documents aft er President Donald Trump ousted Attorney General Jeff Sessions and elevated Whitaker to the top Justice Department post Nov. 7.

The documents show that Whitaker began revising his public disclosure­s the day he was appointed acting attorney general. He revised the forms four more times, including Tuesday.

In a disclosure form Whitaker completed when he joined the Justice Department in September 2017, he reported receiving $1,875 in legal fees from a company called World Patent Marketing. Whitaker has come under scrutiny for his involvemen­t with the company, which was accused of misleading consumers and is under investigat­ion by the FBI.

Whitaker also disclosed his partial interest in a family farm in Ely, Iowa, that he valued at between $100,000 and $250,000. The forms also included disclosure­s of $20,000 to $30,000 in credit card debt in 2017.

FACT drew its funds from 2014-2016 mainly from Donor’s Trust, another nonprofit designed to provide anonymity to conservati­ve and libertaria­n donors. Though such taxexempt groups can legally withhold the identity of their contributo­rs and generally do so, there may be a distinct irony when a group dedicated to transparen­cy keeps its funding sources in the shadows.

Whitaker’s appointmen­t has been criticized by Democrats who have challenged its constituti­onality and are concerned that he will interfere with special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion.

Earlier Tuesday, the Senate’s top Democrat asked the Justice Department’s watchdog to investigat­e communicat­ions between Whitaker and the White House.

Sen. Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., asked the inspector general to l ook i nto whether Whitaker had access to confidenti­al grand j ury i nformation in Mueller’s probe. Schumer also wants investigat­ors to examine whether Whitaker shared informatio­n with Trump or others in the administra­tion.

John Lavinsky, a spokesman for the inspector general, declined to comment on Schumer’s request.

Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, the second-ranking Justice Department official, had been overseeing the special counsel’s Russia investigat­ion until Whitaker’s appointmen­t. Whitaker is now overseeing the investigat­ion.

Schumer and other Democrats have said they are concerned about Whitaker’s past criticism of the Mueller probe, which is looking at Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election and ties to Trump’s campaign.

Whitaker’s past public statements have included an op-ed article in which he said Mueller would be straying outside his mandate if he investigat­ed Trump’s family finances.

 ?? STEPHANIE KEITH/GETTY ??
STEPHANIE KEITH/GETTY

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