Baltimore Sun

Gaines pleads guilty to campaign funds misuse

Facing up to 20 years, the former Maryland lawmaker apologizes

- By Michael Kunzelman

A former Maryland state lawmaker pleaded guilty Thursday to a charge that she illegally used campaign funds for her personal benefit.

Tawanna Gaines faces a sentence of up to 20 years after her plea to one count of wire fraud. U.S. District Judge Theodore D. Chuang is scheduled to sentence her Jan. 3. Chuang says guidelines call for eight to 33 months in prison, depending on the court’s calculatio­n of her criminal history.

The plea agreement with prosecutor­s also calls for Gaines to pay back at least $22,565.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Windom said Gaines spent campaign money on personal expenses including fast food, hair styling, dental work, a cover for her swimming pool and an Amazon Prime membership.

Gaines made a brief statement to reporters as she left the courthouse: “I take full responsibi­lity for what I’ve done. I don’t want any of you to judge the Maryland General Assembly by that. There are honorable people working there. I want to apologize to them for putting myself in this position.”

The Democrat from Prince George’s County was charged earlier this month in a criminal informatio­n. The Oct. 7 court filing accused Gaines of defrauding her campaign and its contributo­rs out of more than $22,000.

Gaines, 67, of Berwyn Heights, had served in the Maryland House of Delegates since 2001. She resigned less than a week before she was charged.

Since June 2002, Gaines had used a campaign committee called “Friends of Tawanna P. Gaines” to raise money for her political campaigns. It was a regulated state election campaign committee with a designated bank account. Separately, Gaines controlled a PayPal account for donations that weren’t disclosed in state campaign finance filings, a court filing said.

Gaines, who was vice chair of the House Appropriat­ions Committee, submitted her resignatio­n to House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones on Oct. 4.

“As elected officials, we have an obligation to uphold the public trust, both in office and in our campaigns,” Jones said in a statement. “We cannot sacrifice that trust for personal gain for ourselves or our family members.”

U.S. Attorney Robert Hur of the District of Maryland said public officials are entrusted to make decisions in the best interests of their constituen­ts “and not to use their positions of authority to line their own pockets.”

“These types of cases stand for the propositio­n that the law applies to everyone. No one is above the law,” Hur told reporters after the hearing.

Gaines’ plea marks the latest legal trouble for former or current state legislator­s in Maryland in recent years.

Last year, former Sen. Nathaniel Oaks, a Democrat, pleaded guilty to two federal counts of fraud for accepting $15,300 in bribes. His indictment in 2017 came amid a flurry of state and federal charges against would-be, former and sitting lawmakers who ended up in legal trouble.

Gary Brown, a Democrat, was indicted by state prosecutor­s on charges of making illegal campaign contributi­ons, one day before he was scheduled to be sworn in as a Baltimore delegate. A day later, federal prosecutor­s announced a former delegate, William Campos, had pleaded guilty to bribery and conspiracy in a public corruption case involving the liquor industry in Prince George’s County. And the very next day, just before the legislativ­e session began, another Prince George’s County Democrat, Del. Michael Vaughn, abruptly announced his resignatio­n. Vaughn was indicted in the same federal case as Campos.

 ?? OVETTA WIGGINS/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Prosecutor­s said former Maryland Del. Tawanna Gaines spent campaign money on personal expenses including food and dental work.
OVETTA WIGGINS/THE WASHINGTON POST Prosecutor­s said former Maryland Del. Tawanna Gaines spent campaign money on personal expenses including food and dental work.

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