Call & Times

Source making Jane Sanders allegation­s admits informatio­n was based on hearsay

-

MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — A Republican lawyer who reported independen­t U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders and his wife to federal officials was passing on informatio­n he heard from a GOP lawmaker who said he didn't have direct knowledge of the allegation­s.

The lawyer, Brady Toensing, sent letters to the U.S. attorney for Vermont and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. alleging that Sen. Sanders pressured a bank to approve a loan to a now-closed college run by Sanders' wife.

The source of that informatio­n was Republican state Rep. Don Turner, the minority leader of the Vermont House.

Turner told WCAX-TV that friends at the bank described pressure from Sanders' office, but he says those friends didn't have direct knowledge of the negotiatio­ns. Turner says he told Toensing about it in May 2016, adding that he would not have brought it to the attention of federal investigat­ors.

Toensing, an attorney who served as Donald Trump's Vermont representa­tive during last year's presidenti­al campaign, said Monday he was standing by the allegation.

"This was not a country store, cracker-barrel rant," Toensing said. He said Turner told him the informatio­n came from a top bank official, and he noted that hearsay is used by investigat­ors to develop direct evidence.

Turner did not immediatel­y return a message left by The Associated Press on Monday.

The Vermont weekly newspaper Seven Days first reported late Friday that Turner was the source of Toensing's informatio­n.

In early 2016, Toensing sent a more extensive letter to federal authoritie­s alleging that in 2010, when Jane O'Meara Sanders was president of Burlington College, she made fraudulent claims while seeking $10 million in financing for a real estate deal.

The college, which closed last year, later sold the property. Officials cited debt from the land deal as a major reason.

Federal law enforcemen­t officials have refused to confirm or deny the existence of any investigat­ion, let alone what led them to open one. But Bernie Sanders confirmed an investigat­ion was underway after it was revealed last month that Jane Sanders had retained attorneys. No charges have been filed.

During a Sunday appearance on CNN's State of the Union, the Vermont senator and 2016 Democratic presidenti­al candidate cited Turner's comments as proof that the allegation­s against his wife were politicall­y motivated.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States