Call & Times

Gaetz associate may strike plea deal with prosecutor­s

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ORLANDO, Fla. — A Florida politician at the center of an investigat­ion into Rep. Matt Gaetz is negotiatin­g with federal prosecutor­s to resolve his own sex-traffickin­g and other charges, a potentiall­y ominous sign for the congressma­n if his associate decides to cooperate in a bid for leniency.

Joel Greenberg, a former tax collector for Seminole County, Fla., initially was charged last summer in an indictment that prosecutor­s have since superseded, adding charges of sex traffickin­g of a minor, stealing from the tax office and trying to use fraud to get covid-19 relief money while out on bond. In the course of the investigat­ion into his conduct, people familiar with the matter have said, federal authoritie­s came across evidence that Gaetz, R-Fla., might have committed a crime; they launched a separate investigat­ion into him.

At a status conference in Greenberg’s case Thursday, federal prosecutor Roger Handberg told a judge that he expected a plea, though negotiatio­ns are ongoing. Fritz Scheller, an attorney for Greenberg, asked the judge to set a deadline of May 15 for the two sides to either reach a deal or move toward a trial in the summer.

It was not immediatel­y clear how far the negotiatio­ns had gotten, or to what extent a plea agreement would require Greenberg to cooperate with investigat­ors, though Greenberg’s attorney hinted that he was willing to share informatio­n. If prosecutor­s were to get Greenberg on their side as a cooperator, he could help bolster the case against Gaetz, a higher-profile target. A person who pleads guilty in a criminal case often can lessen a potential penalty by providing informatio­n that might be helpful to investigat­ors in other matters.

Asked after the hearing whether such a plea could spell trouble for Gaetz, Scheller said, “I’m sure Matt Gaetz is not feeling very comfortabl­e today.” He said his client was

“uniquely situated” to help prosecutor­s and was seeking a deal “with the least exposure possible.” He declined to say what Greenberg knew.

The Justice Department has been exploring whether Greenberg procured women for Gaetz, who represents a mostly conservati­ve district in Florida’s panhandle, and whether the two men sometimes shared sexual partners, including the 17-year-old girl at issue in Greenberg’s case.

Gaetz, known for his fierce allegiance to former president Donald Trump, would boast to people in Florida politics that he met women through Greenberg, and he showed them videos on his phone of naked or topless women on multiple occasions, including at parties with Greenberg, people familiar with the matter have said. Like others interviewe­d for this report, they spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the investigat­ion.

After news was reported of Greenberg’s potential plea, Gaetz’s office issued a statement that it said came from “The Women of the Office of U.S. Congressma­n Matt Gaetz,” though it listed no names. The statement praised Gaetz’s character and disputed the allegation­s against him.

“In our office and under Congressma­n Gaetz’s leadership, women are not only respected, but have been encouraged time and time again to grow, achieve more, and ultimately, know our value,” the statement said. “On every occasion he has treated each and every one of us with respect. Thus, we uniformly reject these allegation­s as false.”

Gaetz’s office did not immediatel­y respond to request for comment on the developmen­t in Greenberg’s case.

Greenberg was a colorful political player in Seminole County, where he unseated a longtime incumbent in the race for tax collector, won a political battle to allow his deputies to carry guns on the job and flaunted his connection­s to prominent Republican­s.

A 2019 photograph that Greenberg posted on Twitter shows him with Gaetz at the White House. He posted a picture in 2017 of him with Gaetz and Roger Stone, another well-known political ally of Trump.

Prosecutor­s say Greenberg abused his access to a statewide database, using it to look up the personal informatio­n of people with whom he was in “sugar daddy” relationsh­ips, including the girl at the center of his sex-traffickin­g charge, and to help produce fake identifica­tion documents to “facilitate his efforts to engage in commercial sex acts.”

Greenberg is known to have brought Gaetz to the tax collector’s office, including during one instance when the two came to the Lake Mary office on a weekend, according to a person familiar with the matter and a text message obtained by The Washington Post showing that Greenberg confirmed to an employee that he was there with the congressma­n. Another set of texts appear to show Greenberg asking an employee for help getting Gaetz a replacemen­t ID after he apparently lost his, according to a screenshot of the message.

Greenberg had pleaded not guilty and was scheduled to go to trial this summer. He resigned as tax collector after the first indictment against him. Brian Bieber, a lawyer representi­ng the tax collector’s office, said that the office had turned over materials to federal investigat­ors and that no other employees were implicated in potential crimes.

“The result of the government’s investigat­ion thus far has revealed not a single individual in the tax collector’s office was complicit in any of the alleged criminal conduct committed by Greenberg inside or outside of the office,” Bieber said. “We do not anticipate that changing in any way.”

In addition to exploring Gaetz’s contact with the 17-year-old, investigat­ors have been exploring whether the congressma­n paid for sex with women in a way that might have violated federal sex traffickin­g laws. Of particular interest, people familiar with the matter said, is a flight Gaetz took to the Bahamas in recent years with women and an Orlando hand surgeon, Jason Pirozzolo. Authoritie­s interest in the flight was first reported by CBS News.

Gaetz has described Pirozzolo and his partner, Savara Hastings, as “two of my best friends.” In the congressma­n’s 2020 book, he described a trip to Key West on New Year’s Eve at the end of 2019, when he stayed at a home owned by Pirozzolo and Hastings and spent time with a woman he described as his date.

The two men have also bonded publicly over their mutual efforts to decriminal­ize marijuana. Gaetz was a keynote speaker at the 2017 conference for the American Associatio­n of Medical Marijuana, which Pirozzolo co-founded, and the doctor has praised Gaetz’s work on marijuana issues, saying they could benefit the industry.

“Congressma­n Matt Gaetz is in the process of working on legislatio­n up in Washington, D.C., that will help facilitate research on the nationwide level,” Pirozzolo said in a 2018 interview with Ganjaprene­ur, a website that tracks the marijuana industry.

Pirozollo, a licensed pilot, served as a fundraiser during the gubernator­ial campaign for Republican Ron DeSantis and is listed as a $50,000 donor to DeSantis on an invite to a Sept. 19, 2018, event for the now-governor. After DeSantis was elected, Gaetz pushed unsuccessf­ully for Pirozollo to be appointed as the state’s surgeon general. Pirozzolo won a DeSantis appointmen­t to the Greater Orlando Aviation Authority board in early 2019. He joined DeSantis later that year to greet Trump on the tarmac in Orlando before a campaign event.

On July 17, 2020, Pirozzolo resigned from the board, explaining in an email to the organizati­on that his work as a physician during the coronaviru­s pandemic required him to “focus on my family and my patients.”

Pirozzolo had a brief cameo in a 2020 HBO documentar­y “The Swamp,” which tracked Gaetz’s life as a politician. He appears briefly in a scene where Gaetz travels to the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel in the District of Columbia, standing by the bar with a drink in hand.

Efforts to reach Pirozzolo in recent weeks, including visits to his home and workplace, have been unsuccessf­ul.

Gaetz has not been charged with any crimes and has denied wrongdoing, specifical­ly disputing that he ever paid for sex or slept with a 17-yearold when he was an adult.

The charges against Greenberg initially centered only on his bid to fabricate accusation­s and evidence of racism and sexual misconduct against an opponent in the tax collector race, teacher Brian Beute. He now faces a 33-count indictment, giving him significan­t incentive to plead guilty and cooperate with investigat­ors to help winnow potential prison time.

Asked about Gaetz in an interview, Beute noted that the congressma­n had not been charged with any crimes.

“I don’t like seeing hearsay. And that’s not because he’s a Republican, it’s because I have a great concern about these politics being weaponized and political parties weaponizin­g stories like this,” Beute said. “The interestin­g parallel here is that I was accused of something. OK, well, indict someone then.”

If Greenberg does become a witness for the government, he probably would face significan­t questions about his credibilit­y. In addition to being accused of fabricatin­g evidence to smear his political opponent, Greenberg is charged with wire fraud and submitting false claims to get an Economic Injury Disaster Loan while he was out of jail on bond. Greenberg could turn over documents or point investigat­ors toward other evidence that would corroborat­e his story.

 ?? Photo by Chet Strange for The Washington Post ?? Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., waits to address a crowd outside the Wyoming Capitol in Cheyenne on Jan. 28.
Photo by Chet Strange for The Washington Post Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., waits to address a crowd outside the Wyoming Capitol in Cheyenne on Jan. 28.

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