Chattanooga Times Free Press

Mississipp­i ex-governor threatens to sue news site over welfare fraud comments

- BY EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS

“We have received the demand for retraction from Gov. Bryant’s attorney. We’re reviewing it carefully so that we can reply to that demand as quickly as possible.”

— HENRY LAIRD, AN ATTORNEY REPRESENTI­NG MISSISSIPP­I TODAY

JACKSON, Miss. — Former Mississipp­i Gov. Phil Bryant gave notice Wednesday that he will sue a news organizati­on unless it apologizes for statements he said some of its employees made about him in connection to misspendin­g of welfare money that was intended to help some of the poorest people in the U.S.

A reporter for the nonprofit online publicatio­n, Mississipp­i Today, won a Pulitzer Prize this week for her coverage of the case.

According to Bryant, Mississipp­i Today CEO Mary Margaret White made a “false and defamatory” statement about him when she spoke at a media conference in February. The letter also said Mississipp­i Today executive editor Adam Ganucheau and the reporter who won the Pulitzer Prize, Anna Wolfe, falsely claimed in a podcast that Mississipp­i Today employees “had never stated that former-Governor Bryant had committed a crime.”

The state auditor announced in February 2020 that criminal charges were brought against six people, including a former Mississipp­i Department of Human Services executive director who had been chosen by Bryant. The announceme­nt came weeks after Bryant, a Republican, finished his second and final term as governor.

No criminal charges have been filed against Bryant, and he has said he told the auditor in 2019 about possible misspendin­g of money from the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families antipovert­y program.

Mississipp­i law says anyone who intends to sue for libel or slander must give written notice before a lawsuit is filed, and that a news organizati­on has 10 days to issue a correction, apology or retraction.

Bryant’s demand that Mississipp­i Today publish correction­s was issued in a certified letter to the news outlet from his lawyer, William Quin II. It was published Wednesday on a website that Bryant used last week to release other informatio­n about the welfare fraud investigat­ion.

He’s also demanding that White, Ganucheau and Wolfe publicly apologize.

Henry Laird, an attorney representi­ng Mississipp­i Today, said in a statement Wednesday: “We have received the demand for retraction from Gov. Bryant’s attorney. We’re reviewing it carefully so that we can reply to that demand as quickly as possible.”

State Auditor Shad White has said that from 2016 to 2019, the Mississipp­i Department of Human Services misspent more than $77 million in welfare money. Prosecutor­s have said the department gave money to nonprofit organizati­ons that spent it on projects such as a $5 million volleyball facility at the University of Southern Mississipp­i — a project for which retired NFL quarterbac­k Brett Favre agreed to raise money.

The Mississipp­i Department of Human Services, with a new director, filed a civil lawsuit last year against Favre and more than three dozen other people and businesses to try to recover more than $20 million of the misspent welfare money. No criminal charges have been brought against Favre.

Bryant is not among those being sued, but attorneys for some of the defendants in the civil suit have filed court papers that include text-message exchanges between Bryant, Favre and others about spending welfare money on the volleyball arena, using a lease arrangemen­t because welfare money can’t be spent on constructi­on. Bryant last week released more than 400 pages of his own text messages related to the welfare fraud investigat­ion.

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