Daily Camera (Boulder)

Boebert’s mileage reimbursem­ents under investigat­ion

Rep. paid herself more than $22,000

- By Conrad Swanson

Colorado officials are investigat­ing whether the conservati­ve Western Slope U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert broke any laws by cashing in on large amounts of mileage reimbursem­ents from her own campaign.

Boebert paid herself more than $22,000 from her campaign account in 2020, raising red flags for ethics experts, The Denver Post previously reported. While candidates can legally reimburse themselves for the miles they drive, those payments would have meant she drove nearly 39,000 miles while campaignin­g.

And in one four-month span of her campaign, Boebert had only one publicly advertised event.

A political organizati­on, American Muckrakers, filed a complaint earlier this month with Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser in June, citing Boebert’s reimbursem­ents and asking for an investigat­ion. That complaint was referred to the “appropriat­e agencies to evaluate the allegation­s and whether any legal actions are justified,” Lawrence Pacheco, a spokesman for Weiser’s office, told The Denver Post.

Pacheco did not respond when asked to specify which agency would investigat­e the complaint, but David B. Wheeler, president of American Muckrakers PAC said in a statement that the matter would go to the state department­s of Revenue and Labor and Employment.

Wheeler alleged that Boebert used false mileage records to pay off a tax lien placed on her restaurant in Rifle, Shooters Bar and Grill.

Boebert has repeatedly defended the reimbursem­ents.

“This is another swing and miss from a partisan political group,” Boebert said Wednesday in a statement. “I represent over 50,000 square miles of Colorado; I connect with the people I serve rather than sitting at home in a basement like most Leftists.”

American Muckrakers also took aim at another controvers­ial Republican figure this year, U.S. Rep. Madison Cawthorn, of North Carolina. The organizati­on gathered and released incendiary and sexual videos of the representa­tive leading up to the state’s primary election, which he lost.

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