Dayton Daily News

Yost sues over lawin bribery scheme

AGseeks to block 4.5M Ohioans frompaying for nuclear bailout subsidies.

- ByLauraBis­choffff

Ohio Attorney GeneralDav­e COLUMBUS— Yost onWednesda­yfifiled a civil lawsuit to block millions of dollars in subsidies fromflflow­ing to electric companies allegedly involved in a $60 million bribery scheme.

The subsidies are slated to be added to 4.5 million customers’ bills across Ohio starting in January. The revenues are scheduled to be distribute­d to Energy Harbor Corp., FirstEnerg­y Corp. and Ohio Valley Electricit­y Corp.

Filed in Franklin County Common Pleas Court, the lawsuit names 14 defendants, including the energy companies, political entities and the fifive men criminally charged in U.S. District Court with racketeeri­ng: state Rep. Larry Householde­r, lobbyists Juan Cespedes, Matt Borges andNeil Clark, and political strategist Jeffff Longstreth.

The lawsuit seeks damages and to:

■ Prevent the defendants from receiving the subsidies.

■ Force dissolutio­n of political nonprofits involved in the “shell game.”

■ Block participan­ts in the illegal scheme from holding office in government or campaigns for eight years.

■ Block defendants from lobbying state government for eight years.

“This is too little, too late,” said MikeMcGove­rn of ProgressOh­io, a liberal leaning think tank. “Yost has already failed to investigat­e this scandal once. He is far too connected to the corrupt people and organizati­ons involved to carry out this investigat­ion. Yost isn’t independen­t. He’s compromise­d.”

Yost disagreed and said he has the independen­ce needed to hold the players accountabl­e.

“I call balls and strikes and hey, I sued these people,” he said.

The lawsuit comes as state lawmakers wrestle with whether and how to repeal House Bill 6, a measure that Gov. Mike DeWine signed into law in July 2019 and took effect inOctober 2019 after opponents failed to mount a referendum campaign. Opponents faced a fierce counter-campaign that flooded Ohio with TV ads and mailers and circulated alternate petitions.

Ohioans Against Corporate Bailouts failed to gather the required 266,000 valid voter signatures by the Oct. 21 deadline and the bill became law.

In July, FBI agents arrested Householde­r, Borges, Cespedes, Clark and Longstreth in connection withwhatU.S. Attorney David DeVillers has called the biggest bribery scheme in Ohio history.

According to federal prosecutor­s, unnamed energy companies funneled$60million in bribe money through dark money groups that helped elect Householde­r’s allies into legislativ­e seats and position Householde­r to become House speaker. Householde­r and his team then helped pass the bill and defend it from a referendum attempt, according to an 81-page criminal complaint.

Federal prosecutor­s did not identify companies by name but used descriptio­ns that identify them as FirstEnerg­y, FirstEnerg­y Services and FirstEnerg­y Solutions, now called Energy Harbor.

Ahandful of bills to repeal HB6 are pending in the Ohio General Assembly but none have emerged fromcommit­tee. House Democrats have tried to insert repeal language into other bills but have been thwarted.

Senate President Larry Obhof, R-Medina, said new House Speaker Bob Cupp, R-Lima, told him the House wants time to fix the problems created by House Bill 6. But if the House fails to act, Obhof said the Senate is moving forward with plans to repeal HB6.

“Right nowwe’re trying to work together,” Obhof said.

 ?? JULIE CARR SMYTH / AP ?? Attorney GeneralDav­eYost said the criminal case doesn’t address theharmrat­epayerssti­ll faceinabai­lout “secured through fraud, deceit and intimidati­on.”
JULIE CARR SMYTH / AP Attorney GeneralDav­eYost said the criminal case doesn’t address theharmrat­epayerssti­ll faceinabai­lout “secured through fraud, deceit and intimidati­on.”

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