Las Vegas Review-Journal

BACK IN OKLAHOMA, POLITICAL CONTACTS SEEM TO HAVE GREATLY BENEFITED PRUITT

-

Pruitt, 49, is the administra­tor.

The mortgage on the Oklahoma City home, the records show, was issued by a local bank that was led by another business associate of Pruitt’s, Albert Kelly. Recently barred from working in the finance industry because of a banking violation, Kelly is now one of Pruitt’s top aides at the EPA and runs the agency’s Superfund program.

At the EPA, Pruitt is under investigat­ion for allegation­s of unchecked spending, ethics lapses and other issues, including his interactio­ns with lobbyists. An examinatio­n of Pruitt’s political career in Oklahoma reveals that many of the pitfalls he has encountere­d in Washington have echoes in his past.

According to real estate records, the 2003 purchase of the house for $375,000 came at a steep discount of about $100,000 from what Lindsey had paid a year earlier — a shortfall picked up by her employer, the telecom giant SBC Oklahoma.

SBC, previously known as Southweste­rn Bell and later as AT&T, had been lobbying lawmakers in the early 2000s on a range of matters, including a deregulati­on bill that would allow it to raise rates and a separate regulatory effort to reopen a bribery case from a decade earlier. Pruitt sided with the company on both matters, state records show.

In 2005, the shell company — Capitol House LLC — sold the property for $95,000 more than it had paid. While shell companies are legal, they often obscure the people who have an interest in them, and none of Pruitt’s financial disclosure filings in Oklahoma mentioned the company or the proceeds — a potential violation of the state’s ethics rules.

The Oklahoma City deal, which has not been previously reported, was one of several instances in which Pruitt appeared to have benefited from his relationsh­ips with Kelly and Wagner while in state politics.

During his eight years as a Republican state senator, Pruitt also upgraded his family residence in suburban Tulsa from a small ranch-style home to a lakefront property in a gated community. In addition, he bought a sizable stake in a minor league baseball team and took a second job at Wagner’s corporate law firm. Kelly’s bank, Spiritbank, would be there for much of it — providing financing for Pruitt’s Tulsa home and his stake in the baseball team, as well as the mortgage for the Oklahoma City house.

Pruitt’s interactio­ns with SBC also show that his blurring of lines with lobbyists has roots in his Oklahoma years. One of the issues at the EPA that has gotten Pruitt in trouble with government watchdogs involved his renting a room in Washington for $50 a night from the wife of an energy lobbyist who has had business in front of the agency.

Lobbyists and others in Oklahoma state politics who encountere­d Pruitt recalled him as a tough competitor who always had his eye on a higher office. Some called him a “Boy Scout” who was stingy with his money, while others said privately that he had exuded a sense of entitlemen­t — that rules did not apply to him.

Former Oklahoma Gov. David Walters, a Democrat, described Pruitt as someone who looked out for himself over the needs of constituen­ts, especially during his years as attorney general.

“I was disappoint­ed to find him operating in a hyperparti­san manner and seemingly representi­ng corporate interests over Oklahoma citizens,” Walters said.

In response to questions submitted by The New York Times about Pruitt’s finances in Oklahoma, an EPA spokeswoma­n said Pruitt’s business dealings with Kelly and Wagner “were ethical” and his stake in the shell company “was a simple real estate investment.”

“Mr. Wagner and Mr. Kelly left high-profile positions in law and banking in Oklahoma, to serve in the administra­tion,” the spokeswoma­n said in an email. “They are dedicated EPA employees who have earned the respect and admiration of EPA career employees across the country. They serve the country profession­ally, and transparen­tly — and are committed to ensuring the programs they work on are successful.”

Fraternizi­ng in OKC

The house on Northeast 17th Street in the historic Lincoln Terrace neighborho­od here was built in 1928 and has a grand staircase and an arched doorway. Lindsey said one of the home’s attraction­s was that it looked out on the white dome of the State Capitol.

Pruitt stayed in the house for parts of 2004 and 2005, neighbors said. The residence put him within walking distance of his job — legislator­s worked only part of the year, mainly from February through May — and also near SBC Bricktown Ballpark, which was home to his baseball team, the Redhawks, now known as the Dodgers.

Jim Dunlap, then a Republican leader in the state Senate, said he rented a room from Pruitt above the garage. He was under the impression that Pruitt had bought the home as an investment with a group of lawyers, he said.

“This was a place where you slept and had dinner,” Dunlap said. “It was all above board.”

Oklahoma campaign disclosure­s filed by Pruitt at the time made no mention of the home purchase or the rental agreement with Dunlap. Real estate records show that the transfer of ownership from Lindsey, the lobbyist, was rather complicate­d and involved multiple steps — none of them with any public reference to Pruitt, though the EPA spokeswoma­n confirmed that he was one of five co-owners of the shell company.

When asked whether such a disclosure would be necessary, the executive director of the Oklahoma Ethics Commission, Ashley Kemp, referred The Times to a 2005 ethics manual. The rules required disclosing “every business or entity” in which an official held securities valued at $5,000 or more. Securities were defined to include “documents that represent a share in a company.”

The EPA spokeswoma­n did not respond to questions about Pruitt’s disclosure filings in Oklahoma.

In November 2003, Lindsey signed the deed of the home over to a relocation company SBC had hired to handle her move and severance. She was reimbursed for close to $475,000, the amount she had paid for the house in 2002, as her contract required, she said.

The next day, the relocation company signed the property over to Jon Jiles, a health care executive who has a range of business interests and made contributi­ons to Pruitt’s political campaigns. Records show no mortgage was involved, and Jiles paid $375,000 in cash.

That December, Wagner officially registered the Capitol House shell company with Oklahoma officials, and Jiles transferre­d the deed to the newly formed company. Jiles was listed as a manager of Capitol House, and Wagner as the registered agent.

The following month, Spiritbank, where Kelly was CEO, approved a mortgage in the amount of $420,000 in the name of Capital House LLC, another spelling of the entity.

In a statement, Spiritbank’s CEO and president, Rick Harper, said the bank was legally prohibited from commenting on specific loans, but added, “Spiritbank is confident these loans were made in accordance with applicable laws and regulation­s.”

The deal came at a time when SBC was a major employer in the state and a lobbying force in Oklahoma City.

The prospect of another investigat­ion into a long-standing bribery case had especially rattled SBC. In the early 1990s, an SBC lobbyist had been found guilty in federal court of paying a bribe to a public utilities commission­er to sway a vote that allowed the company to keep federal tax savings rather than disburse them to its ratepayers. But the vote itself was never overturned, and in 2003, another commission­er proposed reopening the investigat­ion, claiming SBC still owed billions of dollars in refunds. The commission­er dropped his plans for an investigat­ion after state legislator­s, and the attorney general at the time, Drew Edmondson, pushed back against the effort.

Later, when Pruitt became attorney general, he helped quash another attempt to revisit the SBC bribery case. In a March 2011 letter, Pruitt’s office warned that any commission­er who reopened the investigat­ion could face prosecutio­n for the misuse of public funds.

A run of good fortune

Around the same time Pruitt invested in the house in Oklahoma City, he had finished a big business deal that involved Kelly, Wagner and a campaign donor who ran a large staffing company.

A baseball player in college, Pruitt bought an approximat­ely 25 percent stake in the Oklahoma City Redhawks and became the team’s managing partner, making him a highly visible spokesman for the local team. Wagner also purchased a small stake, and Kelly’s bank provided financing for the deal, as first reported by The Intercept, which also disclosed the bank’s loans for one of Pruitt’s suburban Tulsa homes.

Pruitt’s main partner was Robert Funk, the business magnate who ran Express Services, the staffing firm. The sale price was not disclosed, but news reports suggested they paid more than $11.5 million, with Funk carrying the biggest load.

Two months after the deal closed in November 2003, Funk attended a news conference where Pruitt announced legislatio­n that would make it harder for Oklahoma workers to claim certain kinds of injury compensati­on, something that would benefit companies like Funk’s.

The relationsh­ip continued, with Funk serving as campaign chairman during Pruitt’s unsuccessf­ul bid for lieutenant governor in 2006. Pruitt announced his candidacy outside the ballpark and cited his efforts on workers’ compensati­on among his achievemen­ts.

After losing the election, Pruitt took a break from public office, but continued his business relationsh­ip with Funk, proposing a $200 million town center on a parking lot next to the ballpark. The City Council balked at the project, but Pruitt’s ambitions and prominence grew.

Back at home in Tulsa, Pruitt worked with Wagner’s firm, which had offices in Spiritbank’s building. As a corporate lawyer, Wagner frequently represente­d the bank, but also represente­d a used-car dealership run by Pruitt’s family.

In 2004, Pruitt upgraded from a modest one-story home where his family had lived for more than a decade to a $605,000 lakeside house a mile away. Spiritbank financed the home. The EPA spokeswoma­n said Pruitt was able to afford the house “due to his sale of personal assets.”

In September 2010, as Pruitt was on his way to successful­ly winning his race for attorney general, he and Funk announced that they had sold the Redhawks. They did not disclose the price, but Forbes estimated its value a few years later at $21 million. Spiritbank, where Kelly was still CEO, “played a key role in facilitati­ng” the deal by providing acquisitio­n financing, a news release said.

As a candidate for attorney general, Pruitt was not required to disclose the extent of his assets, but there were hints that his finances had improved since his early days as a state senator. Early into his term, he and his wife paid $1.18 million for a 5,518-square-foot Cotswold-style stone residence, featured in a book on Tulsa homes. It has five fireplaces, a library and a guest apartment.

The AG years

During his six years as attorney general, Pruitt blazed a path of spending that holds new meaning now that his EPA expenditur­es are the subject of investigat­ions and growing political outrage.

Pruitt moved the attorney general’s outpost in Tulsa to a prime suite in the Bank of America tower, an almost $12,000-a-month space that quadrupled the annual rent. He required his staff to regularly drive him between Tulsa and Oklahoma City, according to several people familiar with his time as attorney general.

And he channeled state contracts to Wagner’s law firm, which was already doing business with the state.

From 2011-17, state records show, the attorney general’s office awarded more than $600,000 in contracts to Wagner’s Tulsa-based law firm, Latham, Wagner, Steele & Lehman — greatly increasing work with the firm, which had gotten a total of about $100,000 over the four years before that. These contracts are not competitiv­ely bid. The additional expenditur­es reflected an approach, contentiou­s even among some fellow Republican­s, to hire private lawyers for state business, often for cases challengin­g federal regulation­s.

“He said that these people had special expertise that his agency didn’t have,” said former state Rep. Paul Wesselhoft, a Republican. “He has an army of lawyers with expertise. He didn’t have to spend that extra tax money to hire another law firm. It didn’t seem frugal.”

Pruitt used the Bank of America building as a base for his political ambitions. Oklahoma Strong Leadership, a political action committee he formed in 2015 to help finance fellow Republican­s’ campaigns, operated out of the building. The group shared a suite with another PAC tied to Pruitt, Liberty 2.0, as well as his campaign office.

Oklahoma Strong Leadership, funded by private donors and corporatio­ns, also appeared to support Pruitt’s travel and entertainm­ent. An analysis of expenditur­e disclosure­s by the Campaign Legal Center, a nonprofit that pushes for stricter rules governing money in politics, shows that just 9 percent of the PAC’S spending was devoted to other candidates. The group found that the PAC had disbursed more than $7,000 for trips to Hawaii in summer 2015 and 2016, $2,180 of which was spent at a Ritz-carlton. The PAC also put $4,000 toward dining, including a $661 meal at the Cafe Pacific, a high-end seafood restaurant in Dallas.

The person who oversaw that spending, as the PAC’S treasurer and chairman, was Wagner.

To Washington, with friends

Last summer, about six months into his job as EPA administra­tor, Pruitt traveled by chartered jet to a Superfund cleanup site in Colorado, where the Gold King Mine had released toxic wastewater.

At the event were two of his most loyal Oklahoma business associates — Kelly and Wagner, newly installed as EPA officials themselves, though neither of them had a background in environmen­tal policy or regulation.

Last year, Kelly, known as Kell, was barred for life from the banking industry. He has not disclosed why, though an order from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said there was “reason to believe” he was illegally involved in “an agreement pertaining to a loan.” He has pushed for more intensive cleanups of Superfund locations to pave the way for investment on the reclaimed land by private developers.

Wagner landed a job as one of Pruitt’s closest personal aides, helping the agency coordinate its regional offices and representi­ng it at high-profile events.

At an energy conference in Kentucky in November, Wagner reminisced about his long relationsh­ip with the EPA chief.

“I’ve known Administra­tor Pruitt for 20-plus years, and had the good fortune of being his business partner in a Triple-a baseball team and a former law partner as well,” he said. “The idea that the major influence at the EPA is coming from the middle of the country is something new.”

 ?? TOM BRENNER / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt attends an event Feb. 26 at the White House. Allegation­s of unchecked spending and ethics lapses that have marked Pruitt’s tenure as the Trump administra­tion’s EPA chief are echoed by his dealings during his time as the Oklahoma attorney general.
TOM BRENNER / THE NEW YORK TIMES EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt attends an event Feb. 26 at the White House. Allegation­s of unchecked spending and ethics lapses that have marked Pruitt’s tenure as the Trump administra­tion’s EPA chief are echoed by his dealings during his time as the Oklahoma attorney general.
 ?? BRETT DEERING / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? This is the home where Pruitt lived during his time as a state senator in Oklahoma City. The house, which had belonged to a lobbyist, was held by a shell company registered to Pruitt’s business partner and financed by a bank run by an associate of his.
BRETT DEERING / THE NEW YORK TIMES This is the home where Pruitt lived during his time as a state senator in Oklahoma City. The house, which had belonged to a lobbyist, was held by a shell company registered to Pruitt’s business partner and financed by a bank run by an associate of his.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States