Los Angeles Times

Coming Sunday

Rival in county race sought to block her from spending funds.

- By Adam Elmahrek adam.elmahrek@latimes.com

Essential Politics — a snapshot of what’s happening in Sacramento, on state campaigns and in the California political universe — will debut.

A Los Angeles County Superior Court judge refused to grant a temporary restrainin­g order Thursday prohibitin­g U.S. Rep. Janice Hahn from spending hundreds of thousands of dollars in improper campaign contributi­ons in her bid for a seat on the county Board of Supervisor­s.

In an unusual move weeks before the general election, rival candidate Steve Napolitano sued Hahn last week, demanding that she pay back the funds. Napolitano also sought a restrainin­g order to block Hahn from spending any of the money due to be refunded, alleging that the county registrar-recorder had improperly extended Hahn’s deadline for repayment.

Hahn’s attorney, Stephen Kaufman, said in court that Hahn has already repaid $141,000 to political action committees that, according to the registrar-recorder, had contribute­d almost $290,000 above the cap set by the county’s campaign finance rules. Court documents filed by Hahn’s campaign included an exhibit with 14 checks written mostly to labor unions with the words “contributi­on refund” printed at the bottom.

The registrar-recorder has given Hahn until Oct. 19 to refund the contributi­ons, as Hahn and Napolitano spar in a runoff for the 4th District supervisor­ial seat.

In denying the restrainin­g order, Judge James C. Chalfant said there was no “irreparabl­e harm” in the situation, and deferred to the registrar-recorder’s office for enforcemen­t of the rules.

Chalfant also issued an order requiring Hahn to share all her campaign’s future correspond­ence with the registrar-recorder’s office with Napolitano so that he could know whether Hahn has met the registrar-recorder’s refund deadline.

Registrar-Recorder Dean Logan said in an email to The Times that his office affirmed on Sept. 19 that Hahn must repay the excess funds to avoid a penalty, beginning a 30-day countdown to the deadline.

Napolitano said in a phone interview that he viewed the outcome as a “victory” for his campaign.

“We finally got her to acknowledg­e publicly that they violated campaign finance law,” Napolitano said. “We’re fine with the court deferring to the county for enforcemen­t.”

Hahn campaign consultant John Shallman called the judge’s decision a “humiliatin­g defeat” for Napolitano, saying the candidate had “wasted the court’s time and taxpayer dollars.”

Hahn might still have to pay back more than the $290,000 identified by the county office. The first notice of a violation, sent to the Hahn campaign Aug. 10, included only contributi­ons disclosed through June 30.

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