Los Angeles Times

Voters beware of GOP group’s mailer trickery

- DAVID LAZARUS

The upper left- hand corner of the envelope says “Los Angeles County Area Assessment,” which is strikingly similar to the Los Angeles County Office of the Assessor.

There’s an official- looking seal featuring an eagle and stars. “DO NOT TAMPER OR DESTROY,” the envelope warns ungrammati­cally but officiousl­y.

But it’s not official correspond­ence. It’s a fundraisin­g mailer from a Republican Senate group that L. A. County officials say may have violated state law.

“We’re very sensitive to this,” Assessor Jeff Prang told me. “The envelope clearly resembles letters from my office, right down to the typeface.”

The letter within, signed by Sen. Todd Young ( RInd.), chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, more clearly defines the mailer as a “Republican Party Area Assessment.”

It purports to be a survey aimed at “compiling a detailed, highly accurate profile of GOP voters across the nation.”

Sample question: “Do you believe Senate Republican­s should continue standing firmly with President Trump against the impeachmen­t- obsessed socialists in the House of Representa­tives, who have been trying to tear the president down since his first day in office?”

In reality, the four- page letter is a vehicle for no fewer than five separate requests for a contributi­on of as much as $ 1,000.

The committee, it says, “is using every dollar we raise to hold Democrats accountabl­e for their impeachmen­t crusade.”

“That’s why our Republican Senate Majority has been so crucial,” Young writes. “The House is controlled by power- mad socialists who will do anything to try and undermine our president.”

The website of the National Republican Senatorial Committee describes it as “the only national organizati­on solely devoted to strengthen­ing the Republican Senate majority and electing Republican­s to the United States Senate.”

It’s a political campaign group, not a government entity. Democratic senators have a similar fundraisin­g organizati­on.

Jesse Hunt, a spokesman for the GOP committee, noted that beneath “Los Angeles County Area Assessment,” the envelope says “NRSC” and includes the committee’s Washington address.

I countered that few non- politicos would be able to say what NRSC stands for ( I couldn’t have before this column), and that the all- caps L. A. County part is much more prominent than the committee address, which isn’t all caps and is in a smaller type face.

Hunt declined to respond to that, or to my question as to whether the mailer’s envelope had been similarly “localized” in cities and counties nationwide.

The commies- under- thebed content of the mailer notwithsta­nding, it was a red f lag for local authoritie­s when calls started coming in from people asking why Prang, a Democrat, was involved with a GOP fundraisin­g effort.

“I’m an elected official,” Prang said. “I don’t want people asking what I’m doing sending out mail on behalf of the National Republican Senatorial Committee.”

He reached out to County Counsel Mary Wickham for a legal opinion. He said she determined that the GOP mailer could violate Section 17533.6 of the California Business and Profession­s Code.

The code states that it’s illegal for “a nongovernm­ental entity to use a seal, emblem, insignia, trade or brand name, or any other term, symbol or content that reasonably could be interprete­d or construed as implying” an affiliatio­n with an official agency.

Prang said Wickham concluded that “there was sufficient informatio­n in the letter to make you believe it’s misleading.”

Stephen Whitmore, a spokesman for Prang, went a step further by revealing that Wickham’s office offered to send the National Republican Senatorial Committee a cease- anddesist order.

“They wouldn’t have done that if they didn’t think there was a violation of the code,” Whitmore told me.

No one at Wickham’s office responded to my requests for comment.

Rather than a ceaseand- desist order, Prang sent a polite letter to Young asking that the National Republican Senatorial Committee stop confusing people with mailers that could appear to be from his office.

“I am certain that you can appreciate the sensitivit­y that accompanie­s such confusion and hope that you can take steps going forward to reduce this risk of such confusion in Los Angeles County and California,” he wrote.

No one at Young’s office responded to my request for comment.

Although Prang said this was the first time his office has been pulled into a political fundraisin­g effort, he’s no stranger to misleading mailers.

Prang issued a warning last year after I wrote about a sneaky mailer from a company charging $ 89 for a copy of a homeowner’s property deed. The actual cost for a duplicate deed was $ 3.

“Property owners should closely examine any officiallo­oking mailers,” Prang said in his warning. “They should be aware of deed scams and unsolicite­d mailings designed to look as if they’ve been issued by a government agency.”

Dubious solicitati­ons from companies are one thing. Questionab­le missives from political entities are something else.

“I’ve never seen anything like this before,” Prang said of the Republican mailer.

Not that there’d be much confusion once recipients got past the tricky envelope and examined the contents within.

“Now that it’s been exposed that the Obama- era FBI abused its power and spied on President Trump’s campaign, it’s more clear than ever that The Swamp will do everything possible to destroy his administra­tion and stop his projobs, pro- borders, proAmerica agenda,” the letter says.

PolitiFact says the spying claim — a persistent GOP talking point — is false. Meanwhile, Trump’s pro- jobs, pro- borders, proAmerica agenda has been disrupted by a deadly pandemic, the worst economy since the Great Depression, a disastrous debate performanc­e and reports that the president engaged in years of aggressive tax avoidance.

Oh, and Trump has been hospitaliz­ed for COVID- 19 after months of downplayin­g the severity of the virus.

Democrats, the GOP letter says, “are franticall­y throwing up roadblocks to our conservati­ve reform agenda and claiming that they are the ones who represent the will of the people.”

I don’t know about that. But I do know this: Trying to dupe potential donors with letters masqueradi­ng as official correspond­ence isn’t pro- anything.

It’s anti- honesty.

David Lazarus’ column runs Tuesdays and Fridays. He also can be seen daily on KTLA- TV Channel 5 and on Twitter @ davidlaz. Send your tips to david. lazarus @ latimes. com.

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