Orlando Sentinel

Report: Sex-traffickin­g probe of Gaetz emerges

Prosecutio­n of former Seminole tax collector Joel Greenberg linked to federal investigat­ion

- By Martin E. Comas, Jeff Weiner and Steven Lemongello

Federal authoritie­s are investigat­ing potential sex traffickin­g violations by U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, a probe that emerged from the prosecutio­n of former Seminole County tax collector Joel Greenberg, according to a report by the New York

Times.

Citing three people briefed on the matter, the Times reported Tuesday that Justice Department investigat­ors are looking into whether Gaetz, a close ally of former President Donald Trump, had a sexual relationsh­ip with a 17-yearold girl and paid for her to travel with him.

The probe of Gaetz reportedly stemmed from the investigat­ion of Greenberg, who faces a slew of charges including sex traffickin­g of a child. He is currently slated to stand trial

derived from the initial investment in a given year. Because of the downturn in the economy last year, Hertz wouldn’t be able to take advantage of the credit this year, and under current law would have to wait 21 years after the start of the project to receive the credit.

In Hertz’s case, they’d have to wait until 2036.

The email asked Passidomo and the Legislatur­e to change the law to allow travel agency and rental car companies that qualify to be able to apply half of the credits they would have received in the current tax year if their revenues fell below 50% from April 2020 through December 2020 compared with the same time the previous year.

The credits could be applied to a company’s corporate income tax bill, its insurance premium taxes or its sales taxes.

“I have just put this in drafting and have put Will as [the] contact,” Becky Kokkinos, Passidomo’s chief legislativ­e assistant wrote to McKinley’s office eight days later.

Passidomo, slated to become Senate president after the 2022 elections, eventually passed the draft bill on to Sen. Ray Rodrigues, R-Estero, who filed it as SB 1246 on Feb. 11. She could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

State economists who analyzed the bill said some companies with travel agency divisions, such as Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines, American Express Travel Related Services and Walt Disney Parks and Resorts could potentiall­y benefit from the change in the law, but zeroed in on Hertz as the main company likely to cash in on their credits.

They estimated the bill would save Hertz $2.3 million, costing the state $1.7 million and local government­s $600,000 next fiscal year.

Hertz qualifies for the credits under a 2013 deal that moved its headquarte­rs from New Jersey to Estero, near Fort Myers.

According to state data, the company has invested $90.2 million to build its new campus and created 778 jobs — 78 more than required — and has received nearly $9.8 million in state tax incentives.

At the committee meeting, Rodrigues described the bill as “one-time economic relief to taxpayers in the travel and hospitalit­y industry that have made a significan­t investment in our state and who have suffered substantia­l economic harm during the pandemic.”

Sen. Victor Torres, D-Kissimmee, asked Rodrigues whether the companies which stand to save money under the bill were suffering before the pandemic began.

Rodrigues admitted Hertz was troubled before the pandemic began and filed under Chapter 11 bankruptcy last May, two months into the pandemic.

“I believe the Hertz company was having some difficulty prior to the pandemic but is in the position of coming out of bankruptcy reorganiza­tion at this time,” Rodrigues said.

Hertz donated $10,000 to the Republican Party of Florida in January 2020, though.

The bill passed unanimousl­y through the Senate Regulated Industries Committee on Monday, but the House version of the bill, HB 863, hasn’t received a hearing in that chamber.

 ?? RAOUX/AP JOHN ?? U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., speaks at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference Feb. 26 in Orlando.
RAOUX/AP JOHN U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., speaks at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference Feb. 26 in Orlando.

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