Orlando Sentinel

Greenberg paid $7,500 in taxpayer money to state Rep. Anthony Sabatini.

- By Jason Garcia and Gray Rohrer

Joel Greenberg, the former Seminole County Tax Collector at the center of a sprawling criminal probe into everything from stalking to wire fraud to sex traffickin­g, used taxpayer money to pay $7,500 in legal fees to state Rep. Anthony Sabatini, records show.

While still serving as tax collector, Greenberg gave Sabatini a $3,000-a-month “legal counsel” contract in September 2019 — five days after Sabatini was admitted to the Florida Bar. Greenberg canceled the contract a little more than two months later, citing “extreme budget constraint­s.”

It’s not clear what Sabatini, a Republican from Howey-in-the-Hills who casts himself as a crusader against “wasteful” government spending, did for the $7,500.

Emails provided Monday by the Tax Collector’s Office show that Sabatini was asked to help with litigation involving a software contractor and with a trio of disputes involving former employees. But the emails didn’t show any work Sabatini produced, and records compiled as part of a Seminole County audit into Greenberg’s office spending show officials were “not sure” what exactly Sabatini worked on.

Sabatini, who reported a net worth of negative $110,000 on his most recent financial disclosure, said via text message that he worked on “wrongful terminatio­n cases against him [Greenberg] from the employees that he terminated when he took office.”

Greenberg resigned as Seminole tax collector last summer after he was first arrested in a federal investigat­ion that has since sprawled in multiple directions — and also ensnared U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, the prominent Panhandle Republican who is reportedly under investigat­ion along with Greenberg over allegation­s that they had sex with a 17-year-old girl and paid for sex and trafficked in other women.

Gaetz has broadly denied the allegation­s and said specifical­ly that he has never paid for sex nor had sex with a 17-year-old as an adult.

Sabatini is one of the few elected Republican­s who have publicly defended Gaetz. Sabatini has tried to emulate Gaetz’s bombastic and confrontat­ional style in politics and has already announced plans to run for Congress himself in 2022.

Incumbent Republican U.S. Rep. Daniel Webster, who currently represents Lake County, criticized Sabatini for potentiall­y challengin­g him. But Gaetz has expressed tacit support for Sabatini’s decision to run because Florida lawmakers may draw a new Congressio­nal seat in the area when they redo legislativ­e boundaries next year.

Asked if he’d spoken to investigat­ors as part of the Greenberg investigat­ion or if he was aware whether his name has come up in any of the probes, Sabatini responded by text: “Lol no.”

The payments to Sabatini were just one small part of what auditors deemed as excessive spending on legal fees. The audit found that Greenberg spent approximat­ely $1.4 million on lawyers and lobbyists over a period of three years and eight months — including on a lobbying contract to Ballard Partners, the prominent Tallahasse­e firm run by one of Florida’s top Republican fundraiser­s.

A typical Florida tax collector, they said, would spend between $10,000 and $20,000 a year on legal fees.

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