San Diego Union-Tribune

INDICTED GAETZ ASSOCIATE EXPECTED TO PLEAD GUILTY

Greenberg could be key to federal inquiry into congressma­n

- BY PATRICIA MAZZEI & MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT Mazzei and Schmidt write for The New York Times.

A former local official in Florida who faces an array of federal charges, including a sex traffickin­g count, is expected to plead guilty in the coming weeks, a prosecutor and a defense lawyer said Thursday in an indication that the defendant could cooperate as a key witness against Rep. Matt Gaetz, who is under investigat­ion.

A plea by the former elected official, Joel Greenberg,

could significan­tly strengthen the Justice Department’s hand as it investigat­es Gaetz and others who met Greenberg through Florida Republican politics and are being scrutinize­d on potential sex traffickin­g violations.

Greenberg met women through a website that connects people who are willing to go on dates in exchange for gifts and allowances, then introduced them to Gaetz, who along with Greenberg had sex with them, people familiar with the matter have said.

The prosecutor, Roger Handberg, made the disclosure about Greenberg’s case at a six-minute status hearing at the federal courthouse in Orlando, as did Greenberg’s lawyer, Fritz Scheller. Greenberg had been scheduled to go on trial in June, but both sides set a May 15 deadline for a plea deal. If they do not reach an agreement, the case would go to trial, they agreed.

“We believe this case is going to be a plea,” Handberg

said.

Added Scheller: “I expect this case to be resolved with a plea deal.”

Neither said whether Greenberg would agree to cooperate with the government’s open investigat­ion. Greenberg, 36, is likely to face 12 years in prison and legal experts said that if Greenberg had any hope of reducing that sentence, he would have to cooperate with the Justice Department.

Cooperatio­n in federal inquiries typically entails being fully candid in interviews with investigat­ors and testifying at trials and before grand juries in related investigat­ions. Those who cooperate early usually receive the best deals from prosecutor­s; no others are known to have been indicted in this case.

Greenberg did not appear in court Thursday. He was sent to jail in March for violating the terms of his bail.

Greenberg, who has known Gaetz since at least 2017 when he began serving in Congress, could provide prosecutor­s with a witness who has a deep knowledge of Gaetz’s dealings with women, can explain how the men paid the women and how the two men bought and used drugs, like ecstasy.

Gaetz, who gained a national profile in recent years as a prominent supporter of former President Donald Trump, has denied that he paid for sex. The investigat­ion into him grew out of Greenberg ’s case.

“I’m sure Matt Gaetz is not feeling very comfortabl­e today,” Scheller told reporters outside the courthouse after the hearing.

Gaetz did not immediatel­y address the hearing, but his congressio­nal office issued a statement Thursday from women who work for him extolling his respect for them. “At no time has any one of us experience­d or witnessed anything less than the utmost profession­alism and respect,” said the statement, which included no individual aides’ names.

In August, Greenberg was indicted on a count of sex traffickin­g a 17-year-old in 2017. Around the time of the indictment, the Justice Department began investigat­ing Gaetz’s ties to the same girl.

 ??  ?? Joel Greenberg
Joel Greenberg

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