San Diego Union-Tribune

FLA. DEM CHARGED WITH CONSPIRACY

Former candidate for governor also faces 19 counts of fraud

- BY PATRICIA MAZZEI Mazzei writes for The New York Times.

Andrew Gillum, the Democrat who lost the 2018 Florida governor’s race to Ron DeSantis, surrendere­d to federal authoritie­s in Tallahasse­e, Fla., on Wednesday after he and a close associate were charged with conspiracy and 19 counts of fraud over how they raised and used funds when he was mayor of Tallahasse­e and a candidate for governor.

Gillum, 42, was also charged with making false statements to the FBI.

He pleaded not guilty in a court appearance Wednesday afternoon. Gillum, dressed in a navy suit with a dark tie and face mask, was cuffed around his wrists and ankles, with a chain around his waist. Inside the courtroom were some of his friends and a gaggle of news reporters. He left the courthouse after his release and gave no comment to the cameras and microphone­s waiting outside.

The arrest is the latest detour from Gillum’s onceascend­ant career. He came within 32,000 votes of the governorsh­ip — which would have made him Florida’s first Black governor and a future White House hopeful — only to lose his political direction and face personal struggles. In 2020, police found him in a Miami Beach hotel room where another man was suffering from a possible drug overdose.

Gillum entered rehab to seek treatment for alcoholism shortly after. He later came out as bisexual in an interview that also featured his wife.

The charges appear to stem from a federal investigat­ion into Tallahasse­e City Hall that began in 2015 and involved undercover FBI agents posing as developers. Revelation­s from the investigat­ion, including that Gillum had socialized with the undercover agents in New York, were an issue in the 2018 campaign. DeSantis, a Republican, said at the time that Gillum could not be trusted to run the state.

Gillum, who did not disclose the gifts at the time as required by state law, paid a $5,000 Florida ethics fine in 2019.

The 21-count indictment against Gillum shows that a grand jury filed the charges

against him June 7. Also charged was Sharon Lettman-Hicks, 53, a confidante of Gillum’s since he was in college. According to the indictment, she used her communicat­ions company to disguise fraudulent payments to Gillum as part of her payroll.

In a statement, Gillum said he had run all of his political campaigns “with integrity.”

“Make no mistake that this case is not legal; it is political,” he said. “There’s been a target on my back ever since I was the mayor of Tallahasse­e. They found nothing then, and I have full confidence that my legal team will prove my innocence

now.”

Lettman-Hicks, who is running as a Democrat for a state House seat in Tallahasse­e, was in a wheelchair when she appeared in court Wednesday and pleaded not guilty. She declined to comment.

The indictment covers events involving Gillum and Lettman-Hicks from 2016 to 2019. The false statements charge against Gillum is related to his interactio­ns with the undercover agents.

According to the indictment, beginning in 2016, Gillum and two unnamed associates solicited campaign contributi­ons from the undercover agents for Gillum’s newly formed Forward

Florida Political Action Committee. To keep the agents’ names private, the associates promised to funnel the contributi­ons in other ways, including through Lettman-Hicks’ company, P&P Communicat­ions. In exchange, they were promised “unencumber­ed government contracts,” according to one of the unnamed associates.

Gillum told one of the undercover agents that he “should separate in his mind the campaign contributi­ons and the Tallahasse­e projects,” the indictment says, adding that Gillum also “indicated he looked favorably on” the undercover agent’s proposed developmen­t projects. The indictment says that when Gillum voluntaril­y spoke to FBI agents in 2017, he “falsely represente­d” that the undercover agents posing as developers never offered him anything and that he had stopped communicat­ing with them after they tried to link their contributi­ons to support for potential Tallahasse­e projects.

The fraud and conspiracy charges are related to Gillum’s dealings with Lettman-Hicks with regards to P&P Communicat­ions and Gillum’s campaign.

In 2017, when he became a candidate for governor, Gillum resigned from his position with People for the American Way, a liberal advocacy group whose Tallahasse­e office was leased from Lettman-Hicks. Gillum lost his annual $122,500 salary, and Lettman-Hicks lost $3,000 in monthly rent. Gillum was also paid about $70,500 a year as mayor, a position he held from 2014 to 2018.

Gillum then became an employee of P&P Communicat­ions, where he was given a monthly salary of $10,000. According to the indictment, hiring Gillum was “only a cover used to provide him funds that he lost” after his resignatio­n from People for the American Way.

When Gillum and Lettman-Hicks solicited $50,000 in grant funding from two unnamed organizati­ons, the money was intended to be used for the Campaign to Defend Local Solutions, an effort by Gillum to fight state efforts to preempt local government­s’ power. Instead, according to the indictment, that money ultimately went to P&P Communicat­ions to pay Gillum.

 ?? STEVE CANNON AP FILE ?? Andrew Gillum, who ran for governor in Florida in 2018, is facing 21 federal charges related to a scheme to seek donations and funnel a portion of them back to him through third parties.
STEVE CANNON AP FILE Andrew Gillum, who ran for governor in Florida in 2018, is facing 21 federal charges related to a scheme to seek donations and funnel a portion of them back to him through third parties.

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