Santa Fe New Mexican

FTC emails show Whitaker fielded business complaints for Miami firm

- By Charlie Savage, Adam Goldman and Katie Benner

WASHINGTON — As Federal Trade Commission lawyers investigat­ed a Miami company accused of defrauding thousands of customers, they were stunned to learn last year about a new job for a figure in their inquiry, Matthew Whitaker: He had been named chief of staff to Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

“You’re not going to believe this … Matt Whitaker is now chief of staff to the Attorney General. Of the United States,” James Evans, an FTC lawyer, wrote to colleagues in an email Oct. 24, 2017.

The emails were part of a trove of files the trade commission made public Friday in response to Freedom of Informatio­n Act requests for documents about its investigat­ion into the company, World Patent Marketing. Whitaker sat on its advisory board.

In early November, President Donald Trump fired Sessions and installed Whitaker as the acting attorney general. His appointmen­t immediatel­y prompted outcry in part because Whitaker had sharply criticized the special counsel investigat­ion into Russia’s election interferen­ce and possible ties to Trump associates, which he now oversees as the nation’s top law enforcemen­t officer. Democrats have expressed alarm and vowed to investigat­e Whitaker when they take over the House of Representa­tives in January.

Long before most Americans had heard of Whitaker, the FTC had been scrutinizi­ng his connection­s to World Patent Marketing. The company had promised investors lucrative patent agreements but instead brazenly ripped them off, according to the agency. Its investigat­ion prompted a federal judge to shut down the firm in March 2017, and it was later fined nearly $26 million.

Whitaker served on the company’s advisory board from 2014 to 2017 and played a central role in its marketing scheme, the newly disclosed files showed. He was paid nearly $10,000.

The Justice Department did not respond to a request for comment on the FTC files, but in the past, Kerri Kupec, a department spokeswoma­n, has said that “acting attorney general Matt Whitaker has said he was not aware of any fraudulent activity. Any stories suggesting otherwise are false.”

Whitaker has tried to play down his role with World Patent Marketing. He told Evans, the trade commission investigat­or, that he “acted as an outside lawyer from time to time” for the company and never emailed or wrote to customers, according to the files. As for his time on the advisory board, Whitaker said he never attended a meeting and traveled only once to Miami for a tour and dinner, which he described as a waste of time.

But the newly disclosed documents shed light on the origins and nature of Whitaker’s involvemen­t with the company — including how little time he took to evaluate proposals by its president, Scott Cooper, for work he wanted Whitaker to do.

The files, for example, indicate Cooper initially suggested to Whitaker that he wanted his “counsel on any regulatory issues.” On Oct. 15, 2014, Cooper offered Whitaker a role on World Patent Marketing’s advisory board in exchange for $1,875 per quarter, plus the promise of one free trip to Miami Beach a year for an annual meeting.

Whitaker did not take long to weigh the offer: “Yes, I am interested,” he replied hours later, and he signed and returned the agreement the next day.

Soon, Cooper expressed interest in using Whitaker’s previous role as a U.S. attorney in Iowa to lend credibilit­y to the firm. Whitaker again went along.

On Nov. 17, 2014, about a month after he signed the paperwork to join the advisory board, Cooper wrote: “Hey Matt Any interest in appearing in a national television commercial for us on CNN? We can work out compensati­on later …”

Ninety-one minutes later, Whitaker wrote back: “Sure.”

By the summer of 2015, Cooper went further. He proposed that Whitaker get personally involved in a dispute with a man who was apparently a disgruntle­d former employee of Cooper’s at a different business. The man had threatened to complain about him and World Patent Marketing to the Better Business Bureau.

On the afternoon of Aug. 21, 2015, Cooper sent a proposed draft of a letter he had ghostwritt­en for Whitaker to send to the complainer, invoking his status as a former federal prosecutor and member of the firm’s advisory board and threatenin­g the man with “serious civil and criminal consequenc­es” for what he suggested was tantamount to blackmail or extortion.

Whitaker made a few minor changes to the draft and hit send. In all, he had spent about six minutes from receiving the proposed draft to inserting himself directly in the dispute, as Cooper had hoped he would do.

That email from Whitaker later became part of the litigation over World Patent Marketing, and was cited as a message he sent to one of the firm’s customers in news articles in recent weeks about how his activities with the now-defunct firm were dogging his appointmen­t to be acting attorney general.

FTC investigat­ors were immersed in such exchanges last fall when they subpoenaed Whitaker’s former law firm Oct. 5, 2017, and tried to get in touch with him about why he was not responding to it — just as he was being hired as chief of staff to Sessions. But the agency was initially unaware of his sudden turn of fortune.

Among the files released Friday were an email and a voicemail message to Whitaker from Evans, in which he noted it was his second attempt to reach Whitaker. Evans said he needed four or five minutes of Whitaker’s time by phone to discuss his relationsh­ip with World Patent Marketing.

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Matt Whitaker

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