South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Feds probe campaign money spending

Ros-Lehtinen accused of using it for vacations

- Associated Press

MIAMI — The U.S. Justice Department is investigat­ing a former Florida congresswo­man accused of spending at least $50,000 in campaign money on vacations to Disney World and other places as well as on restaurant­s and luxury hotels.

The federal department’s Public Integrity Section is looking into the expenditur­es by Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Republican who retired after three decades representi­ng the Miami area in Congress. They include a 2017 trip to Disney in Orlando with her children and grandchild­ren, rooms at a Ritz-Carlton resort and a New Year’s Eve meal at a high-end seafood restaurant.

Her attorney, Jeffrey Weiner, gave a statement to WFOR-TV, which first reported the Justice investigat­ion on Wednesday, that Ros-Lehtinen and former staff members and volunteers have been cooperatin­g with the Federal Election Commission and the Justice Department.

In a statement to the Miami Herald, the attorney added that they are turning over campaign finance and other records subpoenaed by the Justice Department.

“We … are confident that, if bookkeepin­g errors were committed, they were due to negligence, and not willful or intentiona­l misconduct by the former congresswo­man or anyone on her staff, or her accountant­s,” the news outlets quoted Weiner as saying.

Ros-Lehtinen, declined to seek reelection in 2018. A Cuban-American, she was Florida’s first woman representa­tive, and the first

Hispanic woman elected to Congress. Her husband, Dexter Lehtinen, was an acting U.S. Attorney for South Florida and a law professor.

Following her retirement announceme­nt in April 2017, she transferre­d more than $177,000 from her reelection campaign account to a political action committee she controlled, WFOR-TV reported. Federal law prohibits campaign funds, including those transferre­d to PACs, from being spent on personal use.

But expense reports from her PAC show she spent nearly $4,000 on a Disney World trip in December 2017, a combined $44,000 on rooms at hotels in New York and Florida, as well as more than $3,000 at a Miami restaurant in 2018.

Weiner declined to explain the campaign-related purpose of the expenditur­es but said his team has not “found any evidence whatsoever of intentiona­l wrongdoing” by the former congresswo­man or her staff. He said he’s confident prosecutor­s will ultima t e l y d e c l i n e t o f i l e charges against the politician.

The Justice Department and Ros-Lehtinen herself declined to comment to the news outlets.

WFOR reported that Ros-Lehtinen’s spending was first reported by Noah Pransky on the Florida Politics website in June 2019, and that the Campaign Legal Center, a nonpartisa­n watchdog, filed a complaint in October against Ros-Lehtinen with the Federal Elections Commission.

President Trump has kept three seats open on the six-member commission, denying it the quorum needed to investigat­e any possible abuses of campaign spending.

Brendan Fischer, a director at the Campaign Legal Center who filed the FEC complaint, called the Justice Department move “very significan­t.”

“To open a criminal investigat­ion, the Department of Justice Public Integrity unit presumably had some evidence that t h e s e v i o l a t i o n s we r e knowing and willful,” Fischer told the station.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP 2017 ?? Then Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., speaks during a news conference in Washington, D.C.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP 2017 Then Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., speaks during a news conference in Washington, D.C.

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