South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Judge revives lawsuit over Senate race ads

- By Jason Garcia and Annie Martin jgarcia@orlandosen­tinel. com

A Democratic lawmaker will get a second chance to force a secretive political group to reveal the donors who helped fund advertisem­ents in a key Central Florida Senate race last year after the Orlando Sentinel identified the possible leader of the group.

A judge in Miami-Dade County on Wednesday gave an extra 60 days for state Sen. Annette Taddeo to serve a lawsuit she filed against “Floridians for Equality and Justice,” which sent mailers last year attacking Democrat Patricia Sigman during last year’s Senate District 9 election without ever disclosing its contributo­rs.

Sigman ultimately lost the high-stakes race to Republican Sen. Jason Brodeur of Sanford.

Taddeo, a Democrat from Miami whose name and picture were used in some of Floridians for Equality and Justice’s advertisem­ents, filed a civil lawsuit last summer against the group, which listed its address as a box in a UPS Store in Miami and its chairperso­n as Stephen Jones, a person who election records showed had never led a state-level political committee before.

Taddeo and her attorneys were unable to find Jones and serve him with the suit, as UPS Store employees told process servers they had no box-holder agreement with Stephen Jones or Floridians for Equality and Justice.

As a result, the court was preparing to dismiss the lawsuit.

But the Sentinel reported last month there is a 24-yearold Stephen Stafford Jones in Gainesvill­e whose signature on a traffic court document matched the Stephen Jones signatures on Floridians for Equality and Justice’s election filings, according to an expert forensic document examiner.

That Stephen Jones is the son of William Stafford Jones, a prominent political consultant in Gainesvill­e who has done work with

Data Targeting Inc. — the Gainesvill­e-based firm that worked on Brodeur’s Senate campaign last year, as well as the campaigns of other GOP Senate candidates around the state.

The Sentinel report prompted Taddeo’s attorneys to ask for additional time to serve the suit. In a court filing, they argued Jones “took steps to secret his true address in forming the political committee for the purpose of potentiall­y avoiding responsibi­lity for illegal acts.”

They say they ultimately want to depose Stephen Jones and obtain bank records from Floridians for Equality and Justice, which claimed in its campaign finance reports that it began with a roughly $250,000 “starting balance” rather than disclosing its individual contributo­rs.

Reached by cellphone, Stephen Jones declined to comment.

“Sorry, I’m not available to talk right now,” he said.

Taddeo said it is “obvious” that the people behind Floridians for Equality and Justice were trying to hide their identities from voters.

“This is completely unacceptab­le that they went through such lengths to hide where all of this communicat­ion with voters was coming from,” Taddeo said. “People should care because the reason why we have so many voters that do not trust government is because of things like this.”

Floridians for Equality and Justice’s secret donors were one of several controvers­ies that marred the District 9 race, in which Brodeur ultimately defeated Sigman by about 7,600 votes out of about

281,000 cast, helping Republican­s retain control of the

40-member Florida Senate. During the general election campaign, Jestine Iannotti, a former substitute teacher who had already applied for permanent residency in Sweden, appeared on the ballot as an independen­t candidate. Iannotti had never run for public office before but she knew a prominent Seminole County Republican who works for Brodeur and had help qualifying from a controvers­ial local political consultant who is also a Brodeur supporter.

Though Iannotti did no campaignin­g herself, another political committee working with Tallahasse­e Republican­s spent $180,000 promoting her in ads that appeared designed to appeal to Democrat-leaning voters. The ads were financed by a dark-money nonprofit that records and interviews show has connection­s to a political consulting firm whose clients included sugar grower Florida Crystals and a business that matches the descriptio­n of the parent company of electric utility Florida Power & Light.

The chairman, treasurer and registered agent of that political committee — called “The Truth” — was a young woman from Pinellas County who told investigat­ors probing another independen­t candidate in a Miami-area Senate race that she was paid $4,000 by a Tallahasse­e consultant to use her name on The Truth’s election filings.

The Truth did not disclose any payments to her in its campaign finance report and the woman also told investigat­ors her signature was forged on some documents.

In addition, one of the only donors reported by Iannotti’s campaign — Todd Karvoski of Orlando, who gave $100, according to campaign finance reports — told an Orlando Sentinel reporter who visited his MetroWest apartment that he’d never heard of Iannotti and didn’t give any money to her campaign.

After the Sentinel published a story with Karvoski’s comments, someone claiming to be Karvoski emailed the newspaper to say he had made a mistake and had, in fact, contribute­d $100 to Iannotti’s campaign. But Karvoski never responded to a follow-up phone call to confirm he sent the email, and, when the reporter visited his apartment again, a woman said he was not home.

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