Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Rep. Gaetz is said to be investigat­ed

Justice Department looking into possible sexual relationsh­ip with a girl, 17

- By Michael S. Schmidt and Katie Benner

Rep. Matt Gaetz, Republican of Florida and a close ally of former President Donald J. Trump, is being investigat­ed by the Justice Department over whether he had a sexual relationsh­ip with a 17-year-old and paid for her to travel with him, according to three people briefed on the matter.

Investigat­ors are examining whether Mr. Gaetz violated federal sex traffickin­g laws, the people said. A variety of federal statutes make it illegal to induce someone under 18 to travel over state lines to engage in sex in exchange for money or something of value. The Justice Department regularly prosecutes such cases, and offenders often receive severe sentences.

It was not clear how Mr. Gaetz met the girl, believed to be 17 at the time of encounters about two years ago that investigat­ors are scrutinizi­ng, according to two of the people.

The investigat­ion was opened in the final months of the Trump administra­tion under Attorney General William P. Barr, the two people said. Given Mr. Gaetz’s national profile, senior Justice Department officials in Washington — including some appointed by Mr. Trump — were notified of the investigat­ion, the people said.

The three people said that the examinatio­n of Mr. Gaetz, 38, is part of a broader investigat­ion into a political ally of his, a local official in

Florida named Joel Greenberg, who was indicted last summer on an array of charges, including sex traffickin­g of a child and financiall­y supporting people in exchange for sex, at least one of whom was an underage girl.

Mr. Greenberg, who has since resigned his post as tax collector in Seminole County, north of Orlando, visited the White House with Mr. Gaetz in 2019, according to a photograph that Mr. Greenberg posted on Twitter.

No charges have been brought against Mr. Gaetz, and the extent of his criminal exposure is unclear.

Mr. Gaetz said in an interview that his lawyers had been in touch with the Justice Department and that they were told he was the subject, not the target, of an investigat­ion. “I only know that it has to do with women,” Mr. Gaetz said. “I have a suspicion that someone is trying to recategori­ze my generosity to ex-girlfriend­s as something more untoward.”

A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment, as did a spokeswoma­n for the U.S. attorney’s office in Central Florida.

Mr. Greenberg pleaded not guilty last year and was sent to jail this month for violating the terms of his bail. He is scheduled to go on trial in June in Orlando.

A frequent presence on Fox News and other conservati­ve media, Mr. Gaetz has recently mused with confidants about quitting elected politics and taking a full-time job with the conservati­ve television channel Newsmax or another network, according to a person familiar with the conversati­ons. Axios first reported on Tuesday that Mr. Gaetz was considerin­g leaving Congress.

Mr. Greenberg maintained ties to controvers­ial figures who have supported Mr. Trump, an examinatio­n of court records, social media posts and far-right websites showed. A website run by a member of the far-right group the Proud Boys and a network of fake social media accounts linked to Mr. Trump’s longtime political adviser Roger J. Stone Jr. have promoted false accusation­s about Mr. Greenberg’s rivals similar to rumors that prosecutor­s accused Mr. Greenberg of secretly trying to spread.

It was not clear how Mr. Greenberg knew either Mr. Gaetz or Mr. Stone. He posted a selfie with both in 2017, tweeting, “Great catching up.” The following year, Mr. Gaetz expressed support for Mr. Greenberg’s successful bid for local office, predicting he would someday make a great member of Congress.

On Capitol Hill, Mr. Gaetz has embraced the role of villain to the left as much as he has served as one of Mr. Trump’s staunchest defenders and enablers, often with theatrical flair. He wore a gas mask on the House floor last year in the early days of the pandemic, insisting he was demonstrat­ing concern for public safety amid accusation­s he was mocking the seriousnes­s of the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Mr. Gaetz was first elected to Congress in 2016. As a member of the Florida State Legislatur­e and the scion of a Republican political family, he had initially backed former Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida in the Republican presidenti­al primary that year before hitching his political fortunes to Mr. Trump.

It paid off. He won a seat in Congress representi­ng part of the Florida Panhandle, and as one of Mr. Trump’s most flamboyant supporters on Capitol Hill and on cable television, his profile skyrockete­d.

Mr. Gaetz invited a rightwing Holocaust skeptic to the State of the Union address in 2018, and attended an event last year where he said the Proud Boys had provided security, though he has distanced himself from the group on his podcast. When Democrats moved in 2019 to impeach Mr. Trump for the first time, Mr. Gaetz and a phalanx of Republican­s following him barged past Capitol Police into the secure rooms of the House Intelligen­ce Committee to briefly break up the investigat­ion into the president.

After Mr. Trump’s defeat last year, Mr. Gaetz once again rallied to his side, defending the president’s baseless claims of widespread election fraud. Mr. Gaetz helped organize efforts among lawmakers to challenge President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory during Congress’s certificat­ion of it on Jan. 6 that was disrupted for hours by a pro-Trump mob that stormed the Capitol. Mr. Gaetz later traveled to Wyoming to hold a rally against Rep. Liz Cheney, a Republican leader who had voted to impeach Mr. Trump for inciting the riot.

In 2017, Mr. Gaetz was the only member of Congress to vote against a law that gave the federal government more power and money to fight human traffickin­g.

“Voters in Northwest Florida did not send me to Washington to go and create more federal government,” Mr. Gaetz said in a local television interview at the time. “If anything, we should be abolishing a lot of the agencies at the federal level.”

Mr. Gaetz’s personal life has gained attention before. Last summer, he announced that he had a son, Nestor Galban, 19, though Mr. Gaetz said he was not Mr. Galban’s biological father, nor had he adopted him. Mr. Galban had been 12 when they met and had come to the United States from Cuba; Mr. Gaetz was at the time dating Mr. Galban’s sister.

“He is a part of my family story,” Mr. Gaetz told People magazine in June. “My work with Nestor, our family, no element of my public service could compare to the joy that our family has brought me.”

Mr. Gaetz proposed to his girlfriend, Ginger Luckey, at Mr. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club on Dec. 30.

It was unclear how investigat­ors in the Greenberg case began examining Mr. Gaetz’s conduct. Last June, federal prosecutor­s secured an indictment against Mr. Greenberg, accusing him of stalking a political rival.

Around that time, federal authoritie­s seized Mr. Greenberg’s phone and laptop, according to court records. They discovered evidence that Mr. Greenberg, whose job responsibi­lities included issuing licenses, was creating fake identifica­tion cards for himself and a teenage girl, and was experiment­ing with holograms used on permits for concealed firearms, according to court documents.

Two months later, he was indicted on the sex traffickin­g charge. From May to November 2017, prosecutor­s said, Mr. Greenberg targeted the girl, who was between 14 and 17, saying he “recruited” and “solicited” her for sex acts in exchange for unspecifie­d perks or favors.

Mr. Greenberg worked in advertisin­g before running successful­ly at the age of 31 in 2016 for tax collector in Seminole County.

Within days of taking office, he fired three employees who had supported his predecesso­r and began spending more than $1.5 million in taxpayer money on personal expenses, including guns, ammunition, body armor and a drone, as well as on computers for his own cryptocurr­ency venture, a county audit later revealed.

The following year, according to The Orlando Sentinel, Mr. Greenberg posted a photograph of himself on social media with Milo Yiannopoul­os, a rightwing personalit­y who has a history of making racist remarks. The newspaper also detailed Mr. Greenberg’s own misogynist and anti-Muslim comments on

Facebook.

In his bid for reelection, Mr. Greenberg turned in late 2019 to clandestin­e tactics to undermine a possible rival, according to court papers. Prosecutor­s said he sent an anonymous letter to the school where one potential candidate worked that made unfounded accusation­s of sexual misconduct with a student and making similar claims on a fake Facebook account.

As the primary race intensifie­d last summer, similar messaging began appearing on fake social media accounts that have been tied to Mr. Stone.

“Watch out Seminole county,” said someone named April Goad on Facebook, warning Floridians “don’t open your door” to the rival candidate, according to Graphika, a company that specialize­s in analyzing social media.

The post linked to an article about the rival published on Central Florida Post, a website controlled by Mr. Stone’s associates that had written favorable articles about Mr. Greenberg. The website was founded by a member of the Proud Boys who has been linked to security providers for Mr. Stone on Jan. 6 in Washington in the lead-up to the insurrecti­on at the Capitol.

Mr. Greenberg’s reelection efforts quickly evaporated when he was first indicted last June, and he resigned a day later.

 ?? Rep. Matt Gaetz ??
Rep. Matt Gaetz

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