Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Gaetz probe focusing on cash paid to women

Sources: He met them through former Central Florida official

- By Katie Benner and Michael S. Schmidt

WASHINGTON — A Justice Department investigat­ion into Rep. Matt Gaetz and Joel Greenberg is focusing on their involvemen­t with multiple women who were recruited online for sex and received cash payments, according to people close to the investigat­ion and text messages and payment receipts reviewed by The New York Times.

Investigat­ors believe Greenberg, the former tax collector in Seminole County who was indicted last year on a federal sex traffickin­g charge and other crimes, initially met the women through websites that connect people who go on dates in exchange for gifts, fine dining, travel and allowances, according to three people with knowledge of the encounters. Greenberg introduced the women to Gaetz, who also had sex with them, the people said.

One of the women who had sex with both men also agreed to have sex with an unidentifi­ed associate of theirs in Florida Republican politics, according to a person familiar with the arrangemen­t. Greenberg had initially contacted her online and introduced her to Gaetz, the person said.

Gaetz denied ever paying a woman for sex.

The Justice Department inquiry is also examining whether Gaetz had sex with a 17-year-old girl and whether she received anything of material value, according to four people familiar with the investigat­ion. The sex traffickin­g count against Greenberg involved the same girl,

according to two people briefed on the investigat­ion.

The authoritie­s have also investigat­ed whether other men connected to Gaetz and Greenberg had sex with the 17-year-old, two of the people said.

Gaetz, 38, was elected to Congress in 2016 and became one of former President Donald Trump’s most outspoken advocates.

The Times has reviewed receipts from Cash App, a mobile payments app, and Apple Pay that show payments from Gaetz and Greenberg to one of the women, and a payment from Greenberg to a second woman. The women told their friends that the payments were for sex with the two men, according to two people familiar with the conversati­ons.

In encounters during 2019 and 2020, Gaetz and Greenberg instructed the women to meet at certain times and places, often at hotels around Florida, and would tell them the amount of money they were willing to pay, according to the messages and interviews.

One person said that the men also paid in cash, sometimes withdrawn from a hotel ATM.

Some of the men and women took ecstasy, an illegal mood-altering drug, before having sex, including Gaetz, two people familiar with the encounters said.

In some cases, Gaetz asked women to help find others who might be interested in having sex with him and his friends, according to two people familiar with those conversati­ons. Should anyone inquire about their relationsh­ips, one person said, Gaetz told the women to say that he had paid for hotel rooms and dinners as part of their dates.

The FBI has questioned multiple women involved in the encounters, including as recently as January, to establish details of their relationsh­ips with Gaetz and his friends, according to text messages and two people familiar with the interviews.

No charges have been brought against Gaetz, and the extent of his criminal exposure is unclear. Gaetz’s office issued a statement Thursday night in a response to a request for comment.

“Matt Gaetz has never paid for sex,” the statement said. “Matt Gaetz refutes all the disgusting allegation­s completely. Matt Gaetz has never ever been on any such websites whatsoever. Matt Gaetz cherishes the relationsh­ips in his past and looks forward to marrying the love of his life.”

A lawyer for Greenberg, Fritz Scheller, declined to comment, as did a Justice Department spokesman.

It is not illegal to provide adults with free hotel stays, meals and other gifts, but if prosecutor­s think they can prove that the payments to the women were for sex, they could accuse Gaetz of traffickin­g the women under “force, fraud or coercion.” For example, prosecutor­s have filed traffickin­g charges against people suspected of providing drugs in exchange for sex because feeding another person’s drug habit could be seen as a form of coercion.

It is also a violation of federal child sex traffickin­g law to provide someone under 18 with anything of value in exchange for sex, which can include meals, hotels, drugs, alcohol or cigarettes.

The investigat­ion stems from the Justice Department’s continuing inquiry into Greenberg, who potentiall­y faces decades in prison on three dozen charges. The U.S. attorney’s office in Central Florida initially secured an indictment against Greenberg in June, alleging that he had stalked a political rival and had used his elected office to create fake identifica­tion cards.

During the investigat­ion, the authoritie­s discovered evidence that prompted them to broaden it, and Greenberg was indicted in August on the sex traffickin­g charge.

One of the sites the men met women through was called “Seeking Arrangemen­t,” which describes itself as a place where wealthy people find attractive companions and pamper them “with fine dinners, exotic trips and allowances.” The site’s founder has said it has 20 million members worldwide. The FBI mentioned the website in a conversati­on with at least one potential witness, according to a person familiar with the conversati­on.

Greenberg was indicted this week on additional charges, accusing him of submitting false claims to receive pandemic relief aid from the government and trying to bribe a government official. The authoritie­s said Greenberg undertook those efforts after he was initially indicted last summer.

Greenberg has pleaded not guilty to the earlier charges and is scheduled to go on trial in June. He was sent to jail in March for violating the terms of his bail.

Gaetz said this week that his lawyers had been in touch with the Justice Department and that he was the subject, not the target, of an investigat­ion.

Subjects of investigat­ions are often witnesses or people who might have informatio­n that could help the government pursue its targets. But it is common for that designatio­n to shift during an investigat­ion.

“I only know that it has to do with women,” Gaetz said. “I have a suspicion that someone is trying to recategori­ze my generosity to ex-girlfriend­s as something more untoward.”

Gaetz, a lawyer, was first elected to the House representi­ng the Florida Panhandle at age 34. The son of a former president of the Florida state Senate, Gaetz attended Florida State University and William & Mary Law School before serving in the Florida Legislatur­e.

Gaetz has sought to divert attention from the Justice Department investigat­ion by claiming he and his father were the targets of an extortion plot by two men.

The men — Robert Kent, a former Air Force intelligen­ce officer who runs a consulting business, and Stephen Alford, a real estate developer who has been convicted of fraud — approached Gaetz’s father, Don Gaetz, about funding their efforts to locate Robert A. Levinson, an American hostage held in Iran.

They suggested to Don Gaetz that Levinson’s successful return could somehow be used to secure a pardon for Matt Gaetz if he were charged with federal crimes, according to a copy of their proposal provided to The Times.

Soon after, Don Gaetz hired a lawyer and contacted the FBI. Matt Gaetz said his father wore a wire and taped a meeting and a telephone conversati­on with Alford. An email exchange between Don Gaetz’s lawyer and the Justice Department provided to The Times appears to confirm he was generally cooperatin­g with the FBI as it looked into his claims.

Kent denied the Gaetzes’ assertions. He said he had heard rumors that Matt Gaetz might be under investigat­ion and mentioned them only to sweeten his proposal.

“I told him I’m not trying to extort, but if this were true, he might be interested in doing something good,” Kent said in an interview.

Last year, the Trump administra­tion notified the family of Levinson, a former FBI agent, that he had died while in captivity in Iran, where he disappeare­d in 2007 while on an unauthoriz­ed mission for the CIA. But some people involved with the Levinson case continued to believe that he might still be alive, including Kent.

He was stunned when he heard that Matt Gaetz had sought to tie the Justice Department investigat­ion to an extortion plot related to the Levinson case.

“He threw Levinson and the entire Levinson family under the bus,” Kent said. “I can’t imagine what these poor people have been through.”

Don Gaetz also taped a phone call and a meeting with David McGee, a Levinson family lawyer, where they discussed the rescue proposal. In an interview, McGee denied any involvemen­t and suggested Matt Gaetz was conflating the matter inappropri­ately with his own potential criminal liability.

“He’s trying to distract attention from a pending tidal wave that is about to sink his ship,” McGee said.

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

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