Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Emails suggest Carson, wife knew about $31,000 dining set

- By Juliet Linderman

WASHINGTON — Recently released emails suggest that HUD Secretary Ben Carson and his wife, Candy, had a hand in choosing a $31,000 dining set, despite claims from the agency and the secretary that he didn’t play a role in making that selection.

Government watchdog group American Oversight obtained internal Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t emails through a Freedom of Informatio­n request, and posted them publicly this week. Among a 163-page cache of emails is an August message sent to Carson’s executive assistant and chief of staff under the subject line, “Secretary’s Dining Room Furniture Needed.”

In the email, department staffer Aida Rodriguez references “printouts of the furniture the Secretary and Mrs. Carson picked out.” Another email shows a HUD staffer reaching out to Carson’s wife to ask if she’s available to meet with a designer about redecorati­ng her husband’s office. Rodriguez wrote in another message that the cost of the dining set, which was estimated at $24,666 — just under the $25,000 budget limit — was “a very reasonable price and the funds are available.”

“We also have a justificat­ion for the cost (as you know, the furniture hasn’t been changed since 1988) so this should not be a problem,” she wrote.

With delivery and installati­on costs, the bill came to $31, 000.

The emails also show that Carson wanted to use the funds earmarked for furniture to instead have portraits painted of some prior HUD secretarie­s.

HUD has denied that Carson knew about or played any role in the dining set purchase, which prompted outrage from the public and lawmakers. In a statement provided to CNN, Carson wrote that he was as “surprised as anyone to find out that a $31,000 dining set had been ordered.”

Following reports of the purchase, Carson asked that the order be canceled.

Two Democratic senators urged the HUD Office of Inspector General to open an inquiry into the purchase.

Carson earlier this year asked the OIG to investigat­e whether his family’s involvemen­t in agency matters constitute­s a conflict of interest.

In a statement Wednesday, HUD spokesman Raffi Williams said, “when presented with options by profession­al staff, Mrs. Carson participat­ed in the selection of specific styles.”

Last week, The Associated Press reported that the Department of the Interior spent $139,000 to repair doors in Secretary Ryan Zinke’s office.

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