The Columbus Dispatch

Dems want probe of Trump Interior head

Bernhardt allegedly pushed for permit reversal to aid donor

- Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON – Democrats on the House Natural Resources Committee asked the Justice Department on Wednesday to investigat­e whether a Trump administra­tion interior secretary engaged in possible criminal conduct while helping an Arizona developer get a crucial permit for a housing project.

The criminal referral says David Bernhardt pushed for approval of the project by developer Michael Ingram, a Republican donor and supporter of former President Donald Trump, despite a federal wildlife official’s finding that it would threaten habitats for imperiled species.

Bernhardt led Interior from 2019 to 2021. In 2017, he was the No. 2 official at the department when the Fish and Wildlife Service, an Interior Department agency, reversed its opposition to the Villages at Vigneto, the proposed 28,000-home developmen­t in southern Arizona, and allowed it to move forward.

Democrat Reps. Raúl Grijalva of Arizona, the committee chairman, and Katie Porter of California, who leads a subcommitt­ee on oversight and investigat­ions. made the referral in a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland. They said the committee has conducted an extensive investigat­ion into the 2017 decision.

A high-ranking interior official had said issuing a Clean Water Act permit for the project could adversely affect endangered species or critical habitat in the area. The region is home to birds such as as the southweste­rn willow flycatcher and yellow-billed cuckoo, as well as the northern Mexican garter snake.

In their referral, Democrats say Ingram met with Bernhardt in August 2017, two weeks before a Fish and Wildlife official received the phone call directing him to reverse the decision blocking the project. The meeting was not disclosed in Bernhardt’s public calendar or travel documents.

Two months later, Ingram made a $10,000 donation to the Trump Victory Fund. The permit was approved later that month. At least nine other donors associated with Ingram also donated to the Trump Victory Fund in the days after Ingram’s donation, Democrats said.

“Evidence strongly suggests the decision was the result of a quid pro quo between Vigneto’s developer, Michael Ingram, and senior level officials in the Trump administra­tion,” including Bernhardt, who was then the deputy Interior secretary, the Democrats wrote.

Ingram “had frequent access to high-ranking officials across the Trump administra­tion,” including Bernhardt, then-interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and then-environmen­tal Protection Agency head Scott Pruitt, Democrats said. Zinke, who led Interior from March 2017 to January 2019, met with Ingram in May 2017 and April 2018, the Democrats said in documents submitted with the referral. Zinke and his staff emailed Ingram multiple times, using personal email addresses, Democrats said. The lawmakers asked Garland to investigat­e and consider bringing criminal charges against Bernhardt or other officials.

Bernhardt, now a lawyer in private practice, did not return requests for comment. A Justice Department spokesman said the department received the letter and will review it.

Lanny Davis, a lawyer for El Dorado Holdings, a company owned by Ingram, called the referral by Grijalva and Porter “false, misleading (and) unfair.”

El Dorado participat­ed in multiple meetings with the committee, “acted in full transparen­cy and gave full cooperatio­n without a subpoena,” Davis said in a statement.

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