The Daily Press

Two fired FirstEnerg­y executives indicted in $60 million Ohio bribery scheme, fail to surrender

- By Julie Carr Smyth and Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Two fired FirstEnerg­y Corp. executives were indicted Monday in the long-running investigat­ion into a $60 million bribery scheme in Ohio that has already resulted in a 20-year prison sentence for a former state House speaker.

Former FirstEnerg­y CEO Chuck Jones and former Senior Vice President Michael Dowling were charged in relation to their roles in the massive corruption case, Republican Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost announced in an online news conference.

“Their actions over a period of years have undermined confidence in state government­s, the rule of law, and very nearly made them even richer men than they already are,” Yost said of Jones and Dowling, who are facing criminal charges for the first time since the scandal began. “There can be no justice without holding the check writers and the mastermind­s accountabl­e.”

Both Jones and Dowling were fired in October 2020 for violating company policies and code of conduct, but the lack of indictment­s had been notable as a 5-year statute of limitation­s nears.

Yost said a grand jury in Summit County, home to Akron, indicted Jones and Dowling on Friday. He said the two men promised to turn themselves in Monday to the Summit County Jail, but that they did not keep that promise. He said he anticipate­s the they will be taken into custody sometime later Monday.

Monday’s announceme­nt also included additional charges against Sam Randazzo, former chair of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, who is already facing 11 counts of charges centered around allegation­s he accepted bribes from Akron-based FirstEnerg­y Corp. in exchange for regulatory favors. It also names his two businesses, IEU-Ohio Administra­tion Co. and Sustainabi­lity Funding Alliance of Ohio.

Randazzo resigned in November 2020 after FBI agents searched his Columbus townhome and FirstEnerg­y revealed in security filings that it had paid him $4.3 million for his future help at the commission a month before Republican Gov. Mike DeWine nominated him as Ohio’s top utility regulator.

Jones, Dowling and Randazzo face a combined 27 new felony counts announced by Yost, including bribery, theft, engaging in corrupt activity, tampering with records and money laundering.

“This indictment is about more than one piece of legislatio­n,” Yost said in an online news conference Monday. “It is about the hostile capture of a significan­t portion of Ohio’s state government by deception, betrayal and dishonesty.”

The long-awaited indictment­s mark the latest developmen­t in what has been labeled the largest corruption case in Ohio history.

Former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householde­r was sentenced in June to 20 years in prison for his role in orchestrat­ing the scheme, and lobbyist Matt Borges, a former chair of the Ohio Republican Party, was sentenced to five years.

The U.S. attorney’s office in Cincinnati indicted three others on racketeeri­ng charges in July 2020. Lobbyist Juan Cespedes and Jeffrey Longstreth, a top Householde­r political strategist, pleaded guilty in October 2020 and await sentencing. The third person arrested, statehouse lobbyist Neil Clark, pleaded not guilty before dying by suicide in March 2021.

The dark money group used to funnel FirstEnerg­y money, Generation

Now, also pleaded guilty to a racketeeri­ng charge in February 2021.

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