The Day

U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter and his wife are charged with misusing more than $250,000 in campaign funds.

- By MICHAEL R. BLOOD and JULIE WATSON

San Diego — U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter and his wife were charged Tuesday with using more than $250,000 in campaign funds to finance family trips to Italy and Hawaii, golf outings, school tuition, theater tickets — even fast food purchases — and attempting to disguise the illegal spending in federal records, prosecutor­s said.

A 48-page federal indictment depicts the couple as binge spenders who over eight years pocketed a steady stream of dollars intended for campaign purposes, while their household budget was awash in red ink.

Prosecutor­s said the couple tried to conceal the spending, which ranged from the banal to lavish, by falsifying campaign finance records.

In March 2015, Hunter told his wife that he wanted to buy “Hawaii shorts” but ran out of money, the indictment said. She told him that he should buy them at a golf pro shop so they could later describe the purchase as “some (golf ) balls for the wounded warriors,” according to court documents.

“Throughout the relevant period, the Hunters spent substantia­lly more than they earned,” the indictment said. “They overdrew their bank account more than 1,100 times in a 7-year period resulting in approximat­ely $37,761 in ‘overdraft’ and ‘insufficie­nt funds’ bank fees.”

Asked for comment about the indictment, a spokesman for Hunter sent an Aug. 6 letter from Hunter’s attorney, Gregory A. Vega, to U.S. Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein asking him to postpone the indictment.

Vega contended that there was a “rush to indict” after a two-year grand jury investigat­ion.

There was “politicall­y motivated” pressure to wrap up the investigat­ion in order to tarnish Hunter before the general election after he handily won a June primary, Vega contended.

Hunter was among the earliest Republican members of Congress to endorse President Donald Trump and Vega’s letter suggested his outspoken support for the president made him a target for what he described as politicall­y biased prosecutor­s.

Hunter, 41, the son of a longtime congressma­n, won the June primary in the strongly Republican 50th Congressio­nal District in San Diego and Riverside counties, as news reports circulated about the federal probe.

He faces the prospect of campaignin­g under the shadow of a federal indictment in a year when Democrats have targeted a string of Republican-held House seats across the state.

Hunter’s Democratic opponent, Ammar Campa-Najjar, stopped short of calling on the congressma­n to resign.

“I think justice should run its course,” he said.

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