The Denver Post

Senators press Pruitt for details on new legal defense fund

- By Ellen Knickmeyer

WASHINGTON» Four Senate Democrats asked Scott Pruitt on Monday for details about a new legal defense fund to help the Environmen­tal Protection Agency administra­tor as he weathers a series of federal ethics investigat­ions.

Pruitt confirmed at a Senate hearing last week that people he did not identify have created the legal defense fund in his behalf, but he gave no specifics on its operation. Officials typically use such funds to help cover any legal bills for themselves and sometimes for others.

Under questionin­g last week from Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., Pruitt said, “Yeah, absolutely” when Van Hollen asked him to commit to refusing any donations to the fund from lobbyists or companies with business before the EPA.

Neither Pruitt nor the EPA has made public any other informatio­n about his defense fund since then. Pruitt is the subject of probes by the EPA’s inspector general, the Government Accountabi­lity Office, Congress and others investigat­ing allegation­s about his spending, relationsh­ips with lobbyists and other matters.

In a letter from Van Hollen and three other Senate Democrats, the lawmakers asked Pruitt within 10 days to provide all the documents that went into setting up the defense fund, and any communicat­ion involving the EPA’s ethics office about the fund.

Asked by The Associated Press for informatio­n about Pruitt’s defense fund, Cleta Mitchell, the Washington lawyer reported by The Washington Post to have handled setting up the fund, responded by email, “No.”

An Oklahoma native like Pruitt, Mitchell is known for arguing for narrow interpreta­tions of financial disclosure requiremen­ts in politics, as in a 2012 essay she wrote for a Minnesota law review titled, “Donor disclosure: Underminin­g the First Amendment,” which protects free speech. She argued for the National Rifle Associatio­n in a 2002 case against tougher financial-disclosure laws in politics.

Called “the attack attorney of choice for Tea Party stars” by the Wall Street Journal in 2010, Mitchell is a spirited defender of Pruitt on Twitter, tweeting last month, “Pruitt is an American hero, dedicated to draining the Swamp. This brave man dares to wrangle the EPA to its proper role. Hang in there, Scott Pruitt!!”

EPA spokesman Jahan Wilcox did not respond to an AP email asking for the contact of someone who could comment on the fund.

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