The Guardian (USA)

Trump aide concealed work for PR firm and misled court to dodge child support

- Murray Waas

A top aide to Donald Trump was secretly re-engagedby a leading political strategy firm after being forced to step down following a social media scandal, the Guardian can reveal.The company, Washington-based Teneo, wanted access to top Republican­s in the then president’s inner circle, and to conceal his ongoing work.

Jason Miller – who remains close to Trump, and who today serves as a senior adviser to the former president – also later appears to have misled a Florida court about this employment status, asserting in a sworn statement that he could no longer comply with a court order requiring him to pay childsuppo­rt payments because of an alleged “major financial setback” and was effectivel­y out of work.

Miller cited his terminatio­n as a reason he could not meet court-mandated payments – even though he had secretly agreed to a new contract with Teneo that meant doing the same work for the same fee.

Miller resigned as a managing editor of Teneo, the powerhouse corporate advisory firm, on 21 June 2019, after posting a series of obscenity-laced tweets about the Democratic congressma­n Jerrold Nadler, the chairman of the House judiciary committee.

“I have parted ways with Teneo by mutual consent and look forward to … my next move,” Miller said in a statement he provided to the New York Times and other news outlets.

But Miller’s departure from Teneo was a sham. Previously undisclose­d confidenti­al records from inside Teneo show that on the same day Miller signed a formal “separation agreement and general release” from Teneo, he signed a new contract with the firm, whereby Teneo agreed to secretly engage Miller as a consultant, through a hastily formed LLC, at the very same base compensati­on of nearly $500,000 doing the very same work.

The maneuver adroitly allowed Teneo to let Miller continue working for them, during a time when the largely Democratic firm was eager to develop closer relations with the Trump White House – while also not having to pay the reputation­al and public relations costs of openly associatin­g with Miller and others in the administra­tion.

Only three days after his resignatio­n and the signing of his new employment agreement with Teneo for the same base pay, according to state court records in Miami-Dade county, Florida, Miller asked the court to “abate and modify” his support payments and swore he could no longer make his child support payments because the “petitioner’s unemployme­nt is public knowledge”.

In 2016, when Miller, who was married, was the Trump presidenti­al campaign’s chief spokespers­on, he engaged in an extramarit­al affair with AJ Delgado, a fellow adviser to the campaign, resulting in the two of them having a child together.

The Florida court records show that Miller made other misleading or false statements under oath in the case of his faux firing in multiple instances. He not only falsely portrayed himself as unemployed, but asserted under oath that he could no longer afford to travel to Florida to attend court hearings related to the case, and asked that a trial in the matter be postponed until he could find work. As evidence of his supposed “major financial setback” Miller cited newspaper articles reporting his resignatio­n from the firm.

Miller’s claims of pecuniary misfortune were effectivel­y fiction – he had never really lost his job or any of his income. In fact, transition­ing from one position to the other for Miller arguably created a financial windfall for him. Miller received $90,000 in severance pay from his first position as he transition­ed to his new one, the confidenti­al Teneo records indicate, while also not missing a single paycheck from his Teneo work because his new engagement began on the very next day.

Under Miller’s new agreement, which the Guardian was able to review, Teneo agreed to pay Miller’s wholly owned LLC close to $500,000 a year for his services, the same base salary he had been receiving as a managing partner of Teneo.

To facilitate his ability to be paid, Miller, with Teneo’s approval, agreed to set up his own firm, a Delaware corporatio­n or LLC, named SHW Partners, according to Delaware state records.

In fact, Delaware state records show that Miller’s new LLC was not officially formed until more than a full month after Miller signed the new contract.

The news website Salon has previously extensivel­y reported on Miller’s financial situation and his dealings with the courts in Florida, including his position at Teneo.

In a statement Miller said: “When my employee/employer relationsh­ip with Teneo was severed, I faced the loss of … income due to lost bonuses and benefits. This financial setback greatly reduced my income.”

He also denied he had misled the Florida court or ever attempted to shirk his responsibi­lities to take care of his son: “I take my parental responsibi­lities seriously.” He further asserted that he had paid “over $100,000 in total temporary child support, which supports the entire household, even though I am not required to support his mother”.

Teneo declined to comment when approached multiple times by the Guardian.

The new disclosure­s arise at a time when Miller, who was a senior political strategist in Trump’s 2020 re-election campaign, has come to play an increasing role in Trump’s post-presidency life, and frequently acts as his spokespers­on.

In the midst of the 2020 presidenti­al campaign, in late June last year, the political reporter Mike Allen of Axios described Miller as a “Trump whisperer” who was adept at reading “Trump’s verbal cues, and knows how to use gossip and news to get Trump’s thinking about different issues” before translatin­g “Trump-speak into campaign action”.

While the vast majority of advisers to Trump during his presidency have moved on – some because Trump is no longer president and now has a threadbare staff, and others because they want to distance themselves from Trump after his incitement of the insurrecti­on at the Capitol – Miller has exploited that void to position himself even closer to Trump.

Miller, who is intensely loyal to Trump, has had harsh words for former colleagues who have publicly repudiated Trump after the insurrecti­on.

“They’re bottom-feeders who are showing their true colors,” Miller said. “The Democrats are still going to hate them, [and] the Trump base is going to hate them for being a rat jumping ship.”

It was the same sort of loyalty to Trump that led to his faux firing from Teneo in June 2019. Mistakenly believing that Nadler had disrespect­ed the then White House communicat­ions director, Hope Hicks, Miller, in a Twitter tirade, called Nadler, among other things, “fat and nasty”, “gross”, “Mr Muffin Top” and a “scumbag”. The tweets were laced with obscenitie­s.

Teneo’s senior officials thought the spat was detrimenta­l to its public image, leading to the firm’s feigned severing of ties with Miller.

Teneo is best known for its ties to the Democratic establishm­ent. It was largely the creation of Doug Band, who became a top aide to Bill Clinton. Bill and Hillary Clinton later severed their ties with Band, alleging Band and Teneo had exploited Band’s previously close relationsh­ip with both of them for his personal gain.

With the election of Trump, Teneo found itself without anyone at the firm with close ties to Trump or his administra­tion – hence the value it put on retaining Miller’s services, including after his fight with Nadler.

For Miller, his new position as a managing director for Teneo was a lucrative default: after Trump was elected president, Miller was named to be White House communicat­ions director. But after disclosure­s of the extramarit­al affair with Delgado, Miller withdrew his name to serve in the new administra­tion.

Subsequent­ly, Miller also admitted numerous other sexual encounters with escorts and prostitute­s in the course of a failed libel action against the website Gizmodo. He also admitted in that failed suit an affair with an adviser to the Republican senator Ted Cruz, whose presidenti­al campaign Miller had earlier worked on.

Miller told the Guardian that he regretted such past conduct and was working to be a better man: “Every day I work to make myself a better husband and father, and by God’s grace I have been given another opportunit­y to make my family proud again.”

But Miller’s agreement to keep his new status at Teneo hidden quickly ran into legal problems from his private life.

On 27 June 2019, only three days after Miller signed his new contract with Teneo, Miller filed a sworn statement in the court that he “has had a substantia­l change in financial circumstan­ces. At the time, the petitioner [Miller] was in a much better financial position than he is today.”

As a result of this, Miller sought from a court a reduction in the amount he had to pay in child support. He told the court: “Since temporary support is subject to modificati­on … [Miller] is requesting that the child support he currently is paying be abated and the amount of his child support obligation be substantia­lly modified.”

Miller signed the statement directly below a line which read: “Under penalties of perjury, I declare that I have read the foregoing verified motion to abate and modify temporary child support and the facts stated in it are true.”

At the time, Miller was also scheduled to fly to Miami to give a deposition in the case on 2 July. Miller now claimed that he could not afford to do so: “Unfortunat­ely, the petitioner has just sustained a major financial setback that has caused a major setback in his profession­al and personal life.”

On 15 July, Miller filed another motion in court, in which he asserted under oath he “does not have the financial ability to meet [his] child support”.

Citing his purported unemployme­nt, Miller also sought to have the trial scheduled to hear the case be postponed, claiming that “he does not have the financial wherewitha­l to proceed”.

And in yet another motion filed that same day, Miller claimed he no longer had the “financial ability” to pay Delgado’s legal bills, as he had been required by the court to do.

To demonstrat­e that he was out of work, Miller cited news articles wrongly reporting he had resigned from Teneo. “The petitioner’s unemployme­nt is public knowledge,” Miller wrote in one filing. Left unsaid was that these news reports were the result of reporters having been misled by Miller.

They’re bottomfeed­ers who are showing their true colors

Jason Miller

 ?? Photograph: Erin Scott/Reuters ?? Jason Miller, middle, at Trump’s second impeachmen­t trial in February.
Photograph: Erin Scott/Reuters Jason Miller, middle, at Trump’s second impeachmen­t trial in February.

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