The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

House speaker, 4 others arrested

$60M bribery case linked to nuclear power plants

- By Julie Carr Smyth and John Seewer

COLUMBUS » The powerful Republican speaker of the Ohio House and four associates were arrested Tuesday in a $60 million federal bribery case connected to a taxpayer-funded bailout of Ohio’s two nuclear power plants.

Hours after FBI agents raided Speaker Larry Householde­r’s farm, U.S. Attorney David DeVillers described the ploy as “likely the largest bribery scheme ever perpetrate­d against the state of

Ohio.”

Gov. Mike DeWine, also a Republican, called on Householde­r to resign immediatel­y, saying it would be impossible for him to be an effective legislativ­e leader given the charges against him.

Householde­r was one of the driving forces behind the nuclear plants’ financial rescue, which added a new fee to every electricit­y bill in the state and directed over $150 million a year through 2026 to the plants near Cleveland and Toledo.

Also arrested were Householde­r adviser Jeffrey Longstreth, longtime Statehouse lobbyist Neil Clark, former Ohio Republican Party Chairman Matthew Borges and Juan Cespedes, co-founder of The Oxley Group, a Columbus-based consulting firm.

Previous attempts to bail out the nuclear plants had stalled in the Legislatur­e before Householde­r became speaker. Months after taking over, he rolled out a new plan to subsidize the plants and eliminate renewable energy incentives. The proposal was approved a year ago despite opposition from many business leaders and the manufactur­ing industry.

Generation Now, a group that investigat­ors said was controlled by Householde­r and successful­ly fought an effort to put a repeal of the bailout law on Ohio’s ballot, was charged as a corporatio­n in the case.

A criminal complaint filed by the FBI says Generation Now received $60 million from an unidentifi­ed company over the past three years. In exchange, Householde­r and the other defendants worked to pass the nuclear plant bailout and block attempts to overturn it.

Householde­r and the others used the money to preserve and expand his political power in Ohio, the complaint said.

FirstEnerg­y Corp., whose former subsidiari­es owned the plants, donated heavily to Householde­r’s campaigns and his backers in the Ohio House. The utility’s political action committee contribute­d $25,000 to Householde­r’s campaign in 2018, according to an analysis by Common Cause Ohio, a government watchdog.

Householde­r flew to President Donald Trump’s inaugurati­on on the company’s plane in 2016. Just months later, Householde­r began receiving quarterly payments of $250,000 from the unidentifi­ed company sent through Generation Now,

the complaint said.

The group then spent millions backing Ohio House candidates who would back Householde­r’s bid for speaker and support the bailout legislatio­n.

FirstEnerg­y Solutions, the subsidiary which has since changed its name to Energy Harbor and now operates the nuclear plants as an independen­t company, spent millions on lobbying and campaign contributi­ons while trying to persuade federal and state officials to give the nuclear plants a lifeline.

FBI agents were at Householde­r’s farm in Glenford on Tuesday morning in rural Perry County. FBI spokesman Todd Lindgren said only that they were carrying out “law enforcemen­t activity.” The Perry County Sheriff’s Office confirmed that it was assisting.

Attempts to reach Householde­r, Borges and Clark were unsuccessf­ul. A message seeking comment was also left with the House communicat­ions office.

The defendants appeared in court and were not required to enter a plea. The

judge ordered Householde­r released on his own recognizan­ce and directed him not to obtain a passport, to restrict his travel to the southern half of Ohio and not to contact any other defendants. The judge also ordered him to remove any guns from his home.

Similar restrictio­ns were imposed on Longstreth. The next hearing was tentativel­y set for Aug. 6.

Borges has increasing­ly been on the outs with the Ohio Republican Party establishm­ent since it was taken over by devotees of President Donald Trump. He was recently censured by the party’s central committee, including for helping launch a PAC in June to turn out GOP voters for Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden. The PAC is backed by a group of prominent Republican operatives that include a former White House communicat­ions director, Anthony Scaramucci.

Clark is one of Ohio’s best connected lobbyists, representi­ng a high-powered stable of clients from the pharmaceut­ical, gambling and alcoholic beverage industries, among others.

Cespedes is a former investment officer with the Ohio Treasurer’s Office who was appointed by then-Gov. John Kasich as commission­er for the Ohio Civil Rights Commission, where he oversees a team effort to stop discrimina­tion in the state. His term ends July 29.

Householde­r is a veteran state lawmaker who’s in his second stint as speaker. He held the same position from 2001 to 2004. He left state politics more than a decade ago because of term limits and returned in 2016 and took up a contentiou­s fight to win back the chamber’s top job.

At the time he left office, he and several top advisers were under federal investigat­ion for alleged money laundering and irregular campaign practices. The government closed the case without filing charges.

Householde­r is the second Ohio House speaker to come under investigat­ion in just over two years.

Former Republican

Speaker Cliff Rosenberge­r was investigat­ed in 2018 amid an FBI inquiry into his travel, lavish lifestyle and a condo he rented from a wealthy GOP donor. Rosenberge­r, who has maintained he broke no laws, has not been charged, but the investigat­ion remains open.

Seewer reported from Toledo. Associated Press Writer Andrew WelshHuggi­ns

in Columbus and AP/Report for America reporter Farnoush Amiri contribute­d to this report. Amiri is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalist­s in local newsrooms to report on undercover­ed issues.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Ohio State Representa­tive Larry Householde­r (R), of District 72, stands Oct. 30 at the head of a legislativ­e session as Speaker of the House, in Columbus.
JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Ohio State Representa­tive Larry Householde­r (R), of District 72, stands Oct. 30 at the head of a legislativ­e session as Speaker of the House, in Columbus.
 ?? PAUL VERNON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Ohio House speaker Larry Householde­r speaks March 5, 2019 in Columbus. FBI agents were at the farm of Householde­r on Tuesday morning, hours ahead of a planned announceme­nt of a $60 million bribe investigat­ion by federal prosecutor­s.
PAUL VERNON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Ohio House speaker Larry Householde­r speaks March 5, 2019 in Columbus. FBI agents were at the farm of Householde­r on Tuesday morning, hours ahead of a planned announceme­nt of a $60 million bribe investigat­ion by federal prosecutor­s.
 ?? JAY LAPRETE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ohio House Speaker Larry Householde­r leaves the federal courthouse July 21 after an initial hearing following charges against him and four others alleging a $60 million bribery scheme in Columbus.
JAY LAPRETE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ohio House Speaker Larry Householde­r leaves the federal courthouse July 21 after an initial hearing following charges against him and four others alleging a $60 million bribery scheme in Columbus.

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