The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Ex-Ohio House speaker denies exec dinners

- By Julie Carr Smyth

Former Republican Ohio House Speaker Larry Householde­r directly contradict­ed FBI testimony in his corruption trial Wednesday, taking the stand for the first time to deny attending a series of swanky dinners in Washington, D.C. where prosecutor­s have alleged he and executives of Akron-based FirstEnerg­y Corp. hatched a $60 million bribery scheme in 2017.

Householde­r, 63, looked relaxed and confident during his first day of testimony, setting the stage by describing his lifetime lived in a single rural Ohio county, his early political-underdog days and his rising path to become speaker. His wife of 38 years, Taundra, sat facing him from the gallery.

The trial is in its fifth week before a jury and U.S. District Court Judge Timothy Black in Cincinnati.

Householde­r and Matt Borges, 50, a lobbyist and former Ohio Republican Party chair, have been charged with conspiracy to participat­e in a racketeeri­ng enterprise involving bribery and money laundering. Federal prosecutor­s allege Householde­r controlled a scheme, secretly funded by FirstEnerg­y, to elect allies, win the speakershi­p, pass a $1 billion nuclear plant bailout and that Borges sought to bribe an operative for inside informatio­n on the referendum to overturn it. Both have pleaded not guilty and maintain their innocence. Each faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted.

Householde­r told jurors that he invented the strategy of recruiting large numbers of like-minded Republican House candidates and setting up expensive operations to help them all get elected at once, requiring the raising of large sums of money. But he denied demanding loyalty oaths from his recruits or extracting promises to vote a certain way.

“I really looked for people who are independen­tminded,” he said.

Three of Householde­r’s former caucus members testified last week that he pressured them to vote for the bill, and texts were presented in which Householde­r appeared to express anger at disloyalty.

Associate Jeff Longstreth, among four other individual­s and a dark money group charged in the scheme, had testified for the prosecutio­n that Householde­r wanted “casket carriers,” people so

loyal they would carry his casket on the day of his funeral. Householde­r told jurors “casket carriers” were just friends, and that a long-time politician like him doesn’t need anymore enemies.

In another denial of previous allegation­s, Householde­r said he never granted Statehouse superlobby­ist Neil Clark, a codefenden­t who died by suicide in 2021, a “proxy” to act on his behalf. The former speaker guffawed at the suggestion.

“I don’t give up my right to speak for myself,” he said.

Clark was taped describing himself as Householde­r’s “proxy” while speaking to two undercover FBI agents posing as developers. He went on to describe in detail Householde­r’s use of dark money groups to conceal campaign contributi­ons. Householde­r’s attorneys have said Clark exaggerate­d.

Perhaps the day’s most striking exchange was when Householde­r described his trip to Republican President Donald Trump’s inaugurati­on in January 2017. He recounted flying to Washington on a FirstEnerg­y plane, then outlined his weekend activities in detail — photo opportunit­ies, cocktail parties, balls, parades, a concert with his son and pizza with a wife “addicted” to it.

Missing from the account were several dinners, which earlier documents had shown were arranged by Longstreth, head of the dark money Generation Now, to involve thenFirstE­nergy CEO Chuck Jones, Vice President Michael Dowling and others. Householde­r said he had not attended any such dinners. He said he saw Jones on the plane flights to and from the inaugural, and then throughout the weekend only at a “packed” house party hosted by media consultant Rex Elsass and perhaps once more in passing. Asked if he attended

the dinners, Householde­r simply said, “No” or “I was not.”

Earlier in the trial, FBI Agent Blane Wetzel had walked through internal documents from both Generation Now and FirstEnerg­y, phone records, emails and other documents indicating Jones, Dowling and Householde­r were part of a party of eight that met three times in D.C. over Trump’s inaugural weekend.

It was about two weeks later that Longstreth opened a bank account for Generation Now, through which FirstEnerg­y admitted in an agreement to avoid prosecutio­n to pushing millions of bribes aimed at getting the bailout bill passed. The same day, Longstreth emailed Dowling “wiring instructio­ns” for FirstEnerg­y to put money in the account. Regular $250,000 began flowing.

Longstreth and Generation Now have pleaded guilty to their parts in the bribery scheme, as has a third individual, Juan Cespedes, who testified last week. Clark had pleaded not guilty.

Cross-examinatio­n of Householde­r had not yet begun at day’s end Wednesday.

Earlier in the day, Statehouse lobbyist Robert Klaffky testified to being present at a meeting where a $400,000 check from his client, FirstEnerg­y Solutions, was given to Householde­r in an envelope. Klaffky said he could not remember what was said at the meeting, but that he was certain he had not witnessed pay-to-play.

Klaffky said he was already a Householde­r insider and adviser before taking on FirstEnerg­y Solutions, a subsidiary that owned the two nuclear plants, as a client — and wanting him to win the speakershi­p.

Borges’ attorney, Karl Schneider, said he expected his client also to take the stand.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JOSHUA A. BICKEL, FILE ?? Former Ohio Republican Party Chairman Matt Borges, right, walks toward Potter Stewart U.S. Courthouse with his attorneys Todd Long, left, and Karl Schneider, center, before jury selection in his federal trial, Jan. 20, in Cincinnati, Ohio.
AP PHOTO/JOSHUA A. BICKEL, FILE Former Ohio Republican Party Chairman Matt Borges, right, walks toward Potter Stewart U.S. Courthouse with his attorneys Todd Long, left, and Karl Schneider, center, before jury selection in his federal trial, Jan. 20, in Cincinnati, Ohio.
 ?? AP PHOTO/ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS, FILE ?? Ohio Republican Party Chairman Matt Borges participat­es in a question-and-answer session in Columbus, Ohio, Feb. 11, 2016.
AP PHOTO/ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS, FILE Ohio Republican Party Chairman Matt Borges participat­es in a question-and-answer session in Columbus, Ohio, Feb. 11, 2016.

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