The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Householde­r’s claims questioned as corruption testimony comes to end

- By Julie Carr Smyth

Government prosecutor­s used former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householde­r ‘s own speeches, photograph­s and conversati­ons against him on Thursday, as they sought to unravel the Republican’s denials of key elements of the secretly funded $60 million racketeeri­ng scheme that they allege he carried out on behalf of Akron-based FirstEnerg­y Corp.

Both Householde­r and co-defendant Matt Borges rested their cases in the pair’s corruption trial in U.S. District Court, as did the government, which sends the state’s largest ever corruption trial into its final phase. Closing statements were scheduled to begin Tuesday.

On Householde­r’s second day on the stand, Assistant U.S. Attorney Emily Glatfelter questioned the timeline Householde­r provided on Wednesday of his January 2017 visit to Washington, D.C., for former President Donald Trump’s inaugural. She also pushed back against his claims that he never saw early drafts of the legislatio­n that bailed out two FirstEnerg­y Solutions nuclear plants nor ever got involved in planning attack ads funded by dark money that helped him secure reelection to the House in 2018.

Householde­r, 63, and 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 run a dirty tricks campaign to foil a referendum effort. Borges is accused of offering a bribe for inside informatio­n on that campaign. Both have pleaded not guilty and maintain their innocence. Each faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted.

After appearing relaxed and confident on his first day of testimony, Householde­r grew testy and argumentat­ive at times Thursday. U.S. District Court Judge Timothy Black scolded him loudly at one point to stop responding to questions with questions. Householde­r apologized, though he had to be repeatedly reminded.

After presenting jurors in the trial’s fifth week with photograph­ic metadata, documents obtained through search warrants and taped phone calls that contradict­ed certain details of Householde­r’s denials, Glatfelter all but accused Householde­r of lying.

Glatfelter walked Householde­r through a 2016 financial disclosure form on which he left off many items made public throughout the government’s investigat­ion. Those included the name of one of his businesses; tickets worth as much as $2,500 each to a World Series game in Cleveland that he testified he attended with his wife and then-FirstEnerg­y CEO Chuck Jones in his corporate box; large debts on two credit cards; and a languishin­g unpaid lien.

Householde­r initially testified that he never reviewed the form, until Glatfelter reminded him that his e-signature amounted to a legal promise that it had been “prepared and carefully reviewed” by him — “just like today, the oath you’re under.”

On further questionin­g, Householde­r said an attorney had advised him that the items she listed were not required to be listed, standing by the form as accurate, legal and thorough.

Jurors also heard taped phone calls in which Householde­r and his late co-defendant, Statehouse superlobby­ist Neil Clark, plotted a nasty attack ad and contemplat­ed revenge against two lawmakers who had angered Householde­r in expletive-laced fashion. “We like war, you know that, Neil,” Householde­r

said, adding that he needed to convey the message, “You f—- with me, we’re gonna f—- with your kids.”

Householde­r persisted to testify that he never retaliated against those who voted counter to his wishes or donated to his rivals.

A key focus of the day was whether Householde­r had attended a dinner at the swanky Charlie Palmer’s Steakhouse in Washington, at which the government alleges a dark money group accused in the scandal, Generation Now, was hatched during Trump’s inaugural weekend. Householde­r and his son Luke traveled to and from the event on a FirstEnerg­y plane. Generation Now was charged in the scheme and has pleaded guilty.

Householde­r insisted on the stand that he never attended the dinner and did not see Jones, who was supposed to be in attendance, on that day.

FBI Agent Blane Wetzel, who has led the Householde­r investigat­ion, took the stand after those statements. He described a photograph from Householde­r associate Jeff Longstreth’s phone from that evening, in which Luke Householde­r and the knee of what looks like the same pants Larry Householde­r was wearing earlier that day are pictured in a group of men that includes then-FirstEnerg­y Vice President Michael Dowling.

He said it was taken just after 10:30 p.m. the night of the dinner. The metadata located the photo just alongside Charlie Palmer’s.

The day was interrupte­d briefly by a spectator’s medical emergency. As 911 was called and the jury was briefly dismissed, the defendants and their attorneys worked together to move chairs and a coat rack out of the way for emergency responders and Wetzel, who had been in the middle of testifying, rushed to the person’s aid. She walked out on her own and Black assured the jury she was being taken care of.

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