The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Commerce’s Ross selling stock in response to ethics concerns

- By Marcy Gordon

WASHINGTON » Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross says he is selling off all his vast stock holdings after news reports raised questions about the timing of some of his stock transactio­ns and he received a sharp reprimand from the chief federal ethics officer.

But it’s not clear whether the sales by Ross, who before joining the Trump administra­tion made billions investing in distressed companies, will be enough to satisfy ethics critics and end the episode.

Watchdog groups and some congressio­nal Democrats are already calling for further government probes into his stock trades.

Ross disclosed late Thursday that he had received a letter from the Office of Government Ethics telling him to put his future financial paperwork in order.

The letter warned Ross that his failure to divest stocks he had pledged to sell in his original ethics agreement when he took office could have placed him in a position to run afoul of criminal conflict-of-interest law.

“He should have done it at the outset,” Richard Painter, who was the chief ethics lawyer for President George W. Bush, said of Ross’ stock sales. “He may have already violated the criminal conflict-of-interest” law.

A review by the Commerce Department’s ethics official found nothing to indicate legal violations by Ross, the letter from OGE Acting Director David Apol said. However, he added, “Your failure to divest created the potential for a serious criminal violation on your part and undermined public confidence.”

Ross said he made “inadverten­t errors” in completing the required divestitur­es. Apol’s letter said the ethics agency has no informatio­n contradict­ing that.

But “to maintain the public trust, I have directed that all of my equity holdings be sold and the proceeds placed in U.S. Treasury securities,” Ross’ statement said. “I take my ethics obligation­s very seriously and am committed to serving the American people.”

His move to divest his stock holdings, however, may not be enough to put the matter to bed.

“He’s got some potential legal vulnerabil­ities,” said Virginia Canter, a White House lawyer in the Obama administra­tion now at Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics in Washington. “I think it has to be looked at very closely. There’s a lot of roads that have yet to be pursued.”

CREW has asked the Justice Department and the Office of Government Ethics to investigat­e possible legal violations by Ross. The Commerce Department’s independen­t watchdog and the Securities and Exchange Commission may also have grounds to pursue investigat­ions, Canter suggested.

Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, the senior Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, said Friday that given the OGE’s letter, “the Justice Department should conduct a thorough investigat­ion to ensure that Ross was working on behalf of all Americans and not just his own bank account.”

Spokesmen for Ross at the Commerce Department had no additional comment Friday.

As Commerce chief, Ross is President Donald Trump’s point man on trade and manufactur­ing.

Last month, he became the latest administra­tion official dogged by ethics questions when news surfaced that he used a trading technique to profit if the stock in a shipping company with Russian-government ties fell, a transactio­n coming just days after he learned of a possible negative news story about his investment in the company.

Ross reported on a government form, as required by federal ethics rules, that he shorted stock in Navigator Holdings in October. The New York Times reported that the transactio­n came three business days after a Times reporter submitted questions to Ross about Navigator.

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, testifies before a House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology Space Subcommitt­ee and House Armed Services Committee Strategic Forces Subcommitt­ee joint hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, testifies before a House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology Space Subcommitt­ee and House Armed Services Committee Strategic Forces Subcommitt­ee joint hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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