Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump’s PAC faces scrutiny amid intensifyi­ng legal probes

- BY JILL COLVIN, BRIAN SLODYSKO AND ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — Sitting on top of more than $115 million across several political committees, Donald Trump has positioned himself as a uniquely indomitabl­e force in the GOP who would almost certainly have the resources to swamp his rivals if he launched another presidenti­al campaign.

But that massive pile of money is also emerging as a potential vulnerabil­ity. His chief fundraisin­g vehicle, Save America PAC, is under new legal scrutiny after the Justice Department issued a round of grand jury subpoenas that sought informatio­n about the political action committee’s fundraisin­g practices.

The scope of the probe is unclear. Grand jury subpoenas and search warrants issued by the Justice Department in recent days were related to numerous topics, including Trump’s PAC, according to people familiar with the matter who requested anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigat­ion. The subpoenas seek records as well as testimony and ask at least some of the recipients about their knowledge of efforts to engage in election fraud, according to one of the people.

The subpoenas also ask for records of communicat­ion with Trump-allied lawyers who supported efforts to overturn the 2020 election results and plotted to line up fake electors in battlegrou­nd states. A particular area of focus appears to be on the “Save America Rally” that preceded the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol, the person said.

The investigat­ion is one of several criminal probes Trump currently faces, including scrutiny of how documents with classified markings wound up at the former president’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida. Regardless of Save America’s ultimate role in the investigat­ions, the flurry of developmen­ts has drawn attention to the PAC’s management, how it has raised money and where those funds have been directed.

Trump spokesman Taylor Budowich slammed the subpoenas, saying a “weaponized and politicize­d Justice Department” was “casting a blind net to intimidate and silence Republican­s who are fighting for his America First agenda.” Representa­tives for the Justice Department have declined to comment.

While Trump has more than $115 million held across various committees, the vast majority of it is stored at Save America. The PAC ended July with more than $99 million cash-on-hand, according to fundraisin­g records — more than the Republican and Democratic national campaign committees combined.

Trump has continued to shovel up small-dollar donations in the months since, frustratin­g other Republican­s who have been struggling to raise money ahead of the November midterm elections.

Save America is set up as a “leadership PAC” designed to allow political figures to fundraise for other campaigns. But the groups are often used by would-be candidates to fund political travel, polling and staff as they “test the waters” ahead of potential presidenti­al runs. The accounts can also be used to contribute money to other candidates and party organizati­ons, helping wouldbe candidates build political capital.

Much of the money Trump has amassed was raised in the days and weeks after the 2020 election, which he lost to Democrat Joe Biden. That’s when Trump supporters were bombarded with a nonstop stream of emails and texts, many containing allcaps lettering and blatant lies about a stolen 2020 election, soliciting cash for an “election defense fund.”

But no such fund ever existed. Instead, Trump has dedicated the money to other uses. He’s financed dozens of rallies, paid staff and used the money to travel as he’s teased an expected 2024 presidenti­al run.

Other expenses have been more unusual. There was the $1 million donated last year to the Conservati­ve Partnershi­p Institute, a nonprofit that employs Cleta Mitchell and former Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows, both of whom encouraged Trump’s failed attempt to overturn the 2020 election.

There was the $650,000 “charitable contributi­on” in July to the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n to help fund portraits of Trump and the former first lady that will one day hang in the National Portrait Gallery, according to the Smithsonia­n spokespers­on Linda St. Thomas.

Much of the money has also funded a different sort of defense fund — one that has paid the legal expenses of Trump confidants and aides who have been called to testify before the Jan. 6 committee.

Overall, Trump’s sprawling political operation has spent at least $8 million on “legal consulting” and “legal expenses” to at least 40 law firms since the insurrecti­on, according to an analysis of campaign finance disclosure­s.

It’s unclear how much of that money went to legal fees for staffers after a congressio­nal committee started investigat­ing the origins of the attack. But at least $1.1 million has been paid to Elections LLC, a firm started by former Trump White House ethics lawyer Stefan Passantino, according to campaign finance and business records. An additional $1 million was paid to a legal trust housed at the same address as Passantino’s firm. Passantino did not respond to a request for comment Monday night. Payments have also been made to firms that specialize in environmen­tal regulation and real estate matters.

As of July, only about $750,000 had been doled out to candidates for Congress, with an additional $150,000 given to candidates for state office, records show. Trump is expected to ramp up his political spending now that the general election season has entered full swing, though it remains unclear how much the notoriousl­y thrifty former president will ultimately agree to spend.

Trump has long played coy about his 2024 plans, saying a formal announceme­nt would trigger campaign finance rules that would, force him to create a new campaign committee that would be bound by strict fundraisin­g limits.

In the meantime, Trump aides have been discussing the prospect of creating a new super PAC or repurposin­g one that already exists as gets he closer to an announceme­nt. While Trump could not use Save America to fund campaign activity after launching a run, aides have discussed the possibilit­y of moving at least some of that money into a super PAC, according to people who insisted on anonymity to discuss private plans.

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