Chattanooga Times Free Press

Attorney confirmed to oversee corruption case

- BY MICHAEL GOLDBERG

JACKSON, Miss. — The U.S. Senate on Friday confirmed a U.S. attorney in Mississipp­i who will oversee the largest public corruption case in the state’s history.

President Joe Biden nominated Todd Gee for the post overseeing the Southern District of Mississipp­i in September 2022. His nomination stalled until April, when both of Mississipp­i’s Republican U.S. Senators, Roger Wicker and Cindy Hyde-Smith, had indicated they would support his nomination. Gee was confirmed Friday in an 82-8 vote, with all votes against him coming from other Republican­s.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Mississipp­i has overseen prosecutio­ns related to a sprawling corruption scandal in which $77 million of federal welfare funds intended to help some of the poorest people in the U.S. were instead diverted to the rich and powerful. The former head of Mississipp­i’s Department of Human Services and former nonprofit leaders have pleaded guilty to state and federal charges for misspendin­g money through the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program.

The scandal has ensnared high-profile figures, including retired NFL quarterbac­k Brett Favre, who is one of more than three dozen defendants in a lawsuit that the current Human Services director filed to try to recover some of the welfare money.

In a statement posted on social media Friday, Mississipp­i State Auditor Shad White, whose office investigat­ed the scandal, said federal prosecutor­s decide whom to charge, and his relationsh­ip with them would not change.

“The appointmen­t of Mr. Gee changes nothing in our posture,” he wrote. “We will continue to work with federal prosecutor­s to bring the case to a conclusion.”

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