La Semana

Attorney General Drummond dismisses Governor’s “meritless” lawsuit

- Entry of

OKLAHOMA CITY – In a growing list of rifts between Governor Kevin Stitt and Oklahoma’s Attorney General Gentner Drummond, this week Drummond assumed control of a State lawsuit that Stitt has pursued against a company that Drummond said the Governor has incorrectl­y blamed for the misuse of hundreds of thousands of dollars in education relief funds. Drummond also dismissed the litigation.

“I have been clear and consistent in communicat­ing with the Governor on this matter,” said Drummond. “I will not allow taxpayer funds and State resources to be wasted in pursuit of this meritless lawsuit.”

The Attorney General, who last year dismissed a similar lawsuit brought against the same vendor, has long maintained that state actors, not Florida-based Classwalle­t, are responsibl­e for the misspent federal relief dollars intended to help families with educationa­l expenditur­es during the pandemic.

Last month, Drummond denied Gov. Stitt’s request to regle the suit, noting that it would be a “futile exercise in poor judgement” given that state o#cials failed to use the controls available to them to manage the funds.

An audit by the U.S. Department of Education O#ce of Inspector General (OIG) found questionab­le expenditur­es and processes surroundin­g $31 million in Governor’s Education Emergency Relief (GEER) funds. A separate audit from State Auditor and Inspector Cindy Byrd congrmed the deep concerns regarding state actors’ lack of oversight and responsibi­lity for these funds. Auditor Byrd’s report identiges 39,634 items, including video game consoles, home appliances, furniture, and Christmas trees, totaling $1,707,377, that were improperly purchased and did not have an educationa­l purpose.

In a response letter to the Governor, Drummond said these Gndings would undermine any lawsuit against Classwalle­t because the State rejected internal controls and oversight, failed to use Classwalle­t’s available controls, and failed to develop any written monitoring policies and procedures.

“The overwhelmi­ng evidence shows no oversight and no control measures and suggests that no one in your administra­tion tried to shut off the spigot of these improper expenditur­es,” Drummond wrote in the Jan. 23 letter.

In his appearance,

Drummond said the lawsuit leaves the State open to paying hundreds of thousands in defendant’s attorney fees.

“As the guardian of the State’s interests, I will not sit idly by while taxpayer funds are threatened by frivolous suits" for political cover, he wrote in the Gling.

In August 2022, then-attorney

General John O’connor, a Gov. Stitt appointee, Gled an initial lawsuit against Classwalle­t claiming the company was culpable for the misspent money. That litigation sat idle for 179 days — one day shy of the maximum permitted before a case is dismissed for lack of service — before being dismissed by Drummond during his Grst month in o#ce.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States