Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Lawmakers call for inquiry into state Controller Betty Yee’s role in failed mask deal

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

California lawmakers say they are troubled by state Controller Betty

Yee’s behind-the-scenes advice to a politicall­yconnected company seeking a $600-million no-bid government contract to provide COVID-19 masks, prompting some to call for a second legislativ­e hearing into the failed deal.

Yee’s role in California’s scuttled state contract with Blue Flame Medical LLC went undisclose­d for two years, despite a lengthy legislativ­e inquiry and federal investigat­ion. Documents from a civil lawsuit reviewed by The Times detail how the two-term Democrat — with no formal role in the state contractin­g process — sought inroads for Blue Flame with the administra­tion of Gov. Gavin Newsom, suggested language on how to ask the state for a large upfront payment and then worked to expedite the agreement.

After California officials were forced to claw back the state’s $457-million cash advance to Blue Flame amid fraud concerns, lawmakers demanded transparen­cy and accountabi­lity during a hearing in May 2020.

But Yee’s name was never mentioned.

“The bottom line is the Blue Flame fiasco was a near miss for the state,” said Assemblyme­mber Cottie

Petrie-norris (D-irvine), who chaired the legislativ­e hearing.

In one text message included in the court documents, Yee discourage­d Blue Flame’s co-founder John Thomas, a Republican political fundraiser, from disclosing how much the company stood to make from the deal because it may “become a matter of public record and make headlines.”

Blue Flame’s internal records, disclosed as part of an ongoing lawsuit, showed the company stood to turn a profit of $134 million by charging the state 20% to 30% markups in price.

Following the revelation of Yee’s role in the deal, Petrienorr­is said she is calling for a follow-up hearing and asking the state’s Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office to provide recommenda­tions “so we can strengthen our vetting and approval processes during a protracted emergency situation.”

“I wish we knew at the time of the hearing what we know now,” said Assemblyme­mber Jim Patterson (R-fresno), vice chair of the

Assembly Committee on Accountabi­lity and Administra­tive Review that conducted the 2020 oversight hearing. “I am absolutely flabbergas­ted. This is the controller. She is the last bulwark from sending a lot of taxpayer money to organizati­ons.”

Assemblyme­mber Jose

Medina (D-riverside), also a member of the accountabi­lity panel, said lawmakers should have been offered more informatio­n. “The fact that we were not made aware of the full scope of this situation during such hearings hinders our job.”

The nearly 150 text messages between Yee and Thomas over the course of one week in March

2020 — part of the public record in a lawsuit over the failed contract — include instances of the controller criticizin­g Newsom’s staff for moving too slow when buying supplies during the early days of the pandemic. At the time, Thomas told Yee he had 100 million N95 masks at the Port of Long Beach that his company could “move to you guys today.”

Hours later, Thomas texted Yee that Blue Flame had almost sold all of those, but he promised that another 100 million masks would arrive each week at the port. Yee texted Thomas that she would keep “bugging” the governor’s office about his offer and suggested how he should word a request for an advance payment, but “without invoking my name” with administra­tion officials.

“I will get my folks working on how to facilitate prepayment,” Yee wrote Thomas.

The next day, Yee told Thomas she had directed her chief of staff to call the director of the California Department of General Services, known as DGS. Thomas quickly texted back, “OMG! YES!”

Yee later texted Thomas, “Prepayment process in place.”

In the days that followed, Thomas repeatedly texted the controller for updates as he waited for the state to wire $457 million to Blue Flame’s bank account.

“We sat ready while DGS took their f—ing time,”

Yee wrote to Thomas after state officials missed the initial cutoff on March 25 to wire money to Blue Flame. “They missed the deadline.

Sorry about that.”

The next morning, Thomas began texting Yee early to “make sure your shop presses the button” at 8 a.m. to send the wire. “Truthfully I’m going to lose my place in line and inventory soon,” he wrote.

But the size of the state’s eventual deposit triggered a warning by bank officials of a potential scam, given that Blue Flame had opened its account the day before. The wire was then reversed a few hours later. Yee rebuffed a subsequent request by Thomas to talk on the phone, texting him to “please cease to keep me in the loop; it is not helpful . ... You have a credibilit­y issue now that you need to solve. Good luck.”

In his deposition last year, Thomas said Blue Flame did not actually sell any of the 100 million masks he claimed to have at the port, despite what he had told Yee. The deal’s unraveling triggered a federal investigat­ion, although

Blue Flame’s attorney said in a letter obtained by The

Times that probes “have long since concluded and the government has confirmed that no charges of any sort have been or will be sought.”

Lawmakers said the Blue Flame deal is a cautionary tale of the perils of nobid contracts, which were heavily relied on by the Newsom administra­tion at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic as a means of helping officials quickly buy lifesaving supplies.

“As we heard during the oversight hearing in 2020, the state adopted more extensive vetting procedures shortly after this contract came to light, and perhaps in part because this contract came to light,” Assemblyme­mber Adam Gray (D-merced), who participat­ed in the 2020 hearing reviewing the state’s deal with Blue Flame, said in a statement. “We also heard that lessons were learned in the rush to get emergency supplies to our hospitals, but we cannot learn from lessons we don’t know about.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States