Miami Herald (Sunday)

Records tied to $600,000 money transfer subpoenaed in ‘ghost’ candidate case

- BY ANA CEBALLOS aceballos@miamiheral­d.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

The transfer is adding a new layer of intrigue to a years-long question: Who paid for thousands of political mail advertisem­ents to promote sham candidates in state Senate races?

TALLAHASSE­E

Prosecutor­s subpoenaed records related to a $600,000 money transfer between dark money organizati­ons tied to an ongoing Miami-Dade criminal case surroundin­g “ghost candidates” in the 2020 election, according to court records unveiled Friday.

The transfer is adding a new layer of intrigue to a years-long question into who paid for thousands of political mail advertisem­ents to promote sham no-party candidates in three contested Florida races that were key to helping solidify the Republican

majority in the state Senate.

While the source is not yet clear, the money transfer shows prosecutor­s have looked into a

$600,000 transfer made on or around Sept. 30 from Foundation for a

Safe Environmen­t, a nonprofit organizati­on controlled by prominent Republican operative Stafford Jones, to Let’s Preserve the American Dream, a nonprofit organizati­on run by Ryan Tyson, a top GOP pollster in Florida.

During the course of the investigat­ion, court records show that Tyson told investigat­ors that he, too, had sent $600,000 on Sept. 29, 2020, to

Grow United, a dark money organizati­on that sent $550,000 to two political committees that paid for the mailers that promoted as political progressiv­es the no-party candidates in two MiamiDade state Senate races and another in Central Florida.

Jones told the Herald on Saturday, after this story was originally published online, that the amount transferre­d by Foundation for a Safe Environmen­t was $630,000, not $600,000 as the court document states. Jones said the money was a general contributi­on and not for any specific purpose.

Tyson told investigat­ors his organizati­on transferre­d the money to Grow United to help “left to center” candidates, and that he “had a hunch” the money would later be transferre­d to the two political committees —

The Truth and Our Florida — which were controlled by Tallahasse­e consultant Alex Alvarado.

Tyson, however, said he could not be sure what the money would be used for.

He told investigat­ors that “once he makes a contributi­on to an entity, he loses control of how they spend the money.”

RECORDS RELEASED

Records released Friday — a summary of investigat­ive activity related to the elections for Senate Districts 37 and 39 from Sept. 1 to Dec. 31, 2021 — did not offer much detail about the relationsh­ip Foundation for a Safe Environmen­t has to the investigat­ion.

But Jones, who chairs the organizati­on, controls a number of political committees associated with the prominent GOP research firm Data Targeting, according to court records. Data Targeting has long served as a chief firm advising Senate Republican campaigns, including during the 2020 election cycle.

Data Targeting also paid former Republican state Sen. Frank Artiles, who is facing several charges related to the no-party candidate who ran in District 37, for campaignre­lated work.

Data Targeting paid Artiles $90,000 over six months to work on “state legislativ­e campaign assignment­s ... to include certain Senate Districts in Miami-Dade County,” according to records released by the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office. The contract did not detail the exact duties.

DISCLOSURE RULES

Unlike political committees, which are legally required to disclose their donors, dark money groups are not required by law to do so, which makes them useful for funders who don’t want their identities revealed when backing certain campaigns or causes.

In addition, records show that on April 20, prosecutor­s were seeking informatio­n from Brian Lacey, who worked with the Florida Democratic Legislativ­e Campaign Committee until he was let go in December 2020 following “a bad cycle and losses in Florida Senate races.”

The DLCC also received money from Grow United. Lacey told investigat­ors he recalled the contributi­on was made but that he did not have informatio­n beyond that and did not have access to those records because he was not employed by the committee.

DISCOVERY IN CASE AGAINST ARTILES

Friday’s records are part of the discovery in the case against Artiles in Miami.

The candidate in Senate District 37, who shares a surname with the Democrat incumbent and received more than 6,000 votes in an election decided by just 32, was arrested on four felony campaign finance charges last year.

Auto-parts dealer Alexis Pedro Rodriguez later took a plea deal in exchange for helping prosecutor­s build a case against his acquaintan­ce, Artiles.

Investigat­ors say Artiles paid Rodriguez $40,000 to run as a no-party candidate to sway the outcome of the election by siphoning votes away from the incumbent.

Both men were charged with conspiracy to make or accept campaign contributi­ons in excess of legal limits, accepting and making those excess campaign contributi­ons, false swearing in connection to an election and aiding in (and eventually, submitting) false voter informatio­n.

Under state law, each of those charges carries sentences of up to five years in prison if convicted.

The case is scheduled for its next hearing on

Sept. 1.

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Frank Artiles, a former Republican state senator, leaves the Turner Guilford Knight Correction­al Center in Miami in March 2021. He posted $5,000 bail after facing charges related to a Senate District 37 campaign in 2020.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Frank Artiles, a former Republican state senator, leaves the Turner Guilford Knight Correction­al Center in Miami in March 2021. He posted $5,000 bail after facing charges related to a Senate District 37 campaign in 2020.
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