Miami Herald

Why did Florida hire banking regulator now suspended amid sex-harassment allegation­s?

- BY LAWRENCE MOWER Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

The Florida banking regulator accused of sexual harassment and inappropri­ate behavior got the job with the endorsemen­t of Florida’s chief financial officer, Jimmy Patronis.

In a letter to the governor and two other Cabinet members in February, Patronis pushed for Ronald Rubin, a former D.C. lawyer who hadn’t had a job in four years, over 21 other applicants who met the minimum qualificat­ions.

“Our office has interviewe­d a wide range of candidates and after careful considerat­ion, I recommend that Ronald Rubin ... interview for this position,” Patronis wrote to Gov. Ron DeSantis, Attorney General Ashley Moody and Agricultur­e Commission­er Nicole “Nikki” Fried.

During the next week’s Cabinet meeting, Patronis moved to hire Rubin as commission­er of the Office of Financial Regulation, and the three other Cabinet members concurred.

However, Patronis apparently missed the fact that Rubin had been fired from his last job, as an adviser to the U.S. House Financial Services Committee, over an accusation of sexual harassment, according to a Monday story in Bloomberg Law.

Since leaving that job in 2015, Rubin hasn’t had a full-time job until he took the Florida job in February. He didn’t respond to requests for comment.

A spokeswoma­n for Patronis did not answer when asked why Patronis wanted Rubin for the job, which oversees the agency that regulates banks, payday loan stores and check-cashing operations. Rubin is paid $166,000. The spokeswoma­n said that neither Patronis nor anyone in his office had any knowledge of any misconduct committed by Rubin prior to the recent complaints.

She added that Patronis considered the allegation­s “deeply disturbing” and he suspended Rubin after the first complaint. The Chief Financial Officer’s office of inspector general is investigat­ing.

In his 2018 applicatio­n, Rubin said his reason for leaving the House committee job in 2015 was to “resume writing and publishing articles” and to volunteer for the 2016 presidenti­al campaign of U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio.

Rubio campaign spokesman Dan Holler said the senator and Rubin knew each other but didn’t have a relationsh­ip. And he knew of neither Rubio nor anyone in Rubio’s office helping Rubin get the job.

Within weeks of getting the job at Patronis’ office, Rubin was accused of “inappropri­ate and uncomforta­ble behavior” with an employee, including inviting the employee to his downtown Tallahasse­e condo and discussing his parents’ sex life while at lunch.

The behavior forced the employee to hide from him and avoid socializin­g with coworkers for fear of running into the commission­er, according to the complaint.

Since then, two more people have come forward with their own stories of inappropri­ate behavior by Rubin, according to Patronis’ office.

One applicant for a job with Rubin wrote that the commission­er complained about “too many ‘rednecks’” in Tallahasse­e, and that some of the people in his agency were “too old.”

“He continued to talk about the current staff, saying [name redacted] was early in pregnancy but ‘showing already,’” the person, whose name was redacted, wrote.

The applicant repeatedly tried to get Rubin “back on track” during a 90-minute interview, but he strayed to different topics. Rubin complained that DeSantis didn’t recognize him at an event, according to the complaint, and “how his new job was actually costing him money.”

At the end of the interview, “he said he would look into whether my experience would be a fit for the position, but that he doubted it.”

“I have never experience­d anything like this,” the person wrote.

Another complainan­t wrote that in a meeting, Rubin bragged about hearing about the sexual exploits of Jordan Belfort, the so-called “Wolf of Wall Street,” when Rubin was an enforcemen­t attorney at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Belfort, a financial fraudster whose memoir was turned into a movie starring Leonardo DiCaprio, was a cooperatin­g witness in Rubin’s case against shoe designer Steve Madden. Madden eventually spent 41 months in federal prison.

Rubin frequently brings up his experience with Belfort, writing a Wall Street Journal op-ed about it, noting it on his website and on his Florida résumé, and mentioning it during his interview with the Cabinet.

During his meeting with staff, Rubin told them Belfort had refused to discuss his sexual exploits with a woman in the room. The woman in the room, who was a colleague of Rubin’s at the time, left, and Belfort shared stories with Rubin, the employee recounted the commission­er saying.

The employee considered the story “inappropri­ate” to bring up in a staff meeting, but chalked it up to Rubin’s being nervous.

However, the employee said they learned later that Rubin gave his personal cell phone number to two female employees, according to the complaint.

“My feeling was that his purpose for doing so might not have been entirely work related,” the person wrote.

Since leaving the SEC in 2003, Rubin held seven different full-time jobs in 12 years, some for just a few months.

He worked for 16 months as an enforcemen­t attorney at the then-fledgling Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and for just five months at his previous post as a chief adviser to the House Committee on Financial Services, according to his résumé.

After leaving the committee in 2015, he’s written articles and op-eds decrying the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, his only source of income, according to his résumé..

Patronis was responsibl­e for ousting the last commission­er of the Office of Financial Regulation last year, pressuring him to resign for not being “responsive.”

The Cabinet could remove or replace Rubin immediatel­y, and Moody last week asked for an emergency Cabinet meeting to discuss the situation.

But no emergency meeting has been scheduled.

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