Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

House ethics panel opens investigat­ion into Florida’s Gaetz

- ERIC TUCKER, MICHAEL BALSAMO AND LISA MASCARO Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Curt Anderson of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — The House Ethics Committee has opened an investigat­ion of U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, citing reports of sexual and other misconduct by the Florida Republican, the panel’s leaders said Friday.

The deepening of the scrutiny of the congressma­n comes as Gaetz has retained two prominent

New York attorneys while facing a Justice Department investigat­ion into sex traffickin­g allegation­s involving underage girls.

The House panel’s bipartisan probe is one of the first official indication­s that Gaetz’s party leaders are willing to scrutinize his actions. It also appears sweeping in scope, reaching beyond the reports of sexual misconduct into broader allegation­s of public corruption, according to the committee chairman, Rep. Ted Deutsch, D-Fla., and ranking Republican Rep. Jackie Walorski of Indiana.

Unfolding alongside a federal criminal investigat­ion, the ethics probe ensures Gaetz will have to confront simultaneo­us inquiries even as he maintains his innocence and plans to remain in Congress.

The Ethics Committee conducts its work in secret and usually issues a final report on what it finds, often many months later. Punishment for ethics violations is up to the House and can include censure, fines and even expulsion from Congress.

Separately Friday, a spokespers­on for Gaetz said attorneys Marc Mukasey and Isabelle Kirshner will lead his legal team.

“Matt has always been a fighter. A fighter for his constituen­ts, a fighter for the country, and a fighter for the Constituti­on. He’s going to fight back against the unfounded allegation­s against him,” the statement said, adding that the lawyers “will take the fight to those trying to smear his name with falsehoods.”

Gaetz has not been charged with a crime, has denied any wrongdoing and has sent fundraisin­g appeals that portray him as a victim of a “smear campaign.”

But a potentiall­y ominous sign occurred in a Florida court Thursday when it was revealed that a Gaetz associate, Joel Greenberg, a former county tax collector, is working toward a plea deal. Such a move could potentiall­y open the door for Greenberg’s cooperatio­n against Gaetz.

Prosecutor­s are examining whether Gaetz and Greenberg paid underage girls or offered them gifts in exchange for sex, according to two people familiar with the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity because they could not discuss details publicly.

Greenberg entered an innocent plea Friday through his attorney to a variety of charges ranging from child sex traffickin­g to fraud. A judge has set a May 15 deadline for Greenberg to reach a plea deal.

Mukasey is a former federal prosecutor in New York and is the son of Michael Mukasey, a former federal judge who served as attorney general in President George W. Bush’s administra­tion.

He has represente­d former President Donald Trump’s family business, the Trump Organizati­on, in tax-related investigat­ions in New York, and defended Edward Gallagher, a Navy SEAL whose war crimes case caught Trump’s attention. Gallagher was acquitted of killing a wounded prisoner in Iraq.

Kirshner represente­d former New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an, who resigned after being accused of physically assaulting women.

No charges were filed against him after an investigat­ion by a special prosecutor. Kirshner’s law firm has also represente­d several lawyers accused of criminal wrongdoing.

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