San Antonio Express-News

‘Advising con artists’ his area of expertise

- CATHERINE RAMPELL crampell@washpost.com

Many assume Matthew G. Whitaker was chosen as acting attorney general because he criticized the Russia probe, said he would have indicted Hillary Clinton and otherwise looks like a die-hard Trump loyalist.

But maybe Whitaker really was picked because he has experience advising con artists.

Whitaker, after all, was involved with a Miami-based firm that federal regulators shut down last year as an alleged scam. The firm, World Patent Marketing, promised aspiring inventors that it would patent and market their brainchild­ren, based on what a 17-page Federal Trade Commission complaint characteri­zed as bogus “success stories” and other false claims.

Among the many, many ways this company hoodwinked customers, according to the FTC complaint: It claimed its customers’ inventions were sold in “big box” stores such as Walmart and Target, when in fact none were; it claimed it owned a manufactur­ing plant in China, though no such plant existed; and it said its board of advisers (“Invention Team Advisory Board”) personally reviewed customers’ invention ideas, when the board did no such thing.

The company allegedly bilked some customers out of their life savings and threw others deeply into debt; a Miami New Times exposé found that some had lost hundreds of thousands of dollars. In return, the company “provided almost no service,” according to the FTC.

Just as bad, when customers complained or asked for refunds, the FTC said, the company resorted to threats and intimidati­on.

Sometimes this involved ominous references to World Patent Marketing’s “intimidati­ng security team, all exIsraeli Special Ops and trained in Krav Maga, one of the most deadly of the martial arts.”

Mostly, the message came from lawyers. Including Whitaker.

Whitaker was on the World Patent Marketing’s “Invention Team Advisory Board” — yes, that body the FTC said was falsely advertised as reviewing customers’ creations. The company touted Whitaker’s credential­s as a former U.S. attorney and Republican Senate candidate. Whitaker publicly vouched for the firm in promotiona­l materials.

In exchange, he received $9,375 between 2014 and early 2016; the company’s chief executive also donated $2,600 to Whitaker’s Senate campaign, and the company owed him an additional $7,500 at the time the FTC moved to seize it.

Whitaker is not personally named in the FTC complaint, and we don’t know the extent of his day-to-day involvemen­t with the company. But he does not appear to have been a totally passive observer.

Among its court exhibits, the FTC included a 2015 email Whitaker sent while acting on behalf of the company. In the email, which cited his U.S. attorney credential­s and his corporate board seat, he told an unhappy customer that filing a complaint with the Better Business Bureau, or “smearing” the company online, could result in “serious civil and criminal consequenc­es.”

The company ultimately settled with the FTC without admitting or denying blame and was served with a partially suspended judgment of $26 million. Board members were asked to repay the money they had received; Whitaker, however, didn’t respond to a demand letter, the court-appointed receiver told the Wall Street Journal.

Given all this, why was Whitaker chosen for an (acting) Cabinet post? Presumably because a Nigerian prince wasn’t available.

Trump clearly loves to surround himself with fellow hucksters, snake-oil salesmen and others accused of questionab­le business behavior.

Recall that Education Secretary Betsy DeVos backed a “brain performanc­e” firm that advertised 90 percent success rates in curing illnesses such as attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder, despite having no such evidence. Housing and Urban Developmen­t Secretary Ben Carson shilled for a miracle-cure dietary supplement company and continued doing so even after it settled a deceptive-marketing case with the state of Texas. A land deal involving Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke is under federal investigat­ion. And so on and so on. There’s also the grifter in chief. Besides the myriad contractor­s and small businesses he has stiffed over the years, President Donald Trump recently settled a case over Trump University. Which — in separating naïve customers from big sums of money while failing to fulfill the promises it made to them — looks an awful lot like World Patent Marketing.

This, after all, is what Trump administra­tion officials mean when they hawk “free markets”: Scammers and swindlers get to roam free.

 ?? Andrew Harrer / Bloomberg ?? Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker as sparked protests by those who fear he will interfere with the special counsel’s investigat­ion. Maybe he was appointed for another reason.
Andrew Harrer / Bloomberg Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker as sparked protests by those who fear he will interfere with the special counsel’s investigat­ion. Maybe he was appointed for another reason.
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