San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

NEBRASKA CONGRESSMA­N RESIGNS AFTER CONVICTION IN CALIFORNIA

Fortenberr­y maintains his innocence, plans appeal in campaign finance case

- BY MARIANA ALFARO & MARÍA LUISA PAÚL Alfaro and Paúl write for The Washington Post.

Rep. Jeff Fortenberr­y, R-neb., said Saturday he will resign from Congress after he was convicted Thursday on three felony counts for lying to federal investigat­ors about illegal campaign contributi­ons from a foreign billionair­e.

In a letter to his House colleagues, Fortenberr­y said his last day in Congress will be March 31.

“It has been my honor to serve with you in the United States House of Representa­tives,” Fortenberr­y wrote. “It has been my pleasure to call many of you friends. May God bless you as you labor for the good of our country, help those in need, and strive for what is right and just.”

Fortenberr­y’s charges stem from a 2016 fundraiser held in Glendale for the congressma­n’s re-election. There, Fortenberr­y received donations totaling $30,200 from Gilbert Chagoury, a wealthy Nigerian business executive of Lebanese descent who used other people as conduits to make the contributi­ons, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California announced in October.

Foreign nationals are prohibited from donating to candidates running for federal office in the United States. It is also illegal to disguise a donor’s identity through third-party contributi­ons.

Fortenberr­y was convicted of one count of scheming to falsify and conceal material facts and two counts of making false statements to federal investigat­ors. Each of the counts carries a maximum penalty of five years in federal prison.

Fortenberr­y’s weeklong trial in Los Angeles concluded with a guilty verdict announced after two hours of deliberati­ons on Thursday, The Associated Press reported.

“After learning of illegal contributi­ons to his campaign, the congressma­n repeatedly chose to conceal the violations of federal law to protect his job, his reputation and his close associates,” U.S. Attorney Tracy L. Wilkison said in a statement Thursday. “The lies in this case threatened the integrity of the American electoral system and were designed to prevent investigat­ors from learning the true source of campaign funds.”

The congressma­n — who has maintained his innocence since being charged in October — said he planned to appeal the verdict. His defense team argued that authoritie­s had used deceptive investigat­ive tactics to indict the congressma­n.

House leadership, however, called for his resignatio­n after the conviction.

“Congressma­n Fortenberr­y’s conviction represents a breach of the public trust and confidence in his ability to serve. No one is above the law,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., said in a statement Friday. “Congressma­n Fortenberr­y must resign from the House.”

House Minority Leader Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., also called on Fortenberr­y to step down.

Speaking during the House Republican­s’ annual retreat in Florida on Friday, Mccarthy said Fortenberr­y “had his day in court.”

“I think if he wants to appeal, he could go do that as a private citizen,” Mccarthy said. “But I think when someone’s convicted, it’s time to resign.”

According to court documents, Chagoury, the Nigerian billionair­e, and his associates had ties to a nonprofit that fought the persecutio­n of Christians and other minorities in the Middle East. Federal prosecutor­s said the trio sought to funnel money to “politician­s from less-populous states because the contributi­on would be more noticeable to the politician and thereby would promote increased donor access.”

Fortenberr­y, who supported the group’s mission to combat the persecutio­n of Christians in the Middle East, maintains he knew nothing of the illegal campaign donations.

Twice in 2019, investigat­ors interviewe­d the congressma­n about the contributi­ons while secretly recording him — the recordings of which, according to reports by multiple outlets, were played during the trial. According to the indictment, Fortenberr­y “knowingly and willfully made materially false statements and representa­tions to the FBI and IRS” about the illegal donations.

Yet the congressma­n has repeatedly painted a different story.

Ahead of the announceme­nt of the indictment, Fortenberr­y — sitting inside his pickup truck with his wife, Celeste, and their dog — said in a Youtube video that “a person from overseas illegally moved money to my campaign,” adding that he “didn’t know anything about this.”

Fortenberr­y said he had told everything he knew to the FBI agents. The charges brought against him came as a shock, he said.

“I feel so personally betrayed,” he said. “We thought we were trying to help.”

News of Fortenberr­y’s indictment drew a primary challenge from Nebraska state Sen. Mike Flood, a Republican. The winner of the GOP primary is likely to face state Sen. Patty Pansing Brooks, a Democrat from Lincoln, but Nebraska’s 1st Congressio­nal District is heavily Republican and hasn’t been competitiv­e in decades.

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