The Arizona Republic

GOP keeps pressing over Backpage funds

- YVONNE WINGETT SANCHEZ AND RONALD J. HANSEN

The Arizona Republican Party is trying to keep pressure on U.S. Rep. Kyrsten Sinema over donations she accepted from the founders of Backpage.com, including an offer to reimburse people who paid to attend a Wednesday night campaign event for the Arizona Democrat.

The efforts to press Sinema came as the congresswo­man made her first public remarks on the controvers­y over donations from Michael Lacey and James Larkin, founders of Backpage.com and former Phoenix New Times executives. She promised closer scrutiny of future contributi­ons.

“I am really sorry that this happened. I have asked my campaign to create better vetting procedures to make sure something like this never happens again,” Sinema said in an interview earlier in the day. “We looked through the entire history of my congressio­nal donor history, and it took a little bit of time, because none of the people who made these contributi­ons noted any affiliatio­n with Backpage on their contributi­on forms or their identifyin­g informatio­n. I was not aware these individual­s were affiliated with Backpage.”

Sinema donated the money from the Backpage.com executives and their spouses to a group that combats sexual abuse. The website is accused of knowingly accepting ads offering sex with underage girls.

But for some that didn’t end the controvers­y. Cindy McCain and other antitraffi­cking activists groused that the Arizona Coalition to End Sexual and Domestic Violence had accepted the $53,000.

In an email to GOP party officials obtained by The Arizona Republic, political coordinato­r Kyle Pierce urged

Republican­s in Sinema’s district to attend the congresswo­man’s “Coffee Club“and ask about the donations. To those who attended, the party offered to reimburse the Coffee Club’s $25 membership fee.

“It would be absolutely wonderful if we had as many of her Republican consituent­s (sic) as possible attend this event to ask her why she accepted thousands of dollars from the creator of Backpage.com,” Pierce wrote in the email. “I’m sure most of you have been keeping up with the news on this. It’s pretty bad, and we’re trying to hold her accountabl­e for it.”

The email noted that to attend the event required joining the coffee club and paying $25. “If someone does have to pay, the Party is willing to reimburse the expense,” the email stated.

Kory Langhofer, attorney for the state Republican Party, said if people are reimbursed the $25 entry fee, the party will “make sure it’s fully disclosed and reported correctly. As long as the transactio­n is disclosed and transparen­t, it’s perfectly acceptable,” he said.

A spokeswoma­n for Sinema said she could not immediatel­y comment because she was unaware of the Arizona Republican Party’s plans.

Asked about the state GOP’s efforts to boost turnout at Sinema’s event, a spokeswoma­n for the state party, Torunn Sinclair, said it’s not unusual.

“The Republican Party is always encouragin­g its members to get involved and talk with their elected officials,” she said. “Congresswo­man Sinema received over $50,000 from Backpage.com executives and their family members. Constituen­ts, both Republican­s and Democrats, deserve to know the extent to which she’s involved with the disgraced CEO of Backpage.com.”

Kathy Petsas, Republican chairwoman of Legislativ­e District 28 in northcentr­al Phoenix, received Pierce’s email, but said she doesn’t support such tactics.

“This behavior is not the value and culture of Republican­s,” said Petsas, who lives in Paradise Valley. “Democrats like to go out and act like they did at the (U.S. Sen. Jeff) Flake town hall,” she added, referencin­g the raucous crowd that battered the senator for 2 1/2 hours at a town hall last week.

“Republican­s don’t do that,” Petsas said. “They simmer quietly and vote.”

McCain, who co-chairs the Arizona Human Traffickin­g Council, was appalled that the Arizona Coalition to End Sexual and Domestic Violence had accepted the money.

“I am stunned that Congresswo­man Sinema would take their money. She should have known better, but she still took it,” McCain said. “And then she thinks she can just say, ‘Oh, I’m sorry, let me give it away,’ that it’s somehow less tainted if she gives it to someone else.

“And the Coalition took it! I am horribly dismayed by that decision. I find it obscene that they think they can take dirty money like this and think they can put it to better use.”

A Coalition board member said Wednesday that taking the cash is “one of the best things that can be done with that money under the circumstan­ces is to work directly with programs that will protect people from ... what Backpage was doing.”

Sinema is believed to have received the largest share of campaign money directly from Lacey and Larkin, taking in at least $10,600 in 2013 and 2016.

Federal campaignfi­nance records show Sinema received an additional $10,800 in donations from the spouses of two other Backpage.com executives on the same day in 2016 when Lacey donated $5,400 to her. A political-action committee affiliated with Sinema also received $16,200.

Following publicatio­n of a story detailing the donations in The Arizona Republic, Sinema first attempted to donate the money to an organizati­on affiliated with KJZZ and Spot 127, a media center to help “teens find their voices and engage with their communitie­s.” That group rejected the money, which included only the direct contributi­ons from Lacey and Larkin.

On Tuesday, the Coalition decided to accept the money.

Larkin and Lacey, along with their business partners, have been besieged by a growing number of legal difficulti­es: criminal charges in California; lawsuits by traffickin­g victims in six states; and a blistering report in January by the U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommitt­ee on Investigat­ions. That report, “Backpage.com’s Knowing Facilitati­on of Online Sex Traffickin­g,” concluded Backpage.com knowingly accepted ads from pimps who had coerced underage children into having sex for money. A federal grand jury is reviewing evidence against both men, and lawyers for Lacey and Larkin expect the men to be indicted.

The original story about the donations published in The Republic was written by students at Arizona State University under the supervisio­n of Walter V. Robinson, who edited the Boston Globe’s Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of sexual predators in the Catholic Church.

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