The Capital

Former Hogan chief of staff pleads not guilty

- By Pamela Wood

Roy McGrath, the former chief of staff to Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, is pleading not guilty to federal charges that he misled officials into paying him a six-figure severance from his previous job and misused government money.

McGrath, 52, entered a not-guilty plea during a brief arraignmen­t hearing before U.S. District Court Magistrate Judge J. Mark Coulson on Friday afternoon.

McGrath, who spent 11 weeks as the GOP governor’s top adviser in 2020, spoke only to answer routine questions and acknowledg­e that he understood the federal indictment against him.

McGrath now lives in Florida and appeared at the hearing remotely. Another judge previously ordered that McGrath could remain free while awaiting trial. Federal prosecutor Joyce K. McDonald told the judge she expects a trial in the case to last two weeks.

In response to questions from the judge, McDonald and McGrath’s Luthervill­e-based attorney, Joseph Murtha, said they have not yet encountere­d any issues with scheduling or the discovery phase of the case.

“There’s a lot of informatio­n forthcomin­g, and the government has been clear there’s a lot coming,” Murtha said.

McGrath previously had been represente­d by attorneys from the Greenbelt-based firm MarcusBons­ib. If convicted, he faces up to 20 years in prison on each of four federal charges of wire fraud and up to 10 years in prison on each of two federal charges of misappropr­iation.

McGrath also is facing charges of misconduct in office and wiretappin­g in Anne Arundel County Circuit Court. Prosecutor­s have alleged in that case that McGrath illegally recorded conversati­ons with Hogan and other officials without their knowledge, a violation of the state’s wiretappin­g laws. A status conference in that case is scheduled for next month.

All told, McGrath faces six federal counts and more than two dozen state charges related to his conduct as executive director of the Maryland Environmen­tal Service, a job he held before Hogan brought him to the

State House to be his chief of staff in June 2020.

The Baltimore Sun reported in August 2020 that McGrath had negotiated a payout worth a full year’s salary of about $233,650, plus more than $5,000 in tuition reimbursem­ent, from the Maryland Environmen­tal Service when he left voluntaril­y to join the governor’s team.

Board members of the environmen­tal service have testified publicly that McGrath led them to believe Hogan approved the payout. Hogan has repeatedly denied he had detailed knowledge of

McGrath’s negotiatio­ns.

Days after The Baltimore Sun reported McGrath’s severance deal, he resigned. An investigat­ion by state lawmakers and a criminal investigat­ion were then opened, with charges filed this fall.

McGrath has defended the payout as customary at the environmen­tal service and maintains he had Hogan’s support. But when called to testify before state lawmakers, he offered little explanatio­n, invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incriminat­ion at least 170 times.

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