The Columbus Dispatch

Former Firstenerg­y exec preps his defense

Subpoenas in suit seek info from organizati­ons

- Laura A. Bischoff

Lawyers for former Firstenerg­y executive Michael Dowling want two dark money groups connected to a massive public corruption case to fork over a big pile of records.

In a shareholde­r civil lawsuit pending in federal court, Dowling’s attorneys issued two subpoenas – one to Generation Now and the other to Partners For Progress. Firstenerg­y admitted funneling tens of millions of dollars through the two 501(c)4 groups to advance its agenda.

Dowling’s team wants financial records and communicat­ions that they believe will help them mount a defense against the lawsuit. They’re asking for communicat­ions that the two groups had with the IRS, the state of Ohio, vendors, law firms and others.

The subpoenas also seek records about communicat­ion the dark money groups had with lawmakers, the governor’s and lieutenant governor’s offices, a lengthy list of other dark money and lobbying groups and those charged in the criminal case – former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householde­r, former Ohio Republican Party chairman Matt Borges, lobbyist Juan Cespedes and political strategist Jeff Longstreth.

Attorneys in the civil case also trying to obtain communicat­ions shared with more than a dozen political candidates

Federal prosecutor­s say former Ohio Speaker Larry Householde­r and his allies took $61 million in bribe money, paid by Firstenerg­y through dark money groups, to position Householde­r as House speaker, pass a $1.3 billion bailout bill and defend the new law against a referendum attempt.

or operators, including U.S. Senate GOP candidate Jane Timken, Ohio Republican Party Chairman Bob Paduchik, Republican ad maker Rex Elsass and a handful of Republican­s, including Senate GOP candidate Josh Mandel’s top campaign aide Scott Guthrie. Guthrie declined to comment.

Timken spokesman Rob Secaur said “Jane and I had no involvemen­t with HB6 and zero contact with Generation Now or Partners for Progress.” He noted that Timken called for Householde­r to resign immediatel­y after his arrest.

The shareholde­r lawsuit was filed in August 2020, shortly after FBI agents arrested Householde­r, Borges, Cespedes, Longstreth and lobbyist Neil Clark on federal racketeeri­ng charges.

Federal prosecutor­s say Householde­r and his allies took $61 million in bribe money, paid by Firstenerg­y through dark money groups, to position Householde­r as House speaker, pass a $1.3 billion bailout bill and defend the new law against a referendum attempt.

Clark died by suicide in March. Cespedes and Longstreth pleaded guilty. Householde­r and Borges have maintained their innocence.

Firstenerg­y signed a deferred prosecutio­n agreement in July 2021, admitting it used dark money to bribe public officials to advance its business agenda in House Bill 6.

Laura Bischoff is a reporter for the USA TODAY Network Ohio Bureau, which serves the Columbus Dispatch, Cincinnati Enquirer, Akron Beacon Journal and 18 other affiliated news organizati­ons across Ohio.

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