The Mercury News

Muslim aides targeted in inquiry stoked by Trump receive $850,000

- By Noam Scheiber and Nicholas Fandos

The House of Representa­tives quietly paid $850,000 this year to settle wrongful terminatio­n claims by five Pakistani American technology specialist­s, after a set of routine workplace allegation­s against them morphed into fodder for right-wing conspiracy theories amplified by President Donald Trump.

Together, the payments represent one of the largest known awards by the House to resolve discrimina­tion or harassment claims, and are designed to shield Congress from potentiall­y costly legal action.

But aides involved in the settlement, which has not previously been reported, said it was also an attempt to bring a close to a convoluted saga that led to one of the most durable — and misleading — storylines of the Trump era. The aides said its size reflected a bid to do right by a group of former employees who lost their jobs and endured harassment in part because of their Muslim faith and South Asian origins.

What started as a relatively ordinary House inquiry into procuremen­t irregulari­ties by Imran Awan, three members of his family and a friend, who had a bustling practice providing members of Congress with technology support, was twisted into lurid accusation­s of hacking government informatio­n.

In 2018, Trump stood next to President Vladimir Putin of Russia at a nowinfamou­s news conference in Helsinki, and implied that one of the employees involved in the House case — a “Pakistani gentleman,” he said — could have been responsibl­e for stealing emails of Democratic officials leaked during the 2016 campaign. His own intelligen­ce agencies had concluded that the stolen emails were part of an election interferen­ce campaign ordered by Moscow.

The case originated in 2016, when officials in the House, then controlled by Republican­s, began investigat­ing claims that the specialist­s had improperly accounted for purchases of equipment and bent employment rules as they worked part-time for the offices of dozens of Democratic lawmakers.

In the hands of the chamber’s inspector general and later the Capitol Police, the investigat­ion slowly expanded to include concerns that the workers had illicitly gained access to, transferre­d or removed government data and stolen equipment.

In early 2017, the House stripped their access to congressio­nal ser vers, making it impossible for them to continue their work. One by one, the lawmakers terminated them.

But as the inspector general’s findings were shared with Republican lawmakers and trickled into conservati­ve media in early 2017, they began to take on a life of their own. The Daily Caller, which led the way, published allegation­s that the workers had hacked into congressio­nal computer networks, and other right-wing pundits speculated that the group were Pakistani spies. Trump, in addition to his comments in Helsinki, repeatedly amplified conspiracy theories about the investigat­ion on Twitter.

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