Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Mystery Super PAC May Have Violated Election Law

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Mystery Super PAC May Have Violated Election Law

    MYSTERY SUPER PAC MAY HAVE VIOLATED ELECTION LAW
    By Gregory Korte and Fredreka Schouten

    USA TODAY
    http://www.usatoday.com/news/politics/story/2012-03-09/william-smith-ohio-super-PAC/53439752/1
    Updated 4d 10h ago

    WASHINGTON - Four days before Ohio's primary election, Democratic
    voters in the 2nd Congressional District received a blitz of automated
    telephone calls supporting William R. Smith, a candidate who didn't
    campaign, raised no money and gave no media interviews before the
    election.

    On election night, Smith won by 59 votes against a well-known, better
    funded and harder working candidate who had the endorsement of major
    Democratic groups.

    So who gets credit for helping Smith secure the Democratic nomination
    to Congress? No one knows.

    The "Victory Ohio Super PAC" claimed credit for the "robocalls,"
    but it is not registered with the Federal Election Commission and
    hasn't disclosed any contributions or spending to federal regulators.

    Campaign-finance experts say the group probably has violated federal
    election law. Under federal rules, groups must report last-minute
    activity to the FEC if they spend more than $1,000 on automated calls,
    mailings or advertising that directly advocate the election or defeat
    of a federal candidate. Such spending must be reported within 24 hours.

    "This activity does require disclosure," said Kenneth Gross, a former
    Federal Election Commission official and a leading campaign-finance
    lawyer in Washington.

    Smith now faces Cincinnati podiatrist and Army Reserve Lt. Col. Brad
    Wenstrup, who pulled off an upset of his own against four-term Rep.
    Jean Schmidt.

    Wenstrup got a boost from conservative anti-tax groups and a legally
    registered super PAC, the Campaign for Primary Accountability, which
    is working to defeat congressional incumbents in several states. The
    group reported spending $66,836 against Schmidt in the week before
    the election.

    A 61-year-old former postal worker from the small town of Waverly,
    Smith says he made less than $15,000 last year driving a truck. His
    reasons for running are a "long complicated story," he said.

    His issues: the mistreatment of veterans by the Department of Veterans
    Affairs, tighter regulation of the mortgage industry, and federal
    rules on how long truckers can drive before they have to rest. All,
    he said, are informed by his family's own experiences.

    "If you had to produce a prototype for the absolute common man,
    that's what you get. He drives a truck. He lives with his mother," said
    Blaine Beekman, a Pike County commissioner who helped circulate Smith's
    nominating petitions. "People call him the 'mystery candidate.' He's
    really the impossible candidate."

    Victory Ohio "clearly exists somewhere, because it spent a lot
    of money," Beekman said. But he said he has no idea who it could
    be. "To be frank with you, there's no one in Pike County that would
    have the money to do these things. We have the highest unemployment
    rate in Ohio."

    Smith defeated David Krikorian, a three-time candidate who ran with
    the endorsement of major Democratic groups in the district.

    Krikorian's campaign spent $64,356, according to the FEC, though he
    said only about $5,000 of that was for the current election cycle.

    Krikorian has a longstanding feud with Schmidt over her support from
    Turkish causes. Krikorian, an ethnic Armenian, has accused Schmidt
    of denying the Armenian genocide during and after World War I, and
    their battles escalated into a $6.8 million libel suit by Schmidt
    still pending in Ohio courts.

    Her legal fees - about $500,000 - were paid by Turkish interests,
    which led to a House Ethics Committee investigation because she
    failed to disclose the source. The committee ordered her to repay
    the money but didn't sanction her because the panel concluded she did
    "not knowingly" violate ethics rules that prevent such gift-giving.

    One version of the robocall took aim at Krikorian: "William Smith has
    an opponent that describes himself as a Reagan conservative. ... Please
    don't make a mistake and embarrass the party. Vote for William Smith,
    the real Democrat for Congress."

    The recorded call ended with the disclosure, "This has been paid for
    by the Victory Ohio Super PAC." Neither the FEC nor Ohio's Secretary
    of State have any record of such a group. A call receipient's caller ID
    system generated a non-working phone number from the Cleveland suburbs.

    "Honestly, the more I think about this, the more mysterious it
    becomes. Something is fishy," said Clermont County Democratic Chairman
    David Lane.

    "Robocalls are pretty cheap, but they did enough of them I have a
    hard time believing they spent less than $1,000," said Caleb Faux,
    the director of the Hamilton County Democratic Party who, like Lane,
    has never met Smith. " Who are they, what is their motivation, where
    did their money come from?"

    Republicans agree. "If a Republican did it, I don't know about it,"
    said Alex Triantafilou, the GOP chairman in Hamilton County. "Somebody
    should put a stop to it. That kind of thing should not occur in
    politics. Transparency is crucial. I hope someone fully investigates
    it."

    Paul Ryan, a lawyer with the Campaign Legal Center watchdog group,
    said the group broke the rules if it spent more than $1,000.

    "Ohio voters seemingly had no information about who was trying to
    influence their election with last-minute robocalls," Ryan said. "Ohio
    voters deserve that information."

    Smith told USA TODAY that he's as surprised as anyone that he won,
    but he credits the robocalls - and perhaps his prayers. In only his
    second media interview, he said he doesn't know the source of the
    help but suspects Republicans who "were looking at my inactivity and
    my access to no funding" and figured he was less of a threat to the
    Republican nominee.

    "Whatever the source of that is, I'll take it," he said.

Working...
X