The invisible man. Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) received a donation from a Jan. 6 defendant, and he might not even know it. The donation came on Oct. 27, 2020, from Washington state resident John Lolos. Prosecutors charged Lolos almost immediately—three days after the riot—for unlawfully accessing the Capitol and “violent entry and disorderly conduct.” One year after making the donation, he was sentenced to two weeks in prison. Lolos also was jailed days after the riot because he refused to stop chanting “Trump 2020!” on his flight home. (He blamed that on an undercover police officer who “displayed traits stereotypical of a homosexual.”) Jordan—who is chair of the House Judiciary Committee and repeatedly pushed stolen election claims leading up to the attack, voted to disqualify lawfully appointed electors, and vowed to investigate the treatment of Jan. 6 defendants in prison—doesn’t appear to have returned the donation, according to FEC records. But it’s most likely that he doesn’t know about it yet. Because the donation was $100, it was below the $200 threshold that would require the Jordan campaign to itemize the donor’s name in FEC filings. It wouldn’t even be public record, except for the fact that Lolos made the contribution through the online GOP platform WinRed, and WinRed automatically itemizes every donation. This doesn’t mean that the Jordan campaign itself wouldn’t have a record of the donation, but in order to be aware of it, his campaign would have had to cross-check its full donor file with names of Jan. 6 defendants. However, they can do that now. Campaigns must maintain a list of all donors, even those who haven’t given more than $200, so the Lolos contribution should still appear in the campaign’s internal records. (The day he made the Jordan donation, Lolos, not a regular donor, gave the same amount to two other GOP candidates—Kim Klacik and Rep. Madison Cawthorn; all three candidates were participating in a controversial fundraising program.) Asked for comment, Jordan campaign spokesperson Kevin Eichinger said, “This is a non-story. The donation was from October 2020.” Jordan has been in the mix to be the next House speaker. The current leader in the GOP vote count, Rep. Steve Scalise (R-LA), who is also an election denier, doesn’t yet have the floor votes to win, in part because die-hard Colorado conservative Rep. Ken Buck won’t support anyone who refuses to say the election was not stolen. At Lolos’ sentencing, D.C. District Judge Amit Mehta emphasized the fact that the defendant appeared unrepentant. “In a sense, Mr. Lolos, you are a pawn in a game played by people who should have known better. But it still sounds like you believe what happened that day was not that big of a deal,” Mehta said. “And that’s just wrong.” Superduperseding. It wasn’t just George Santos who got hit with extra charges this week. On Thursday, federal prosecutors unveiled a stunning superseding indictment against Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ), alleging that he acted as an unregistered foreign agent for the Egyptian government while chairing the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Menendez, who stepped down as chair following his initial indictment last month, was previously accused of an array of crimes related directly to his official duties, including bribery, but the first indictment stopped just short of charging him with working for a foreign government. The Daily Beast’s resident Menendez expert Will Bredderman reported that the new charges feature “eye-bugging allegations that even the often-boggling original indictment did not.” At one point, the indictment says, Menendez, while in direct contact with an Egyptian intelligence operative, researched an American victim of a botched Egyptian airstrike in an effort to resolve a diplomatic crisis in Cairo’s favor. Flight risk. A Donald Trump-aligned super PAC admitted this week that it had somehow failed to account for more than $150,000 in private flights from megadonors in 2022. The super PAC—the absurdly titled “Make America Great Again, Again!, Inc”—admitted the alleged oversight in a response to FEC analysts who had flagged an unexplained increase in expenses on a recently amended April 2022 report. In the reply, MAGAA! claimed it discovered the discrepancies during an audit “as part of its internal compliance policies.” “The Committee reviewed communications and schedules of past and present Committee employees and contractors, identified and corresponded with donors to obtain their information, and calculated the value of all missed in-kind contributions,” the response said, repeatedly claiming that the review was voluntarily, “not triggered by any media or Commission inquiry.” Last month, Pay Dirt reported that the same thing happened to Trump’s leadership PAC, Save America. One of those new in-kind flight contributions was a $210,000 corporate contribution from a business tied to casino magnate Phil Ruffin. While super PACs can accept corporate contributions, however, leadership PACs cannot. Brendan Fischer, campaign finance law expert at Documented, called these oversights “a pretty big deal.” “Private air travel potentially offers a donor a chance to have one-on-one time with a candidate or top campaign officials,” Fischer observed, noting that Trump once pardoned the father of a donor who allowed the campaign to use his plane. “The public has a right to know about those luxe trips. It is a big omission to not have reported them initially.” Big dent. Former Trump campaign aide Jessica Denson scored a long-fought and sweeping victory over her ex-boss on Thursday, when a federal judge voided the 2016 campaign’s nondisclosure agreement as overly restrictive, according to a court order. In addition to awarding Denson her settlement (amount undisclosed), the ruling frees every member of the 2016 campaign from the agreement, allowing 422 former employees to speak about their experiences without fear of violating their contract. (The order notes that during negotiations the Trump campaign voluntarily released those employees.) The legal muzzle the campaign placed on its employees was so sweeping that it was “invalid and unenforceable,” the judge ruled. The order permanently enjoined the 2016 campaign along with “its successor(s) in interest”—such as the 2020 or current campaigns—from enforcing or attempting to enforce similar agreements. Denson, who accused the Trump campaign of sexual discrimination, previously won a lawsuit focused on her personal NDA, then expanded the effort to include the full campaign. Hidden treasure. The New Mexico State Ethics Commission has fined the state’s treasurer, Democrat Laura Montoya, for campaign finance violations during her 2022 campaign. On Oct. 6, a state judge found that Montoya broke state regulations against straw donations by knowingly misattributing a $10,000 donation from a developer, reporting that the money instead came from a PAC. The ethics commission fined Montoya $1,000 for the violation. “Straw donor contributions, like those uncovered in this administrative case, undermine transparency in our elections,” the commission’s executive director Jeremy Farris said in a press release, according to the New Mexico Political Report. “If wealthy individuals want to give thousands of dollars to candidates for office, that’s their right; but they can’t do it in secret.”
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