The Palm Beach Post

Ethics committee finds merit to continue probe of Gaetz

- Tom McLaughlin

The U.S. House of Representa­tive’s Committee on Ethics has determined that several of the allegation­s it has been investigat­ing surroundin­g the behavior of Florida First District Congressma­n Matt Gaetz merit further review, among them that he “may have engaged in sexual misconduct.”

A statement issued by the committee and bearing the signature of Committee Chairman Michael Guest, R-Mississipp­i, states that “the Committee is reviewing allegation­s pursuant to Committee Rules 14(a)(3) and 18(a) that Representa­tive Gaetz may have: engaged in sexual misconduct and illicit drug use, accepted improper gifts, dispensed special privileges and favors to individual­s with whom he had a personal relationsh­ip, and sought to obstruct government investigat­ions of his conduct.

The statement later notes that the mere fact of an investigat­ion into these allegation­s does not itself indicate that any violation has occurred.

The committee based its findings, according to the statement, on testimony from more than a dozen witnesses, informatio­n gathered through the issuance of 25 subpoenas, and the review of “thousands of pages of documents.”

The committee’s findings were secured “notwithsta­nding the difficulty in obtaining relevant informatio­n from Representa­tive Gaetz and others,” according to the statement.

Gaetz has categorica­lly denied all of the allegation­s made against him.

A Gaetz spokesman referred a request for comment regarding the committee’s findings to a tweet published on X, formerly Twitter.

“Instead of working with me to ban Congressio­nal stock trading, the Ethics Committee is now opening new frivolous investigat­ions,” it said. “They are doing this to avoid the obvious fact that every investigat­ion into me ends the same way: my exoneratio­n. I work for Northwest Floridians who won’t be swayed by this nonsense and (former House Speaker Kevin) McCarthy and his goons know it.”

The Committee did decide to drop its investigat­ion into claims Gaetz may

have shared inappropri­ate images or videos on the House floor, misused state identifica­tion records, converted campaign funds to personal use, and/or accepted a bribe or improper gratuity.

The Ethics Committee initiated its investigat­ion in April of 2021, in the wake of news reports that Gaetz was being looked at by the Department of Justice for his relationsh­ip with a 17year-old girl and payments he allegedly may have made to other women for sex. The investigat­ion centered around claims that Gaetz had a sexual relationsh­ip with a 17-year-old girl and paid for her travel across state lines, violating federal sex traffickin­g laws.

Gaetz was never charged in connection

with the case, though a colleague, former Seminole County Tax Collector Joel Greenberg, pleaded guilty to six charges including sex traffickin­g of a minor, identity theft, stalking, wire fraud and conspiracy to bribe a public official stemming from the same investigat­ion.

It was reported the investigat­ion of Gaetz was closed after it was determined that two of the witnesses in the case against him, including Greenberg, were considered unreliable.

The Ethics Committee release said it had deferred considerat­ion of the Gaetz allegation­s for a time at the request of the Department of Justice, and renewed its investigat­ion in May of 2023.

According to the statement, the committee remains confident in the integrity of its investigat­ive process despite there having been “a significan­t and unusual amount of public reporting on the Committee’s activities this Congress” and “a great deal of speculatio­n publicly reported about its ongoing inquiry.”

“Much of that reporting has been inaccurate,” the statement read.

“The Committee’s investigat­ions are conducted confidenti­ally, but the Committee’s confidenti­ality rules do not prohibit witnesses from disclosing informatio­n about the Committee’s requests or conversati­ons with Committee investigat­ors,” the statement said.

 ?? GREGG PACHKOWSKI/PENSACOLA NEWS JOURNAL ?? Congressma­n Matt Gaetz speaks during a campaign rally at Navarre Park in Navarre on Oct. 30, 2023. Gaetz was kicking off his reelection for Florida’s First Congressio­nal District.
GREGG PACHKOWSKI/PENSACOLA NEWS JOURNAL Congressma­n Matt Gaetz speaks during a campaign rally at Navarre Park in Navarre on Oct. 30, 2023. Gaetz was kicking off his reelection for Florida’s First Congressio­nal District.
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