Matt Brown
issues cease and desist to Raimondo campaign over ‘false and defamatory’ ads
An attorney for the Matt Brown for Governor campaign issued a cease and desist letter to
incumbent Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo and
her senior campaign staff calling on her to immediately retract the false and
defamatory statements made in TV and mailer advertisements about Matt Brown.
Specifically, the letter cites the
following allegations made by the Raimondo campaign:
- Beginning August 30, the Raimondo Campaign has broadcast a television advertisement that asserts that Mr Brown “ran” his United States Senate campaign “with apparent laundering of campaign contributions,” “hid $150,000 in debt,” and “stiffed his workers over $100,000 in pay”; and that, at the nonprofit organization where he subsequently worked, Mr Brown “pa[id] himself nearly $300,000 a year.”
- On July 5 the Raimondo Campaign sent a message to the Providence Journal, with intent that the newspaper would further circulate it publicly (as it did), that “[Matt Brown’s last campaign in 2006 ended in a criminal investigation.”
- On or about July 23, Governor Raimondo stated to Rhode Island resident Brianna McFadden that Mr. Brown is “most famous for having engaged in money laundering and had to drop out of his Senate campaign for doing that.”
“These absurd, false attacks reveal
Gina Raimondo’s deep disrespect for Rhode Islanders, who she assumes aren’t
smart enough to spot a blatant lie when they see it,” said Brown in a written
statement.
“But Rhode Islanders are smart and won’t be fooled, and they
won’t let our democracy be bought by someone who lies and spends millions of
dollars to trick voters and buy an election while refusing to do even one
debate.
"The truth is that the baseless attacks are an attempt to distract from
Raimondo’s own financial mismanagement, which adds up to more than $1.5 billion
in losses from the UHIP debacle, failed pension investments, Cooler and Warmer,
195 construction debacle, and more.
“Politicians only pour millions of
dollars into negative attacks when they know the race is close.
We’ve heard
from multiple sources that a leaked poll from Gina Raimondo’s campaign puts
Raimondo and me in a statistical tie among Democrats, and Spencer Dickinson at 2 percent. Gina Raimondo’s
campaign is panicking because they know Rhode Island is ready for change and
that our grassroots campaign is on the verge of major political upset.”
The cease and desist letter from
Washington DC based attorney Laurence Gold takes
on each of the allegations in turn.
First, there was no “criminal
investigation” associated with Mr Brown’s 2006 campaign for the United States
Senate (“Senate Campaign”) or any other proceeding sought or conducted in
relation to the campaign that entailed any “criminal” aspect. Nor did Mr. Brown
commit the crime of “money laundering,” which is set forth in federal law at 18
U.S.C. § 1956, and in Rhode Island law at R.I.G.L. S 11-9.1-15, each provision
entitled “Laundering of monetary instruments.” Instead, the following is true:
On March 22, 2006, the Rhode Island Republican Party filed a civil
administrative complaint against the Senate Campaign with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) alleging that certain political contributions
violated the Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA). The Raimondo Campaign’s broadcast ad quotes a
Providence Journal editorial that appeared immediately after the Rhode Island
Republican Party filed and publicized its complaint. But that complaint, and
the money laundering” characterization of it, were completely discredited on
March 20, 2007 – almost a year after Mr Brown ended his Senate campaign, but
eleven years before the Raimondo Campaign’s falsehoods about them – when the
bipartisan FEC dismissed the complaint in its entirety, concluding that there
was no basis” and no support for, and “no reason to believe,” the allegations
against the Senate Campaign. The Rhode Island Republican Party declined to
exercise its right under FECA to challenge that dismissal in court.
Accordingly, there was no “criminal
investigation” or criminal case of any kind, and no allegation, let alone a
finding, of “money laundering.” To the contrary, the responsible federal agency
considered and conclusively rejected allegations of civil violations of the
federal election law. It was plain twelve years ago that the Rhode Island
Republican Party’s FEC complaint against the Senate Campaign was a politically
motivated gambit to derail Mr. Brown, then the Rhode Island Secretary of State,
whom that party evidently feared could succeed in his effort to represent Rhode
Island in the United States Senate. The Raimondo Campaign’s current statements
falsely asserting that there was a “criminal investigation” and that Mr. Brown
“engaged in money laundering” exceed in defamatory gravity what even the Rhode
Island Republican Party falsely claimed at the time.
The Raimondo Campaign’s next
falsehood is that Mr. Brown “hid $150,000 in debt.” In fact, the Senate
Campaign reported as quickly as possible all information about campaign debt in
its possession in its regularly scheduled reports to the FEC. The Senate
Campaign timely filed a quarterly report on April 14, 2006, just before the
campaign ended, that disclosed nearly $174,000 in debt. Twelve days later,
after receiving further vendor invoices and information, the Senate Campaign
filed an amended report that disclosed an additional $90,000 of debt. The same
sequence occurred with respect to the next quarterly report: on July 15, eleven
weeks after the campaign ended, the Senate Campaign timely filed a quarterly
report that disclosed over $314,000 in debt; nineteen days later, again after
receiving further vendor invoices and information, the Senate Campaign amended
the report to disclose an additional $50,000 of debt. (When it later worked
with its vendors to settle these debts, as discussed below, they determined the
final figures and the Senate Campaign accordingly amended the two quarterly
reports again to adjust the debt figures upward a total of $10,000 more.) The
Senate Campaign fully explained this sequence of events to the FEC, and the FEC
accepted and resolved the matter administratively, as the public record
demonstrates. But the Raimondo Campaign falsely accuses Mr Brown of a
deliberate act of concealment in “hid[ing]” the difference in the amended
reported figures, rather than acknowledges that the terminating Senate Campaign
timely reported its debt information on hand and – without the FEC or anyone
else prompting it to do so , immediately reported all of the additional
information that it obtained.
The Raimondo Campaign’s next
falsehood is that Mr Brown “stiffed his workers over $100,000 in pay,” with a
visual graphic of four unknown individuals and the figure “$102,997.” In fact,
every Senate Campaign employee was fully paid. This figure instead pertains to
the Senate Campaign’s business vendors, who participated with the Senate
Campaign in making a submission to the FEC under its established debt
settlement rules. Because the Senate Campaign’s effective fundraising ended
with the campaign, it settled with each such vendor at 50% of the amount it was
owed, and the FEC reviewed and approved this plan, which the Senate Campaign
then carried out. But that process – unfortunate, but quite typical of
unsuccessful campaigns – had nothing to do with “pay[ing]” “workers,” let alone
“stiff[ing]” them, as the Raimondo Campaign dishonestly accuses Mr Brown of
having done.
Finally, the Raimondo Campaign’s
broadcast ad falsely states that Mr Brown “paid himself nearly $300,000 a year”
at the nonprofit organization where he worked. In fact, as Global Zero‘s Co-Founder Bruce Blair has publicly explained, he, and not Mr
Brown, determined Mr Brown’s salary at Global Zero. But the Raimondo Campaign,
without any basis in fact, asserts that Mr. Brown controlled the matter and
implicitly accuses him of self-dealing, a breach of Internal Revenue Code-established standards at a
charitable organization.
The letter goes on to claim that the
Raimondo campaign has engaged in “actionable defamation” and laid the
groundwork for a possible lawsuit. The campaign has been advised to retain all
documents.
Letters are being issued to local
television stations requesting that they take down the advertisement with false
claims about Brown.
The attorney also requested that the Raimondo campaign
immediately and publicly call on their “independent expenditure” ally, the “Alliance for a Better Rhode Island,” to cease
circulating its recent mailer that mirrors the Raimondo campaign’s falsehoods.