Partly Cloudy
56°
Morris, IL
Partly Cloudy|Forecast »

Ex-Speaker Hastert conducted business in government office to tune of $1.8 million in taxpayer cost, paper finds

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 4)

Hastert said John came to the office once and they left for lunch. He said there were no discussions regarding private business in the office. Jarman said he attended at least one meeting in the office with Hastert and John but could not recall the topic.

Bob Edgar, president of the government watchdog group Common Cause, said federal dollars should not be used for private business ventures.

Hastert “can’t take the money and do with it what he wants,” said Edgar, a former Democratic congressman. “It’s your money and my money and all of us who pay taxes, so he has to comply with the law.”

Edgar said the Office of Congressional Ethics should investigate whether federal funds were misused by Hastert, who in retirement does not draw a government salary. If Hastert is found to have violated the law, he should repay any money spent improperly, Edgar said.

The ethics office is a nonpartisan agency that reviews allegations of misconduct against U.S. representatives and their staffs.

The Tribune first wrote about Hastert’s government office in 2010. Brad Hahn, a paid consultant to the office and former Hastert press secretary, said then that staffers were combing through documents and mementos from Hastert’s House tenure, handling speech requests and working with the Hastert Center at Wheaton College.

Hahn’s old company, Burnham Strategies Group, received $70,000 from the Office of the Former Speaker. The company last was paid in January 2011, the same month Hahn joined the staff of Illinois’ Republican comptroller, Judy Baar Topinka.

While serving as spokesman for the ex-speaker’s office in 2010, Hahn told the Tribune that Hastert kept his business ventures separate from the operation of the government office. Contacted recently, Hahn declined to comment.

Public records detail spending only through last June, and a Tribune analysis found that the office stands to spend almost $1.875 million before closing. That total does not include federal benefits such as health care for which the three employees were eligible.

Nearly $1.4 million has gone to pay the salaries of Post, Jarman and a third staffer, Bryan Harbin. Harbin, an administrative assistant, was paid $138,551 a year. He went part time last year and now makes half that, records show.

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all