Chattanooga Times Free Press

CALLS FOR CASADA TO BE INVESTIGAT­ED SHOULD NOT BE IGNORED

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Calls are mounting for investigat­ions into the spending and actions of Tennessee House Speaker Glen Casada, who is expected to resign his speakershi­p on Aug. 2 after a vote of no confidence last month.

A special session is scheduled Aug. 23 to elect a new speaker, after Casada, R-Franklin, announced he would step down when Gov. Bill Lee gave him an extra push. Casada had been found to have shared sexually explicit and racist texts with his former chief of staff, and the two have been accused of spying on fellow legislator­s.

House Democratic Caucus Chairman Mike Stewart, who wants the investigat­ions, said in a Wednesday news conference: “We’re not going to allow a special session to become a tool for a cover-up.”

Stewart, a Nashville attorney, fired off letters last week seeking a full audit and investigat­ion by Tennessee Comptrolle­r Justin Wilson, a Republican legislativ­e appointee, and Davidson County District Attorney Glenn Funk, an elected Democrat. Stewart also said he filed a public records request of the speaker’s office.

It’s not Stewart’s first request for probes. In early May, he said he would formally ask the U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Tennessee and the Department of Justice’s Public Corruption Unit to investigat­e if any state or federal laws were broken based on The Tennessean’s report that Cade Cothren, the now-former chief of staff, had a surveillan­ce system in his office allowing him to monitor committee meeting rooms even when they weren’t being used for official committee business.

Those rooms are used for a variety of purposes when not under the gavel — party caucus meetings, discussion­s between lawmakers and citizens, and the usual sort of dealmaking that greases the skids of a republic — and legislator­s, and the public, assume those meetings aren’t being recorded or broadcast.

But The Tennessean also reported there were “white noise” devices installed in and outside Casada’s office — to prevent others from spying on him.

Casada has acknowledg­ed bulking up staff hires. And he paid Cothren almost $200,000 a year before Cothren stepped down over the sexist and racist text scandal, as well as acknowledg­ing he had snorted cocaine in his office several years ago.

In the public records request to Casada’s new chief of staff, Stewart asked for documents for all expenditur­es since January, all time sheets, parking garage records and emails for Michael Lotfi, a political operative hired by Casada and paid $4,000 a month but not required to come to the office, according to the Daily Memphian.

Stewart’s investigat­ion requests also seek “a determinat­ion of whether those staff positions were misused for political purposes.”

In addition, Stewart asked the comptrolle­r to look into all contracts and financial agreements, including funds paid to outside attorneys and consultant­s; all use of state property, including aircraft and vehicles; and all expenditur­es for security staff assigned to protect the speaker.

Citing Nashville news accounts that House spending soared by $3 million under Casada, Stewart said he wants to know precisely how that money was spent.

A spokesman for the DA’s office told the Daily Memphian on Wednesday that Funk has not made a determinat­ion on the request and that it remains under review. Stewart told the Times Free Press he thinks Comptrolle­r Wilson is “independen­t” enough to act on Democrats’ request.

Neither investigat­ion should be an option.

When the actions of the No. 2 person in the Tennessee General Assembly are linked with spying on fellow lawmakers and likely spending our money to do it, he and his associates should be investigat­ed. Period. No matter the party affiliatio­ns.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/MARK HUMPHREY ?? House Speaker Glen Casada, R-Franklin, left, talks with Cade Cothren, right, his then-chief of staff, during a House session in Nashville held in early May.
AP FILE PHOTO/MARK HUMPHREY House Speaker Glen Casada, R-Franklin, left, talks with Cade Cothren, right, his then-chief of staff, during a House session in Nashville held in early May.

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