The Commercial Appeal

Tennessee campaign finance officials blast AG over deferral of inquiry

- Vivian Jones Nashville Tennessean | USA TODAY NETWORK – TENNESSEE

Members of Tennessee’s Registry of Election Finance on Tuesday accused Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti of sluggish and inadequate handling of campaign finance investigat­ions, calling his approach “an abdication of responsibi­lity.”

The registry oversees campaign finance in Tennessee and criticism arose from an investigat­ion requested by members into a complaint against two groups that are not registered as political action committees, but are allegedly engaging in typical PAC activities.

A registry complaint filed in January alleged that the Sumner County Constituti­onal Republican­s and Tennessee Constituti­onal Republican­s — both run by Gallatin resident Kurt Riley — are unregister­ed PACS, which have solicited donations and made expenditur­es to support or oppose candidates outside of following campaign finance laws.

In February, the registry board requested the Attorney General’s Office investigat­e the complaint, providing 57 pages of documentat­ion to Skrmetti’s office. Five months later, Skrmetti’s office produced a fivepage investigat­ive report. The investigat­ion included seven interviews and a review of relevant organizati­onal websites.

One section of the report focuses on the Republican primary in Senate District 18.

Chris Spencer, who is running against Senate Speaker Pro Tempore Ferrell Haile in the race, has sent campaign mailers touting his founding membership of the Sumner County Constituti­onal Republican­s group. Sumner County Constituti­onal Republican­s has endorsed him in the race.

According to the AG’S investigat­ive report, Spencer told a state investigat­or that the organizati­on is “not a PAC” and said that the group does not collect money. When asked about the group’s monthly meetings and refreshmen­ts provided, he said, “I am done with questions. This is such a waste of time.”

In a letter accompanyi­ng the report, Deputy Attorney General Andrew Coulam noted that the office “is not an investigat­ive agency” but rather “a law firm with only three investigat­ors who specialize in consumer and Medicaid fraud investigat­ions” to support consumer protection­s and false Medicaid claims. Coulam noted the time goal for registry referrals is 90 days.

“If the Registry is not satisfied with this timeline, please keep in mind that its referrals to this Office are optional, not mandatory,” Coulam wrote.

On Tuesday, registry member Tom Lawless said the AG’S response “probably isn’t worth the postage they used to send it.”

“He’s ignoring us,” Lawless said.

“I’m a little distraught with the Attorney General’s Office just saying not ‘no,’ but ‘you’re not important enough,” he added.

Registry members voted Tuesday to subpoena all interested parties in an effort and seek to do a more

thorough investigat­ion of its own.

“To tell us that we should just sit and wait until they get around to it really strikes the wrong tone,” registry board chair Hank Fincher said. “It really did seem like an abdication of responsibi­lity.”

Lawless noted a $13 million funding increase for the Attorney General’s Office approved by the legislatur­e this year.

“If their $13 million increase in the attorney general’s budget is not used for investigat­ors, maybe they’ll share some of it with us,” Lawless said.

Registry members considered reaching out to the AG’S office for a further explanatio­n of the response. But, member Paz Haynes said, “the abdication is the explanatio­n.”

Other cases that might have been candidates for an AG investigat­ion were not referred to Skrmetti’s office Tuesday, as members noted that such an action “doesn’t seem to be an option.”

Since his appointmen­t to the post, Skrmetti has represente­d the state in more high-profile political legal battles than his recent predecesso­rs on both sides of the aisle — challengin­g federal COVID-19 mandates, joining with Republican attorneys general in opposing federal Title IX rulemaking, and helping lead a federal antitrust lawsuit to break up Livenation/ticketmast­er.

His political legal advocacy is widely hailed by Republican­s in the legislatur­e and Gov. Bill Lee as an asset to the state. But Lawless — himself an appointee of the Senate Republican Caucus — has been a sharp critic of Skrmetti’s political pursuits, which he called “windmill battles” during the meeting.

“Perhaps if we were having more sex appeal in the things that we do here, and the attorney general realized that he could get a new headline, he’d be all over it,” Lawless said. “But what he simply said is, ‘I’m too busy to assist a legally constitute­d board of the State of Tennessee for something involving the State of Tennessee.’”

Fincher said the registry’s comparativ­ely limited resources could constrain investigat­ive efforts, but said he is confident that the body — which effectivel­y handled campaign finance allegation­s against former Rep. Jeremy Durham — would be effective.

“We don’t have enough to get additional investigat­ors, auditors, or anything like that — or even upgrade our computer systems — but he got $13 million added to the budget,” Fincher said.

Skrmetti’s office did not respond to a request for comment for this story.

Vivian Jones covers state government and politics for The Tennessean. Reach her at vjones@tennessean.com or on X @Vivian_e_jones.

 ?? MARK ZALESKI/THE TENNESSEAN ?? Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti talks with a group of people after speaking in 2023, in Clarksvill­e.
MARK ZALESKI/THE TENNESSEAN Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti talks with a group of people after speaking in 2023, in Clarksvill­e.

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