logo
Report alleges Cherfilus-McCormick may have accepted campaign contributions ‘linked to an official action'

Report alleges Cherfilus-McCormick may have accepted campaign contributions ‘linked to an official action'

Yahoo30-05-2025

An official report outlining potential ethics violations by U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, D-Fla., said there was probable cause to believe that she 'accepted campaign contributions linked to an official action.'
If proven, the allegation contained in a document released Thursday by the House Ethics Committee could be a violation of House rules, standards of conduct and federal law.
The Office of Congressional Conduct determined in May 2024 that the matter warranted review by the Congressional Ethics Committee, which said it has been reviewing the allegation for the last year. The official document provided no details, just a total of three sentences in two different places.
It was one of five alleged violations. The board of the Office of Congressional Conduct recommended further review of three and dismissal of two.
The document was released one year after the conduct office, which reviews allegations of misconduct against members, referred the case to the committee, which investigates and adjudicates alleged violations of House rules and related laws.
In a joint statement accompanying the release of the referral, the Republican chair and top Democrat on the Ethics Committee said that 'the mere fact of a continued investigation into these allegations does not itself indicate that any violation has occurred.'
For the three violations it said warranted further investigation, the congressional conduct office said Cherfilus-McCormick 'may have' taken actions that, if substantiated, mean 'she may have violated House rules and standards of conduct.' For two of the allegations, it said violations may have violated federal law.
Besides the allegation about 'campaign contributions linked to an official action,' the office said she may have requested community project funding that would be directed to a for-profit entity. It also said her congressional office may have 'made payments to an entity in violation of' the rules or 'alternatively, that her campaign may have accepted and failed to report in-kind (campaign) contributions that may have exceeded applicable limits.'
In each of the three allegations, the conduct office's board voted 6-0 to recommend further review by the Ethics Committee.
The board voted 5-1 to recommend dismissal of the allegation that she 'may have dispensed favors or privileges to friends' in connection with official requests for community project funding. It voted 6-0 to recommend dismissal of an allegation that her campaign misrepresented the source of a campaign contribution or accepted a contribution made by one person in the name of another.
In both dismissal recommendations, the board found there was 'not substantial reason to believe' the allegations.
In a statement provided by her communications director, Cherfilus-McCormick said, 'The Committee on Ethics has not yet concluded its review of the allegations, and no decision has been made at this time. As outlined in the Committee's public statement, the referral for further review does not imply that any violation has occurred. I fully respect the process and remain committed to cooperating with the Committee as it works to bring this inquiry to a close.'
In 2023, the Ethics Committee received an earlier referral. A limited summary was released in 2024 — similar to the one put out Thursday. In January, 576 pages of materials were released.
In the earlier case, which has not been publicly resolved, the Office of Congressional Conduct said there was 'substantial reason to believe' four allegations including that she 'made payments to a state political action committee in connection with her campaign and failed to report these payments as contributions to her campaign' and that her campaign campaign committee 'accepted and failed to report contributions exceeding contribution limits.'
Cherfilus-McCormick was first elected in a January 2022 special election in the Broward-Palm Beach county 20th Congressional District.
A Democrat, she was elected to a full term in November 2022.
No Democratic primary challenger or Republican general election challenger came forward to run against Cherfilus-McCormick in 2024, making her the only one of Florida's 28 members of Congress returned to office without facing a primary or general election.
A young Democratic activist, Elijah Manley, who has run unsuccessfully for office before, is challenging Cherfilus-McCormick in the 2026 Democratic primary.
'The people of Florida are sick and tired of political corruption, ethical scandals, and the legal maneuvers the wealthy and powerful use to escape accountability,' Manley said in a statement, adding that in his view the information released by the Ethics Committee shows the incumbent's 'inability to serve the people of Florida's 20th District with honesty and transparency.'
Congressional ethics investigations move slowly, and the system is byzantine to outsiders.
The Office of Congressional Conduct has its own staff and is governed by a bipartisan board of private citizens who aren't members of Congress and don't work for the federal government. Half the members are chosen by the House speaker and half by the minority party leader.
Currently there are only four members instead of the six members and four alternates. Another change: Until January, it was called the Office of Congressional Ethics. This year 'conduct' was substituted for 'ethics' in the name.
The House Ethics Committee includes equal numbers of Republican and Democratic members, which is unusual. The majority party has a majority of spots on all other committees. The panel conducts its business behind closed doors and is circumspect about its activities.
The joint statement Thursday from U.S. Rep. Michael Guest, a Mississippi Republican and committee chair, and U.S. Rep. Mark DeSaulnier of California, the top Democrat on the panel, was the usual, brief format, totaling four paragraphs.
'No other public comment will be made on this matter except in accordance with Committee rules,' Guest and DeSaulnier said.
In cases — such as this one — in which the committee hasn't finished its investigation within a year receiving a referral from the Office of Congressional Conduct, House rules require the release of the referral.
The referral contains some details, but the supporting materials the committee gets at the same time, which can be voluminous, aren't included. Two pages were released Thursday, but pages 3 to 17 were not.
If there has been no resolution of the investigation and at least one year has passed, all the supporting documents are publicly released at the end of the two-year session of Congress. In this case, that would be January 2027.
Currently the matter is in the hands of an investigative subcommittee of the Ethics Committee, which is still considering the earlier ethics referral.
Separately, a lawsuit involving Cherfilus-McCormick's former company, Trinity Health Care Services, has been settled.
In December, the Florida Division of Emergency Management sued Trinity to recover what it said was $5.8 million in overpayments.
Before she was elected to Congress, Cherfilus-McCormick was the CEO of the family-owned company. The case involved the company, not Cherfilus-McCormick. Her brother, Edwin Cherfilus, is vice president of operations, according to his LinkedIn page.
In 2021, the emergency management agency hired Trinity to administer COVID-19 vaccinations and employ canvassers to sign people up to get vaccinated.
In its lawsuit, the state said that on June 28, 2021, the emergency management division sent Trinity an 'overpayment of $5,057,050.00' instead of the $50,578.50 it actually owed 'due to a clerical error.' It later discovered 'several' additional overpayments, totaling $5.78 million.
The Leon County Circuit Clerk's Office website shows the case is closed. The most recent filing, from an attorney representing the Division of Emergency Management, said there was 'an executed settlement agreement in the matter,' and that both the state agency and Trinity Healthcare Services would each pay their own attorneys' fees.
Trinity did not admit any wrongdoing in the settlement, and it agreed to repay $5.62 million. Though the total repayment is almost as much as the state wanted, it is effectively much less because it is being repaid over many years without interest.
Under the terms of the settlement Trinity agreed to pay $25,000 in April and $15,000 in May. Starting in 2026, the company agreed to repay $92,910.99 each quarter, which works out to $371,644 a year. The repayments last 15 years, which means the final payment would be made in the fourth quarter of 2040.
_____

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Democrats wrestle with how to conduct oversight as Trump officials crack down
Democrats wrestle with how to conduct oversight as Trump officials crack down

San Francisco Chronicle​

time38 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Democrats wrestle with how to conduct oversight as Trump officials crack down

WASHINGTON (AP) — Just hours after she pleaded not guilty to federal charges brought by the Trump administration, New Jersey Rep. LaMonica McIver was surrounded by dozens of supportive Democratic colleagues in the halls of the Capitol. The case, they argued, strikes at the heart of congressional power. 'If they can break LaMonica, they can break the House of Representatives,' said New York Rep. Yvette Clarke, chair of the Congressional Black Caucus. Federal prosecutors allege that McIver interfered with law enforcement during a visit with two other House Democrats to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Newark, New Jersey. She calls the charges 'baseless.' It's far from the only clash between congressional Democrats and the Republican administration as officials ramp up deportations of immigrants around the country. Sen. Alex Padilla of California was forcibly removed by federal agents while attempting to speak at a news conference for Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. At least six groups of House Democrats have recently been denied entry to ICE detention centers. In early June, federal agents entered the district office of Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., and briefly detained a staffer. Congressional Republicans have largely dismissed Democrats' behavior as inflammatory and inappropriate, and some have publicly supported the prosecution of McIver. Often in the dark about the Trump administration's moves, congressional Democrats are wrestling with how to perform their oversight duties at a time of roiling tensions with the White House and new restrictions on lawmakers visiting federal facilities. 'We have the authority to conduct oversight business, and clearly, House Republicans are not doing that oversight here,' said New Jersey Rep. Rob Menendez, one of the House Democrats who went with McIver to the Newark ICE facility. 'It's our obligation to continue to do it on site at these detention facilities. And even if they don't want us to, we are going to continue to exert our right.' Democrats confront a stark new reality The prospect of facing charges for once routine oversight activity has alarmed many congressional Democrats who never expected to face criminal prosecution as elected officials. Lawmakers in both parties were also unnerved by the recent targeted shootings of two Minnesota lawmakers and the nation's tense political atmosphere. 'It's a moment that calls for personal courage of members of Congress,' said Rep. Summer Lee of Pennsylvania. 'I wish that we had more physical protection. I think that's one of those harsh realities that members of Congress who are not in leadership recognize: that oftentimes, we do this job at our own peril, and we do it anyway.' The arrests and detentions of lawmakers have led some Democrats to take precautionary measures. Several have consulted with the House general counsel about their right to conduct oversight. Multiple lawmakers also sought personal legal counsel, while others have called for a review of congressional rules to provide greater protections. 'The Capitol Police are the security force for members of Congress. We need them to travel with us, to go to facilities and events that the president may have us arrested for,' said Rep. Jonathan Jackson of Illinois. 'There's not a lot of transparency' As the minority party in the House, Democrats lack the subpoena power to force the White House to provide information. That's a problem, they say, because the Trump administration is unusually secretive about its actions. 'There's not a lot of transparency. From day to day, oftentimes, we're learning about what's happening at the same time as the rest of the nation,' said Rep. Lucy McBath, D-Ga., who led a prayer for McIver at the Capitol rally. Democrats, to amplify their concerns, have turned to public letters, confronted officials at congressional hearings and digital and media outreach to try to create public pressure. 'We've been very successful when they come in before committees,' said Rep. Lauren Underwood of Illinois, who added that she believed the public inquiries have 'one hundred percent' resonated with voters. Tapping into the information pipeline Congressional Democrats say they often rely on local lawmakers, business leaders and advocates to be their eyes and ears on the ground. A handful of Democrats say their best sources of information are across the political aisle, since Republicans typically have clearer lines of communication with the White House. 'I know who to call in Houston with the chamber. I think all of us do that,' said Texas Rep. Sylvia Garcia of how business leaders are keeping her updated. Garcia said Democrats 'need to put more pressure' on leading figures in the agriculture, restaurant and hospitality sectors to take their concerns about the immigrant crackdown to Trump's White House. 'They're the ones he'll listen to. They're the ones who can add the pressure. He's not going to listen to me, a Democrat who was an impeachment manager, who is on the bottom of his list, if I'm on it at all,' Garcia said. Rep. Jason Crow of Colorado, for instance, had a working relationship with a for-profit ICE facility in his district until DHS in February ended reports as part of an agency-wide policy change. A member of Crow's staff now regularly goes to the facility and waits, at times for hours, until staff at the Aurora facility respond to detailed questions posed by the office. Democrats say 'real oversight' requires winning elections Still, many House Democrats concede that they can conduct little of their desired oversight until they are back in the majority. Rep. Marc Veasey, D-Texas, said that 'real oversight power and muscle" only comes 'when you have a gavel." 'Nothing else matters. No rousing oratory, no tours, no speeches, no social media or entertainment, none of that stuff," Veasey said. "Because the thing that keeps Trump up at night more than anything else is the idea he's going to lose this House and there'll be real oversight pressure applied to him.'

Trump, Massie feud reaches fever pitch
Trump, Massie feud reaches fever pitch

The Hill

time44 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Trump, Massie feud reaches fever pitch

President Trump's feud with Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) is showing no signs of abating as the president seeks to oust the GOP congressman for his history of regularly breaking with the administration. Massie recently opposed the administration by denouncing its strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities and refusing to support the president's legislative agenda, leading Trump's political operation to launch a targeted campaign against Massie. On Friday, a Trump-aligned super PAC, led by the president's co-campaign manager Chris LaCivita, rolled out its first ad as part of a $1 million ad buy targeting Massie. The 30-second ad — titled 'What happened to Thomas Massie?' — hit the GOP congressman over his opposition to Trump-supported legislation to fund border security and cut taxes. It also ties him to Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and progressive Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.). But Massie isn't backing down. He hit back in a post on the social platform X, appearing to refer to measures in Trump's legislative agenda that the Senate parliamentarian opposed, including blocking Medicaid funds to be used for gender-affirming care. 'The BBB now allows funding sex changes for minors!' Massie said, referring to what Trump calls the 'big, beautiful bill.' 'This ad slams me for voting against the BBB, but the Senate just stripped the 'ban on sex changes for minors' from the BBB. By the ads' twisted logic, those who support the Senate's edits now support sex changes for minors.' Earlier in the week, Massie invoked former Vice President Mike Pence being targeted in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol after Vice President Vance questioned if his successors saw as much 'excitement' as he has while in office. The ad campaign is the first major sign the president's political operation is flexing its muscles, and Massie's recent digs against Trump foreshadow a fight that is likely only to heat up. 'There's a large feeling that the chickens have finally come home to roost for Massie,' said T.J. Litafik, a Kentucky-based Republican strategist. Massie's break with Trump over his legislative agenda and U.S. military intervention in Iran are only the most recent developments in the feud between the two. In 2020, Massie faced Trump's wrath when he tried to force a roll call vote on the CARES Act coronavirus stimulus bill, forcing lawmakers to rush back to Washington to avoid a delay in passing the legislation. Massie let three calls from Trump go to voicemail before he finally took the president's call in the Speaker's Lobby. Trump then publicly called for Massie to be thrown out of the GOP. Three years later, Massie famously backed Trump rival Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) in what became a deeply personal presidential primary battle. And earlier this year, Massie was the only Republican lawmaker who did not back Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) despite Trump's appeal to House Republicans. 'Massie has chosen to be a tremendous antagonist toward Trump at just about every turn,' Litafik said. The feud has put Johnson in an awkward position as he seeks to navigate a narrow Republican majority in the House. Johnson stopped short of endorsing Massie on Tuesday when asked if he would defend Massie against a primary challenger. 'That's the hardest question I had this morning, and I'm being totally honest with you,' Johnson said. 'Look, the Speaker's job, my role with my party cap on is I'm leader of my party here, and the Speaker leads the incumbent protection program, right, that's what we call it. I got to make sure everybody gets reelected. I travel the country nonstop, relentlessly, raising money to ensure that that happens.' 'But I certainly understand the president's frustration about the colleague you named, and he and I talk about that quite a bit,' he continued. 'Can't quite understand what the rationale is, but if you're here and you're wearing one team's jersey and every single time you vote with the other team, people begin to question what your motive is and what your philosophy is and why you're so consistently opposed to the platform, the agenda of your party.' When asked about Johnson's remarks by reporters on Capitol Hill earlier this week, Massie said that whether the Speaker is 'for me or against me, the result is the same.' 'If they would just quit hitting me, I might get bored and give up,' Massie said, referring to Trump's efforts to oust him. 'But I am not going to lose. I do not lose.' Republicans hold an eight-seat majority in the House, a narrow enough margin where Johnson needs the conference to be united on measures like passing Trump's agenda. 'It needs to be done with these tight margins in the House because essentially, if you can't get the 'yes' on anything, you're just a placeholder and a hindrance to the Trump agenda,' said Ford O'Connell, a Republican strategist. Other Republicans question why Trump and his allies are so deeply invested in kicking Massie off Capitol Hill. 'It does strike me as odd that this is the fight you'd really want to pick at a time when we should be more worried about keeping the House majority than taking out Republicans from it,' said another national Republican strategist. Massie's district is considered safely Republican. Kentucky's 4th Congressional District is situated in the northern part of the state, stretching from Louisville's eastern suburbs to the Cincinnati area along Kentucky's border with Ohio. Massie has trounced his past primary challengers, none of whom have been particularly strong or backed by Trump. 'It is tougher when you're going against someone who is pretty loose and free, and isn't going to cave and doesn't cave into the pressure. I think that's what his district appreciates about him. It's what that district and other parts of the state appreciate about Rand Paul,' the national Republican strategist said. Kentucky GOP strategist Shane Noem noted the state's Republicans come in 'many stripes.' 'The modern Libertarian wing of the party started here when Sen. Paul was elected in 2010. There's room for all varieties of Republicans in the party; it's up to the voters what level of loyalty they expect to the president's agenda,' Noem said. Paul has also broken with Trump in the past, most recently on Trump's legislative agenda and the sweeping global tariffs Trump imposed. Paul earlier this year claimed that he was 'uninvited' from the annual White House picnic, in what he said was retribution for his opposition to parts of the president's agenda. Trump later said that 'of course' Paul was invited to the gathering. Paul also criticized Trump's recent strikes on Iran, arguing that Congress, not the president, 'holds the war power.' But Republicans note Massie's disagreements with Trump have proven to be more intense. 'Rand Paul has had his moments of opposing Trump,' Litafik said. 'Massie has been much more aggressive and much more numerous in his approach.' While Trump's allies are launching the effort with a massive war chest, all eyes will be on a potential Trump-backed primary opponent. 'The one essential ingredient that as of yet has not developed is an opponent,' Litafik said. 'I think that there will be a very viable opponent that emerges.' 'This is a race unlike any that he would have faced before,' he said. Mychael Schnell contributed.

Voting begins on Trump's ‘big beautiful bill'
Voting begins on Trump's ‘big beautiful bill'

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Voting begins on Trump's ‘big beautiful bill'

Senate Republicans are furiously working Saturday to advance their final version of President Trump's 'big beautiful bill,' setting the stage for a marathon weekend session they hope meets the commander-in-chief's July 4 deadline. Senate members are expected to take a procedural vote to kick off debating the revised, 940-page multi trillion-dollar bill, released late Friday that makes Trump's 2017 tax cuts permanent, ends taxation on tips and overtime, boosts border security funding and scraps green-energy tax credits passed during the Biden administration. But Sen. Ron Johnson (R- Wisconsin) already told Fox News's 'Fox & Friends Weekend' that he will vote 'no' on the bill. Advertisement 'President Trump, his goal in the Senate was to make the Big Beautiful Bill even better. I'd like it much better,' he said Saturday. 'Right now, I'm not going to vote for a motion to proceed today. We just got the bill. I got my first copy about 1:23 in the morning, this morning.' President Trump speaks in the Oval Office on June 27. Getty Images The megabill is expected to raise the debt ceiling by roughly $5 trillion in order to cram all the provisions in. Advertisement The latest version includes a vast majority of the policies the House narrowly approved in May, but also includes changes to programs such as Medicaid and reducing federal spending for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Republicans from states with large rural populations have long opposed a reduction in state tax revenue for Medicaid providers including rural hospitals. The newly released legislation delays that reduction and includes $25 billion to support rural Medicaid providers from 2028 to 2032. The bill raises the cap on federal deductions for state and local taxes to $40,000 with an annual 1% inflation adjustment through 2029, after which it would fall back to the current $10,000. The bill would also phase the cap down for those earning more than $500,000 a year. With a 53-47 majority in the upper chamber, the GOP can only afford to lose three votes and still pass the package with a tie-breaking ballot cast by Vice President JD Vance. Advertisement A version of it passed the House by a single vote May 22. But the lower chamber will have to vote on the bill again after the Senate finalizes its changes to it Trump had been hoping the bill would pass both chambers and reach his desk for signing by July 4. 'The Great Republicans in the U.S. Senate are working all weekend to finish our 'ONE, BIG, BEAUTIFUL BILL,'' the president posted on his Truth Social on Friday. GOP momentum screeched to a halt Thursday as the Senate's 'parliamentarian,' Elizabeth MacDonough — the 'referee' of the chamber who ensures proposed legislation abides by the rules — threw out line items that would have eliminated health-care coverage for non-citizens. With Post wires.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store