Lt. Gov. Jon Husted in September 2022. (Photo by Graham Stokes for the Ohio Capital Journal / Republish photo only with original story)
Ohio Lieutenant Governor Jon Husted adamantly denied prior knowledge of the largest bribery scheme in state history after we discovered text messages from FirstEnergy executives alleging he led the push for House Bill 6.
He also seemed aggravated by follow-up questions asking how he was ignorant of the plot.
FirstEnergy spent $61 million dollars in exchange for H.B. 6, legislation giving their failing utility company a $1 billion bailout.
This landed former House Speaker Larry Householder in federal prison for 20 years, and he is now facing state charges, as well.
Recap
A public records request revealed both Gov. Mike DeWine and Husted’s ties to former FirstEnergy CEO Chuck Jones and VP Michael Dowling — the ones who helped fund their campaign.
Both DeWine and Husted have continuously denied any involvement, and law enforcement has not accused either of wrongdoing.
Last week, new texts revealed that DeWine asked Jones for money, which he then received via a dark money PAC.
The day after the texts were revealed, DeWine was questioned as to why anyone should believe him that he didn’t know about the corruption scheme.
The governor deflected questions about his relationship with the former FirstEnergy executives
On June 25, OCJ/WEWS discovered and reported on more texts alleging that he helped push forward H.B. 6 and got a playbook from FirstEnergy on how to convince others, according to FirstEnergy executives.
While DeWine is dealing with the ongoing discovery of text messages linking him to indicted FirstEnergy executives, Republican lawmakers are drafting legislation requiring greater campaign finance disclosure.
Last Wednesday, the bill sponsor gave a first look.
“My one takeaway from your story is — we need to get rid of all of it,” House Finance Chair Jay Edwards (R-Nelsonville) said about dark money.
The next day, it was reported that an indicted FirstEnergy executive planned to call DeWine and Husted to testify as witnesses in his criminal trial.
After four days focused on the governor, the spotlight shifted to the second-in-command: Husted.
OCJ/WEWS discovered and reported on messages sent between Husted and FirstEnergy executives, in addition to a slew of texts and emails between FirstEnergy officials and lobbyists about Husted.
Recap of texts
Husted frequently communicated with FirstEnergy execs before, during and after his campaign.
Once in office, records show that it was Husted, not DeWine, who allegedly helped lead the charge for the bailout bill.
Dowling emailed Jones before H.B. 6 passed in 2019, saying the governor “left the details of H.B. 6 to others — John [sic] Husted and Danny.”
Dan McCarthy was DeWine’s legislative director after having been a lobbyist for FirstEnergy.
Along with McCarthy appearing continuously in the documents, so does John Kiani. Kiani was the executive chairman of FirstEnergy’s subsidiary, FirstEnergy Solutions.
This article was originally published on News5Cleveland.com and is published in the Ohio Capital Journal under a content-sharing agreement. Unlike other OCJ articles, it is not available for free republication by other news outlets as it is owned by WEWS in Cleveland.
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The post Ohio Lt. Gov. Husted denies knowledge of corruption scheme in wake of FirstEnergy texts appeared first on Ohio Capital Journal.