Thursday, March 29, 2012

CREW Files Ethics Complaint Against Lugar

Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics In Washington ("CREW"), a Washington, D.C.-based public interest group, today filed a complaint with the Senate Select Committee on Ethics requesting it investigate Sen. Richard Lugar after his Senate office acknowledged that Lugar was repaying the U.S. Treasury for travel expenses to his home state when the Senate is not in session in violation of Senate rules. The press release reads:

“After erroneously billing U.S. taxpayers for decades, Sen. Lugar’s shady activities are finally coming back to haunt him,” said CREW Executive Director Melanie Sloan. “The Senate Ethics Committee should thoroughly investigate his travel expenses and, if warranted, sanction him accordingly.”
Senate travel regulations limit the expenses for travel related to official business that members may be reimbursed for with Senate funds. The rules senators must follow, including reimbursement guidelines, are set out in the U.S. Senate Handbook, published by the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration. Oddly, while the Senate Ethics Manual is publicly available, the Senate Handbook is not. In contrast, the House Committee on Administration posts the House Handbook on its website. Accordingly, CREW also sent a letter to Senate Rules Committee Chairman Charles Schumer (D-NY) and Ranking Member Lamar Alexander (R-TN) requesting that the Senate Handbook be posted online and made available upon request.
“While Sen. Lugar has admitted to violating Senate rules, it is not sufficient for senators to merely wait until they’re caught to own up to misconduct. Further, ignorance of the law is rarely a defense in any other arena. The Senate Ethics Committee has a responsibility to hold Sen. Lugar accountable for his actions” said Sloan. “Moreover, it is ridiculous that the Senate hides its Handbook to prevent prying outsiders – like journalists and good government groups – from evaluating whether senators have violated the rules. Why should the Senate have its own secret law? It’s time for the Rules Committee to tear down the curtain and make the Senate Handbook available to everyone.”
Politico has more on the story here. Read CREW's complaint here. Citizen activist Greg Wright also filed a complaint with the Senate Rules & Administration Committee last week after Lugar's office admitted they had illegally billed taxpayers for travel to his home state and would be repaying the money either from his personal funds or his campaign committee.

1 comment:

Paul K. Ogden said...

I'm sure our local media will report this story...said with sarcasm.