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Email Suggest Republican Senator Ensign Sought Lobbying Work For Mistress’ Husband #p2 #tcot

 

WASHINGTON — E-mails turned over to the FBI and Senate ethics investigators provide new evidence about Sen. John Ensign’s efforts to find lobbying work for the husband of his former mistress and could add to his legal problems, The New York Times reported.

Ensign, R-Nev., suggested that a Las Vegas development firm hire the husband, Douglas Hampton, after it had sought the senator’s help on several energy projects in 2008, according to previously undisclosed e-mails and interviews with company executives, the Times reported on its Web site late Wednesday.

The newspaper said the e-mails are the first written records from Ensign documenting his efforts to find work for Hampton, a former top aide and close friend, after the senator had an affair with his wife, Cynthia Hampton, a former Ensign campaign staffer.

The Times said the messages appear to undercut the senator’s assertion that he did not know the work might involve congressional lobbying, which could violate a federal ban on such activities by staff members for a year after leaving government.

The e-mail messages also hint at what Ensign’s office now says was an effort by the Las Vegas firm, P2SA Equity, to improperly link Ensign’s possible assistance to a promised donation, the Times said.

The FBI and the Senate Ethics Committee are investigating whether Ensign, in trying to contain the fallout from his affair with Hampton, conspired to find lobbying work for her husband after they left their jobs after the affair ended in 2008, despite the federal restrictions.

According to the e-mails, Ensign met in May 2008 with P2SA co-owner Greg Paulk, who has been a campaign contributor to the senator, and Bob Andrews, then P2SA’s executive vice president. Andrews told the Times he sought Ensign’s support for a biodiesel project to be built in Las Vegas and a possible land swap in Sloan, Nev., with the federal Bureau of Land Management for a solar power plant.

Ensign brought up the idea of P2SA’s hiring Hampton, Andrews recalled.

The senator mentioned "that he might have somebody we should talk to who might be able to provide us with assistance in our biodiesel program," Andrews said. "I took this as a helpful hint." CONTINUED

John Ensign Emails: Senator Sought Lobbying Work For Doug Hampton, NYT Reports

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