Current:Home > InvestMassachusetts GOP couple agree to state’s largest settlement after campaign finance investigation -Stellar Wealth Sphere
Massachusetts GOP couple agree to state’s largest settlement after campaign finance investigation
View
Date:2025-04-17 10:14:11
BOSTON (AP) — The Massachusetts Attorney General’s office announced settlements Tuesday with a Republican couple and others after investigators found evidence of campaign finance violations.
The settlements to be paid by Republican state Sen. Ryan Fattman, Worcester County Register of Probate Stephanie Fattman and others total hundreds of thousands of dollars — the largest amounts ever paid by candidate committees to the state to resolve cases after campaign finance investigations, according to Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell, a Democrat.
The Office of Campaign and Political Finance investigated contributions funneled from Ryan Fattman’s senate campaign committee through state and local Republican committees to Stephanie Fattman’s register of probate committee during her 2020 reelection campaign.
In 2020, Ryan Fattman’s campaign donated money to the Republican State Committee and the Sutton Republican Town Committee, which used the money to help fund more than 500,000 mailers to support Stephanie Fattman’s reelection campaign, according to investigators.
The contributions, totaling more than $160,000 — of which $137,000 flowed through the Republican State Committee — far exceeded the legal limit of $100 on contributions from one candidate to another, Campbell said.
Under the settlement both Stephanie Fattman and the Stephanie Fattman Committee must pay out the full amount of the impermissible contributions funneled to the committee through the Republican State Committee — $137,000. Ryan Fattman must pay $55,000.
Donald Fattman, former treasurer of the Ryan Fattman Committee and Ryan Fattman’s father, must pay $10,000.
“We are grateful to put this matter behind us, and are appreciative of the outpouring of support we received along the way. The professionalism we experienced from the Attorney General’s Office was noteworthy. They treated us with respect, conducted business with decorum, and ultimately agreed that there was no liability or wrongdoing attributed to us,” Ryan Fattman said in a statement.
He also said he and his wife were “targets of political persecution from an outgoing political appointee” and that successful Republicans are held to a different standard than Democrats in the heavily Democratic state.
Last month the attorney general’s office reached a settlement agreement with the Massachusetts Republican State Committee in the same campaign finance violation case. The Committee has agreed to pay a total of $15,000 by December.
The Sutton Republican Town Committee also entered into an agreement, paying the remains of its committee bank account to the state, more than $5,200. As part of the agreement, Anthony Fattman, Ryan Fattman’s brother and chair of the Sutton Republican Town Committee, will resign.
veryGood! (31)
Related
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Dawson's Creek Alum James Van Der Beek Sings With Daughter Olivia on TV
- New York launches probe into nationwide AT&T network outage
- Delaware judge cites ‘evil’ and ‘extreme cruelty’ in sentencing couple for torturing their sons
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Travis Kelce Fills Blank Space in His Calendar With Star-Studded Malibu Outing
- Escaped murder suspect who drove off in sheriff's vehicle arrested at New Orleans hotel, authorities say
- Life of drummer Jim Gordon, who played on 'Layla' before he killed his mother, examined in new book
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Silence of the glams: How the Oscars (usually) snubs horror movies
Ranking
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Virginia man sentenced to 43 years after pleading guilty to killing teen who had just graduated
- A Firm Planning a Drilling Spree in New York’s Southern Tier Goes Silent as Lawmakers Seek to Ban Use of CO2 in Quest for Gas
- See Joe Jonas and Stormi Bree Fuel Romance Rumors With Sydney Outing
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Sony is laying off about 900 PlayStation employees
- Jack Teixeira, alleged Pentagon leaker, to plead guilty
- 'Dune: Part Two' is a grand spice-opera
Recommendation
From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
Providence NAACP president convicted of campaign finance violations
Powerball winning numbers for Feb. 28 drawing: Jackpot rises to over $410 million
Video shows person of interest in explosion outside Alabama attorney general’s office
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
AP Week in Pictures: Global
Hatch watch is underway at a California bald eagle nest monitored by a popular online camera feed
Bachelor’s Joey Graziadei Shares Gilbert Syndrome Diagnosis Causing His “Yellow Eyes”