Campaigns and of Obstructing Investigation by
Federal Election Commission
A jury sitting in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
convicted longtime political operative Kenneth Smukler, 58, of Villanova,
Pennsylvania, today on charges of making and concealing illegal campaign
contributions in two Congressional primary elections, and of obstructing
justice in an investigation by the Federal Election Commission (FEC), announced
Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice Department’s
Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney William M. McSwain for the Eastern District
of Pennsylvania.
“Today’s convictions demonstrate the Department of Justice’s
commitment to ensuring a level playing field in the financing of federal
elections,” said Assistant Attorney General Benczkowski. “We will hold
accountable those who violate campaign finance and other laws designed to
protect the fairness and transparency of our democracy.”
“Smukler was the mastermind of multiple crooked political
schemes,” said U.S. Attorney McSwain.
“He showed a true pattern of deception by misusing funds and lying to
corrupt the entire political process. The only way to guarantee open and fair
elections is to have everyone play by the same rules. Smukler ignored those rules and broke the law
so that his candidates could try to win at all costs. We are grateful that the jury saw through his
lies and held him accountable for his widespread criminal conduct.”
The jury found Smukler guilty of conspiracy to violate
federal law, making and causing unlawful campaign contributions and causing
false statements to the FEC in connection with a 2012 congressional primary
campaign in a Philadelphia-area Congressional district. The jury further found Smukler guilty of
making and causing unlawful campaign contributions, causing the filing of false
reports to the FEC concerning contributions and expenditures, causing false
statements to the FEC in connection with a 2014 congressional primary campaign
in another Philadelphia-area Congressional district, and obstructing an FEC
investigation.
In 2012, Smukler engaged in a conspiracy to make a concealed
payment of $90,000 to Congressional candidate and former Philadelphia Municipal
Judge Jimmie Moore to get Judge Moore to drop out of the primary election
race. Smukler, who worked for another
candidate, orchestrated the payment of the money through his own companies, a
shell company of Judge Moore’s campaign manager, Carolyn Cavaness, and another
campaign consultant, D.A. Jones. Judge
Moore, Cavaness, and Jones all have pleaded guilty separately.
From 2014 through 2015, Smukler, as a campaign manager, also
made, caused, and concealed excess and conduit contributions and engaged in a
falsification and obstruction scheme involving a different Congressional
candidate. The excess contributions came
from associates of Smukler and were funneled through two of Smukler’s
consulting companies. The conduit
contributions were routed through another political consultant and the
candidate.
The jury found that in or about April 2014, Smukler became
aware that the campaign was running out of funds that it could spend on primary
election expenses. Smukler nevertheless
directed the campaign to continue paying for goods and services associated with
the primary election. In or about May
2014, one of Smukler’s companies made a $78,750 payment to the campaign that
was used to pay for primary election expenses.
Smukler falsely told the campaign that this money came from a
“segregated media account,” when in fact the payment was funded by an associate
of Smukler’s and therefore constituted an illegal campaign contribution.
Moreover, after Smukler’s candidate lost the primary
election, the campaign did not have sufficient funds to repay the contributions
that the campaign had received for the general election. To conceal this shortfall, Smukler funneled
illegal contributions totaling $150,000 from an associate to the campaign
through two of Smukler’s consulting companies.
Smukler falsely told the campaign that these payments were refunds of
money that had been “escrowed” in Smukler’s companies for general election
expenses, when, in fact, the money had come not from any such account but from
Smukler’s associate, and the money could not have been “escrowed” campaign
funds because Smukler’s companies had already spent a significant portion of
the funds they had received from the campaign.
Smukler further caused the campaign to falsely characterize
the payments from his companies as refunds in FEC reports and in a letter to
the FEC from unwitting campaign counsel, which led the FEC to dismiss a pending
complaint against the campaign by another candidate in the primary.
The jury also convicted Smukler of making unlawful conduit
contributions to the campaign in 2014, through Jones, and again in 2015 through
the candidate herself.
Judge Jan E. DuBois set sentencing for March 13, 2019.
The case was investigated by the FBI and prosecuted by
Richard C. Pilger, Director of the Election Crimes Branch of the Public
Integrity Section of the Criminal Division; Rebecca Moses, Trial Attorney of
the Public Integrity Section and by Assistant U.S. Attorney Eric L. Gibson of
the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
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