Current:Home > ContactEmails show lieutenant governor’s staff engaged in campaign-related matters during business hours -Momentum Wealth Path
Emails show lieutenant governor’s staff engaged in campaign-related matters during business hours
View
Date:2025-04-12 12:02:16
DOVER, Del. (AP) — Lt. Gov. Bethany Hall-Long’s office staff was in regular communication last year with her husband and other people involved in her campaign for Delaware governor and worked during office hours to help facilitate the use of campaign funds, according to emails obtained by The Associated Press.
The emails, obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request, show that Hall-Long enlisted her office staff, working with her husband, to help with matters bearing little if any relevance to her role as lieutenant governor. They include renewing her memberships in various women’s groups and making donations to community groups. Some of those expenditures were made with campaign funds.
Under Delaware law, state employees are prohibited from engaging in any political activity during work hours. As an elected official, Hall-Long is exempt from that provision, but her office staff is not.
Among the officials who engaged in communications related to Hall-Long’s campaign was Matthew Dougherty, director of operations in the lieutenant governor’s office. Dougherty recently took a leave of absence to serve as Hall-Long’s campaign manager. The move came after the latest in a series of shakeups in Hall-Long’s troubled campaign, as two top staffers left in the wake of a campaign finance audit commissioned by the state elections department.
“Bethany asked that you please mail a $300 check to the address below for an upcoming community event,” Dougherty wrote to Hall-Long’s husband, Dana Long, during business hours on a Wednesday afternoon last August. Hall-Long’s scheduler and officer coordinator, Nicole Algarin, was copied on the email.
“Hi Dana, they just called about this one,” Dougherty wrote in a follow-up email two weeks later. “We’re (sic) you able to mail the check?”
Dougherty sent a second reminder to Long a week later “per our text conversation.” Long replied the next day saying the check was put in the email. A campaign finance report shows that $300 was paid to Ali Abdul-Aleem of Dover for a “Community Unity Family Day” from Hall-Long’s campaign account.
Hall-Long’s office staff, along with aides working for the state Behavioral Health Consortium that she chairs, also collaborated to ensure her appearance last October in the annual Sea Witch Costume Parade in Rehoboth Beach. Algarin then sent an email during business hours to Brandon Cox, Hall-Long’s campaign manager at the time, with the parade information.
Photos of the event show Hall-Long marching in the parade with no indication that she is representing the lieutenant governor’s office or the Behavioral Health Consortium. Instead, she is marching in front of a banner reading “Bethany Hall-Long Democrat for Governor.”
Dana Long also worked with Dougherty during business hours to arrange trips for Hall-Long last year to Nashville and San Antonio, according to emails. It is unclear whether those trips were for personal or professional reasons.
Dougherty told Long in an email that he would be happy to book a San Antonio luxury hotel using “BHL’s credit card,” but Long replied that he had not yet decided at which hotel “we are going (sic) stay.”
There are no travel-related expenses for those dates in Hall-Long’s campaign finance reports or in the expenditures reported by the lieutenant governor’s office. Hall-Long did not also report any gifts or honoraria on her public officer financial disclosure form.
Hall-Long did not immediately respond to an email Wednesday seeking information about those trips.
Hall-Long, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for governor, has been under intense scrutiny since September, when she abruptly announced the postponement of a campaign event with Democratic Gov. John Carney that was to be held the next day, saying she needed to “attend to a personal, private matter.”
In reality, Hall-Long’s campaign was in disarray after people brought in to lead the campaign discovered major discrepancies while reviewing years of finance reports. The scandal led to the resignations of her campaign manager, chief fundraiser and campaign treasurer — who had replaced Dana Long as treasurer only five months earlier.
A forensic review released by the Department of Elections last month found that, from January 2016 to December 2023, Dana Long wrote 112 checks from his wife’s campaign committee account to himself or to cash, and one check to his wife. The checks totaled just under $300,000 and should have been reported as campaign expenditures, the review found. Instead, 109 were never reported in initial finance reports, and the other four, payable to Dana Long, were reported as being made to someone else, according to the review.
Hall-Long has maintained that the campaign finance irregularities were simply “bookkeeping errors” involving loans that she made to her campaign but did not report. New Castle County Executive Matt Meyer, her chief rival for the Democratic nomination, has called for a federal investigation into Hall-Long’s campaign finances.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Singapore to Build World’s Largest Facility that Sucks Carbon From the Sea
- Monarch butterflies are not considered endangered. But a new study shows they are dwindling.
- This week on Sunday Morning (March 3)
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Wendy Williams' guardianship is the subject of a new documentary. Here's how it works
- NCAA freezing investigations into third-party NIL activities after judge granted injunction
- Lucky You, Kate Spade Outlet Has Effortlessly Cool Crossbodies Up to 75% off, Plus Score an Extra 25% off
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- White Christmas Star Anne Whitfield Dead at 85 After Unexpected Accident
Ranking
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- Oregon may revive penalties for drug possession. What will the change do?
- New York Community Bancorp shares plummet amid CEO exit and loan woes
- Report from National Urban League finds continued economic disparities among Black Americans
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Northern California braces for snow storm with Blizzard Warnings in effect. Here's the forecast.
- Jury convicts first rioter to enter Capitol building during Jan. 6 attack
- New York man who fatally shot woman who was mistakenly driven up his driveway sentenced to 25 years to life in prison
Recommendation
US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
The Smokehouse Creek Fire in the Texas Panhandle has already burned 1.1 million acres. Here are the largest wildfires in U.S. history.
Removed during protests, Louisville's statue of King Louis XVI is still in limbo
A White House Advisor and Environmental Justice Activist Wants Immediate Help for Two Historically Black Communities in Alabama
Have Dry, Sensitive Skin? You Need To Add These Gentle Skincare Products to Your Routine
Jury convicts first rioter to enter Capitol building during Jan. 6 attack
Rust assistant director breaks down in tears while testifying about fatal shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins
Kylie Jenner's Knee-High Thong Heels Might Be Her Most Polarizing Look Yet