Updated, Jan. 16th.
Federal investigators have some questions for New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and his staff—and it’s not over the revenge traffic scandal that dominated last week’s headlines.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development’s inspector general will investigate whether the governor’s office improperly used federal aid money after superstorm Sandy for political gain, NBC News has confirmed.
If wrongdoing is found, it would be a major blow to the governor’s national reputation that was founded in part on his handling of the recovery efforts following superstorm Sandy, not to mention the second massive scandal surrounding the governor and his staff in just a couple of weeks.
Tourism ads for the New Jersey after Sandy prominently featured the governor and his family; they were widely criticized as being political ads for a governor heading toward re-election.
New Jersey Democrat Rep. Frank Pallone tipped off the feds in an August letter that the bidding process turned down cheaper ads that didn’t feature Christie and his family in favor of ones that did and requested an investigation.
On Sunday, he told CNN that the inspector general’s preliminary review had concluded that there was enough evidence for a full-scale investigation; their audit will take several months.
“They have found enough evidence to justify a full-scale audit of the state’s usage of the federal funds,” Pallone’s office said on Monday in a released statement.
The Housing and Urban Development later issued a statement noting that their review was an audit and not an investigation, as Pallone’s office had heralded it.
“This is an audit and not an investigation of the procurement process,” they said.
Christie spokesman Colin Reed issued a statement Monday morning, hoping to quash the second budding scandal.









