The stagnating presidential campaign of Rand Paul got a small boost on Friday, when a federal judge knocked down four counts of fraud against a top Paul family political advisor. But the Kentucky senator isn’t free of the distraction: one count remains and prosecutors are expected to call Paul as a witness when the trial starts in Des Moines, Iowa on Tuesday.
The charges stem from the 2012 presidential campaign of Rand Paul’s father Ron, the former Texas congressman. During that cycle, three long time family operatives allegedly paid former Iowa state sen. Kent Sorenson to endorse the elder Paul, switching allegiances from U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann in exchange for $73,000 disguised as “audio/visual expenses.”
Last August Sorenson plead guilty to obstruction of justice and causing a campaign to falsely report expenditures, and he now awaits sentencing. But it wasn’t until this August–on the eve of the first Republican presidential debate–that the three aides were indicted in the alleged scheme. The Paul family accused the government of making a politically-timed case.
RELATED: Ron Paul to testify at trial of campaign aides
On Friday, however, that case suffered a serious setback. A federal judge threw out all the charges against John Tate, an advisor to both Rand and Ron Paul, and the former head of America’s Liberty, a pro-Paul super-PAC. At the same time, Jess Benton, who is married to Ron’s granddaughter and who also used to run the America’s Liberty super-PAC, beat four of the five charges against him.









