Prosecutors in a long-running secret investigation into Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker’s campaign activities allege that Walker was at the head of a scheme to illegally coordinate campaign fundraising efforts, according to documents unsealed Thursday.
Prosecutors allege that Walker, a Republican, and two aides led efforts to work with a dozen conservative groups during recall elections in 2011 and 2012, the documents show. Walker’s office strenuously denied those allegations in a press release Thursday night calling any accusation of wrongdoing “categorically false” and stating that “two judges, in both state and federal courts, have ruled that no laws were broken.”
“This is nothing more than a partisan investigation with no basis in state law,” the statement said. “It’s time for the prosecutors to acknowledge both judges’ orders to end this investigation.”
The investigation’s prosecutors, however, call the efforts to coordinate fundraising and spending efforts a “criminal scheme,” according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Walker allegedly directed two top staffers, R.J. Johnson and Deborah Jordahl, to lead the efforts.
The documents include an email from Walker to Republican strategist Karl Rove from 2011. In it, Walker tells Rove of Johnson’s importance to coordinating “a team that is wildly successful in Wisconsin. We are running 9 recall elections and it will be like running 9 Congressional markets in every market in the state (and Twin Cities).”
Walker, along with 6 Republican state senators and Lieutenant Governor Rebecca Kleefisch, faced recall elections in 2011 and 2012 after Walker sharply cut public sector union rights, effectively ending collective bargaining for public employees. Three Democratic state senators also faced recalls. More than $137 million was spent on all the recall races, with more than $75 million of that coming from outside interest groups.
One of the groups involved, the Wisconsin Club for Growth, has sued to halt the secret “John Doe” investigation, arguing that it restricts free speech and violates its First Amendment rights.
Walker is running for reelection this year, and is facing a strong challenge from Mary Burke, a former State Commerce Secretary and businesswoman. A May poll conducted by Marquette Univeristy found the two of them tied among all registered voters, with Walker holding a 48-45 lead among likely voters.
While a judge ordered a stop to the investigation in May while he considered the suit, the documents released Thursday were unsealed as a part of that lawsuit.
What these revelations could mean to the circuit court currently considering the investigation’s future is still unclear.









