DES MOINES, Iowa — Three top officials with Ron Paul’s 2012 presidential campaign claim political motivations are behind charges alleging they violated federal financial disclosure laws by secretly paying an influential Iowa politician for his endorsement.
Paul, a former Republican congressman from Texas, will be called as a prosecution witness at the trial, set for next Tuesday in Des Moines. He is expected to testify he didn’t know of the payments from the campaign and never would have approved, according to court documents.
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Federal prosecutors say the three men broke several federal campaign laws when they concealed payments to former Iowa Sen. Kent Sorenson after he jumped from the Michele Bachmann campaign to the Paul campaign a few days before the Jan. 3, 2012, Iowa caucuses. They’re also accused of lying to cover up the payments.
The men argue in court documents that they are another example of the federal government going after tea party-backed conservatives.
“The government has an agenda here, and it is not simply to prosecute criminal activity, it is to make new law off the backs of political operatives it holds in disfavor,” an attorney for one of the men wrote in a court filing seeking dismissal of the charges.
Sorensen, 43, entered a plea deal with the government in August to obstruction of justice and causing a campaign to falsely report expenditures. He awaits sentencing. Prosecutors plan to call him as a cooperating witness.
The Paul campaign staffers are charged with conspiracy, falsifying records, falsifying campaign expenditure reports, and making false statements. Benton faces an additional charge of lying to the FBI and Kesari also is charged with obstructing justice for allegedly attempting to tamper with evidence.
Jesse Benton, John Tate and Dimitri Kesari were indicted by a federal grand jury in July and pleaded not guilty in August. A hearing on several motions involving witnesses and evidence is scheduled for Wednesday.
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