Virginia Republican GOP nominee Ken Cuccinelli has been cleared of any legal wrongdoing in the growing scandal around gifts from a major GOP donor with ties to the attorney general and the incumbent Republican Gov. Bob McDonnell.
Democratic nominee Terry McAuliffe and his allies have sought to tie Cuccinelli to investigations into gifts he and McDonnell received from Star Scientific CEO Jonnie Williams Sr., who is at the center of a growing scandal in Virginia over his relationship with McDonnell and his family. Cucinelli admitted earlier this year to accepting gifts from Williams, including stays at his waterfront property and a catered Thanksgiving dinner, and he owned stock in Star Scientific. Cuccinelli has since sold that stock and amended his disclosures.
On Thursday, Richmond Commonwealth’s Attorney Michael Herring said in report from an independent investigation, requested by Cuccinelli himself into his state financial disclosure forms, that he found no evidence Cuccinelli broke the law after failing to disclose stock holdings and gifts from Star Scientific CEO Jonnie Williams Sr., who’s at the center of a growing scandal in Virginia over his relationship with McDonnell and his family.
Herring wrote that while “one cannot help but question whether repeated omissions of gifts from Williams are coincidence or a pattern reflecting intent to conceal, the disclosure of several other gifts and benefits from Williams in his original statements suggests that the Attorney General was not attempting to conceal the relationship.”
“Furthermore, we find no evidence that in his statements the AG intentionally mischaracterized gifts and benefits from Star Scientific and Williams,” Herring wrote in his report.
“This review vindicates what I have said all along,” Cuccinelli said in a statement issued by his office. “There was no legal requirement to refer my own filings to a commonwealth’s attorney to review, but I did it because I wanted to be completely transparent with the public.”









