PMA Group founder charged with illegal campaign contributions
The founder of a once lucrative defense lobby shop was
arrested on Thursday after being indicted on eight counts of making illegal
campaign contributions to lawmakers.
Government prosecutors allege that Paul Magliocchetti, who
founded the now defunct PMA Group, orchestrated a scheme to make hundreds of
thousands of dollars in illegal campaign contributions in an effort to enrich
himself and his firm by increasing its influence and prestige in Washington.
{mosads}Magliocchetti has been indicted on 11 counts: four counts of
making illegal campaign contributions in the name of someone else; four counts
of making illegal campaign contributions from a corporation; and three counts
of causing federal campaigns to unwittingly make false statements, according to
a release from the Department of Justice.
Magliocchetti is scheduled to appear in federal court in Alexandria, Va., this afternoon, according to the release.
Magliocchetti’s son Mark was also indicted on one charge of
making illegal campaign contributions. Mark Magliocchetti, who also worked at
his father’s firm, pled guilty to that charge. He could face a year in prison
and a $250,000 fine, according to the plea agreement he reached with federal
authorities.
Mark Magliochetti made between $120,000 and $200,000 in
illegal campaign contributions, according to court documents.
The PMA Group has been under scrutiny since early 2009 from
federal authorities and House ethics committee investigators, but prosecutors
do not allege any wrongdoing by lawmakers, who they say were not aware of
Magliochetti’s scheme.
The PMA Group made significant campaign contributions to
several veteran defense appropriators, including the late John Murtha (D-Pa.),
a defense appropriations chairman.
It also contributed to the new chairman, Rep. Norm Dicks
(D-Wash.), and committee members Reps. Jim Moran (D-Va.) and Pete Visclosky
(D-Ind.).
Ethics investigators already scrutinized several lawmakers
and cleared them in the process.
The indictment alleges that Magliocchetti used straw donors
to make contributions to campaign committees. He then personally or through his
company paid back those donors for their contribution in a scheme to evade
donation limits to lawmakers, according to the Justice Department.
Government prosecutors allege that Magliocchetti directed
family members to make contributions to lawmakers, and then paid them back. He
also is said to have instructed PMA employees to make political contributions,
and then repaid them with either personal or company funds.
Prosecutors say that the PMA founder also recruited two
acquaintances in Florida to write checks to candidates and then reimbursed them
by writing personal or company checks.
The Floridians, John Pugliese and Jon Walker, were listed as
PMA associates and members of the PMA board of directors since 2005. The two
men, however, were not involved in defense lobbying and were not seen as
political players despite their checks to politicians.
The Hill reported last year that Magliocchetti was planning
to go into another business with the two Florida-based men.
According to corporate records filed with Florida’s
Department of State, Magliocchetti is listed as an executive for Firenze
Partners with Walker and Pugliese. Based in Fernandina Beach, Fla., the
business’s purpose is to be a restaurant, according to its articles of
organization on record.
Filed on Nov. 26, 2008, the records state that Magliocchetti, Pugliese and Walker are all managers of the business.
Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed..