Takeaways
From the House Ethics Committee’s Investigation on Matt Gaetz
A 37-page
report detailed the findings from a yearslong investigation into allegations
that Mr. Gaetz engaged in a range of illegal conduct. He has repeatedly denied
wrongdoing.
The House
Ethics Committee report does not include a criminal referral, but concludes
that former Representative Matt Gaetz, Republican of Florida, broke
prostitution laws in his home state.
Michael S.
Schmidt
By Michael
S. Schmidt
Dec. 23,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/23/us/politics/matt-gaetz-ethics-report-takeaways.html
After a
yearslong investigation, the House Ethics Committee released a 37-page report
on Monday into former Representative Matt Gaetz, Republican of Florida, and
allegations that he engaged in an array of illegal and untoward conduct,
including having sex with a 17-year-old girl.
Mr. Gaetz,
who had been President-elect Donald J. Trump’s first choice to be attorney
general before Mr. Gaetz withdrew from consideration, has repeatedly denied he
did anything wrong.
Here are
takeaways from the report.
The report
says the evidence shows Mr. Gaetz engaged in a range of questionable conduct,
some of it illegal.
The
committee concluded that Mr. Gaetz regularly paid women to have sex with him
from 2017 to 2020 and had sex with an underage girl in 2017, during his first
term in the House, and that the girl was paid.
The report
says that Mr. Gaetz used illegal drugs — including cocaine and Ecstasy — on
multiple occasions between 2017 and 2019. It also says that he accepted gifts
of transportation and lodging, in excess of dollar limits on what members of
Congress are allowed to accept, as part of a trip he took to the Bahamas where
he had sex with women whom he paid.
The report
adds that he used his position to falsely claim to the State Department that a
woman he had sex with was really a constituent who needed help obtaining a
passport.
Mr. Gaetz
also obstructed the committee’s investigation, the report said.
The report
concluded that “there was substantial evidence that Representative Gaetz
violated House Rules, state and federal laws, and other standards of conduct
prohibiting prostitution, statutory rape, illicit drug use, acceptance of
impermissible gifts, the provision of special favors and privileges, and
obstruction of Congress.”
It is not
clear that Mr. Gaetz will face further prosecution.
The Justice
Department has already investigated Mr. Gaetz for the same matters examined by
the House panel. Prosecutors informed Mr. Gaetz’s legal team in February 2023
that they would not bring charges. The prosecutors had concluded that they
could not make a strong enough case in court, people familiar with the matter
said at the time.
There is no
indication that the committee’s report has any evidence that would not have
been available to federal prosecutors. And in less than a month, the Justice
Department will be under the control of Mr. Trump, who just weeks ago wanted
Mr. Gaetz to be the nation’s chief law enforcement officer.
The House
Ethics Committee report does not include a criminal referral, but concludes
that Mr. Gaetz broke state prostitution laws in Florida.
But the bar
to say someone broke the law is lower than having to prove it beyond a
reasonable doubt in court.
The panel
did not find sufficient evidence to accuse Mr. Gaetz of sex trafficking.
The
committee said it “did not obtain substantial evidence” that Mr. Gaetz had
violated federal sex-trafficking laws, one focus of the Justice Department
inquiry, though it concluded that he had sex with a girl when she was 17 and
that the girl was paid.
The
committee said it had no evidence that Mr. Gaetz was aware the girl was a minor
at the time. At the time she had sex with Mr. Gaetz, the report said, the girl
had just completed her junior year in high school.
Evidence
uncovered by the committee showed that Mr. Gaetz paid for women to travel to
New York and Washington to have sex with him. But, the committee said, the
women were over 18 at the time.
“While
Representative Gaetz’s relationship with these women involved an exploitative
power imbalance, the committee does not have reason to believe that he used
force, fraud or coercion as those terms apply under the applicable laws,” the
report said.
But, the
report said, the committee found that by having sex with the 17-year-old, he
violated Florida’s statutory rape law.
“The
committee received evidence that Representative Gaetz did not learn that Victim
A was 17 years old until more than a month after their first sexual
encounters,” the report said. “However, statutory rape is a strict liability
crime. After he learned that Victim A was a minor, he maintained contact and
less than six months after she turned 18, he met up with her again for
commercial sex.”
Some of the
women Mr. Gaetz had sex with for money felt impaired by drug or alcohol use.
The women
whom committee investigators questioned said that their sexual interactions
with Mr. Gaetz were “consensual.” But one woman said that she “felt that the
use of drugs at the parties and events they attended” may have impaired her
“ability to really know what was going on or fully consent.”
The
committee said that “nearly every woman that the committee spoke with could not
remember the details of at least one or more of the events they attended with
Representative Gaetz and attributed that to drug or alcohol consumption.”
Some of the
women expressed regret at what they had engaged in. One woman said that when
she looks “back on certain moments, I feel violated.” Another woman said, “I
think about it all the time,” adding, “I still see him when I turn on the TV
and there’s nothing anyone can do. It’s frustrating to know I lived a reality
that he denies.”
The
committee believed the Justice Department was unhelpful in its investigation.
Initially,
after it was revealed in 2021 that Mr. Gaetz was under federal investigation,
the Justice Department told the panel to stand down as it completed its inquiry
— a request the committee complied with.
In 2023, Mr.
Gaetz announced that the department had decided not to charge him, leading the
committee to restart its inquiry.
But, at that
point, the Justice Department refused to respond to the committee, according to
the committee.
The
committee said that “after three months without a response despite repeated
follow up,” it filed Freedom of Information Act requests with Justice
Department offices, “which to date have not been adequately processed.”
“The
committee continued to reach out to D.O.J. throughout 2023, having still not
received a substantive response to its request for information,” the committee
said.
The
committee said it received its first correspondence from the Justice Department
in January 2024.
“At that
time, D.O.J. provided no substantive response or explanation for its delay,”
the report said.
But the
department told the committee it does not give nonpublic information about
investigations that do not result in anyone being charged.
The
committee said this stance by the Justice Department is “inconsistent with
D.O.J.’s historical conduct with respect to the Committee and its unique role
in upholding the integrity of the House.”
“D.O.J.’s
initial deferral request and subsequent lack of cooperation with the
committee’s review caused significant delays in the investigation,” the report
said.
Michael S.
Schmidt is an investigative reporter for The Times covering Washington. His
work focuses on tracking and explaining high-profile federal investigations.
More about Michael S. Schmidt
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