Actually, it's about ethics in purchasing videogames with campaign funds.
In other totally huge criminal political news today, “Republican congressman Duncan Hunter and his wife have been indicted by DOJ for allegedly using $250,000 in campaign money for their own personal expenses, including trips to Italy and Hawaii, and dental work,” reports Mike Levine of ABC News.
California congressman Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Alpine) and wife Margaret spent over $1,500 of that campaign money on Steam games.
They initially blamed their son.
Nice parents.
The weird gaming connection in the case was reported back in 2016, but — now the guy is probably going to prison. For games, in part. Pretty wild.
Rep. Duncan Hunter spent over $1,500 of campaign funds on @steam_games according to a copy of the indictment. pic.twitter.com/DJsthprm8w
— Jeff Landa (@JeffLanda) August 21, 2018
The first Congressman to go to jail for gaming pic.twitter.com/Sak83ytwf2
— lib crusher (@lib_crusher) August 21, 2018
what the hell kind of luxury gaming keyboard was this pic.twitter.com/QGvnJIg8gG
— lib crusher (@lib_crusher) August 21, 2018
From today's report in the San Diego Union-Tribune (Alpine isn't far from San Diego):
Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Alpine, and his wife, Margaret, were indicted Tuesday on charges including wire fraud and campaign finance crimes, according to a federal indictment.
The document, filed Tuesday in federal court, accuses the couple of converting more than $250,000 in campaign funds to pay for personal expenses and filing false campaign finance records with the Federal Election Commission. The indictment accuses the couple of crimes including conspiracy to commit wire fraud, falsification of records and aiding and abetting prohibited use of campaign contributions.
The crimes date back to 2009, according to the indictment.
Hunter has been under scrutiny since April 2016, when the FEC and then The San Diego Union-Tribune began questioning expenses of campaign funds including video games, private school tuition, oral surgery and a garage door for the couple’s Alpine home. Spending of campaign funds for personal use is banned by law, to protect against undue influence by donors who might benefit from congressional actions.
And from the archival 2016 San Diego Union-Tribune report:
The Federal Election Commission is questioning Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Alpine, for his use of campaign funds to pay for video games on 68 separate occasions — something the congressman is attributing to a mistake by his son, followed by several unauthorized charges.
Hunter listed the $1,302 of Steam Games expenses on his campaign finance disclosure for 2015 year-end, with the notation “personal expense — to be paid back.”
The expenses run from Oct. 13 through Dec. 16, and no payback is listed during the time period of the report.
Hunter’s spokesman, Joe Kasper, said the congressman’s teenage son used his father’s credit card for one game, and then several unauthorized charges resulted after the father tried to close access to the website. Kasper said that Hunter is trying to have the unauthorized charges reversed before repaying his campaign account.
“There won’t be any paying anything back there, pending the outcome of the fraud investigation, depending on how long that takes,” Kasper said.
note that in first @sdut story on Hunter's misappropriation of campaign funds (https://t.co/uzLnfOVv7L), his spokesman said Hunter was trying to get the money back by … filing chargebacks against Valve for the Steam purchases https://t.co/51CzWNmhfe
— Samit Sarkar (@SamitSarkar) August 21, 2018
chef kissing fingers dot gif pic.twitter.com/fWJLn2DRad
— Xeni Jardin ??? (@xeni) August 21, 2018
surprise but the guy who used Wounded Warriors as a front to buy golf gear for himself had some really loud thoughts on Colin Kaepernick pic.twitter.com/EUpVCgWuyh
— Tim Murphy Premium for subscribers only (@timothypmurphy) August 21, 2018
Hunter was the second congressman to endorse Trump, in February 2016. The first was Rep. Chris Collins, facing charges in New York. https://t.co/Zs93E5LZxo
— Dafna Linzer (@DafnaLinzer) August 21, 2018