Featured News

U.S. Interior watchdog probes Zinke over real estate deal

By Timothy Gardner

Don't Miss Sarah Jones's Essay On Kristi Noem Titled Predatory Is The Point On The Daily.

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Interior Department’s watchdog said in a letter to lawmakers on Wednesday that it was investigating a Montana real estate deal involving a foundation set up by Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and a development group backed by the chairman of oil service company Halliburton.

The letter, a copy of which was seen by Reuters, said that the agency’s inspector general had launched the probe on July 16 to look into a development deal in Zinke’s hometown of Whitefish, Montana, between a group funded by David Lesar, Halliburton’s chairman, and the foundation.

Neither the inspector general’s office nor the Interior Department, which comments on behalf of Zinke, replied to requests for comment.

Halliburton spokeswoman Emily Mir said in an email that Lesar’s “personal investment in a small land development in Montana has nothing to do with Halliburton, and the company is confident that any actions of the Interior Department will not be influenced by (his) personal investment.”

The deal, reported by Politico in June, included a hotel, retail shops and microbrewery.

The brewery would be set aside for Zinke and his wife Lola to own and operate, Whitefish city planner said in the Politico story, though the developer said at the time that no final decision had been made.

Politico reported that Zinke’s foundation, the Great Northern Veterans Peace Park Foundation, had pledged in writing to allow the Lesar-backed developer to build a parking lot for its Peace Park project.

Zinke’s wife Lola is president of the foundation, a position she took over from her husband when he became secretary.

The letter, first reported by Politico, was addressed to U.S. Representatives Raul Grijalva, Donald McEachin and Jared Huffman, all Democrats, who had asked the inspector general to investigate if Zinke had used taxpayer resources to advance land developments.

The letter said the investigation had been opened because the lawmakers “expressed special concern about the reported funding by a top executive at Halliburton and assuring decisions that affect the nation’s welfare are not compromised by individual self-enrichment.”

Zinke has pushed for opening federal lands for energy development as the Trump administration pursues a policy of energy dominance to maximize production of crude, natural gas and coal.

The Interior Department’s inspector general has also been investigating Zinke over travel issues since late last year after reports that he had used a private plane owned by an oil executive while secretary.

(Reporting by Timothy Gardner)

Recent Posts

Trump Melts Down In Michigan And Starts Yelling Profanities

Donald Trump could not hold it together to do two campaign events in a day,…

4 hours ago

Lauren Boebert Tries And Fails To Rip Down Palestinian Flag At Campus Protest

Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) showed up at a George Washington University campus protest and tried…

5 hours ago

Trump Embarrasses Himself Trying To Campaign In Wisconsin

Donald Trump tried to campaign in Wisconsin on his day off from court, and the…

6 hours ago

A New Sign That Trump Has A Big RFK Jr. Problem

A sign of Trump fatigue on the right as conservative media has embraced RFK Jr.…

10 hours ago

Stephen Colbert Says He Needs Trump To Be In Jail

On The Late Show, Stephen Colbert responded to the judge's threat to lock the ex-president…

22 hours ago

Even Trump’s Own Lawyer Seems To Think He’s Going To Get Convicted

Alina Habba went on Fox News and acknowledged that a "blue jury" may ultimately convict…

1 day ago