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- Trump's Interior Department head Ryan Zinke is out. Here are the ethics probes that plagued the controversial secretary.
Trump's Interior Department head Ryan Zinke is out. Here are the ethics probes that plagued the controversial secretary.
Real estate and microbrewery deal with an oil executive
Potential Hatch Act violation: Florida drilling exemptions
Zinke announced that Florida would be exempt from the Trump administration's plans for an offshore drilling expansion alongside Florida Governor Rick Scott at a January press conference.
Watchdog groups immediately deemed the announcement an attempt to boost Scott’s expected Senate run. Reports in following months found evidence that Trump administration officials had planned for Scott's victory.
OSC confirmed to CNN in April it opened a file on the issue.
Blocked Native American casino proposal after meeting with MGM lobbyists
The Interior Department blocked a casino project proposed by two Native America tribes, the Mohegan and Mashantucket Pequot, after Zinke met with lobbyists from MGM Resorts, who opposed the Native American casinos.
The rejection was later found to be against the advice of federal experts from the Bureau of Indian Affairs. In a lawsuit, the tribes said the decision "was the product of improper political influence."
The Inspector General is conducting the investigation.
Alleged censorship of climate change research
A National Park Service report deleted any mention of humanity's role in climate change shortly after Zinke testified to Congress that he would not censor scientific reports.
The Inspector General is conducting the investigation.
Alleged whistleblower retaliation
Joel Clement, a policy expert at the Interior Department, claimed that he was reassigned after speaking publicly about the effects of climate change on Alaska Native communities and criticizing Zinke.
The OSC opened an investigation in August.
Potential Hatch Act violation: Make America Great Again socks
Zinke tweeted a picture of himself wearing President Trump campaign socks with the Make America Great Again slogan from his official Twitter account on June 26. OSC has previously instructed White House officials to not wear or display the MAGA slogan while on duty and has reportedly reprimanded six administration officials for violating the policy.
OSC confirmed in July that it had opened a case file into Zinke’s tweet.
Discontinued investigations
Several investigations into Zinke's management were discontinued or inconclusive because of lack of evidence or cooperation.
The most notable case is an alleged threat to Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski after she voted against beginning debate on overturning the Affordable Care Act. Zinke allegedly called Murkowski and said the vote could have negative consequences for her state.
Probes from both the inspector general and the Government Accountability Office were forced to close after Murkowski and the Interior Department refused to cooperate.
A probe into three taxpayer-funded chartered flights, including a $12,000 chartered flight after he spoke to a National Hockey League team in Las Vegas. Investigators concluded the trips followed general guidelines, but department staffers did not provide complete information.
Investigations that cleared misconduct allegations
Zinke has been cleared of wrongdoing in a handful of cases into other possible Hatch Act violations.
Investigators found that Zinke did not violate the Hatch Act when he gave a speech to the Golden Knights, a Las Vegas professional hockey team owned by a donor to Zinke’s congressional campaign.
Several of Zinke's trips between March and October 2017 that were a combination of business and political events, including one during which he attended a GOP fundraiser in the Virgin Islands, were also cleared.
Zinke has only been ruled against once
The Inspector General found Zinke violated department policies by having his wife travel with him in government vehicles and tried to sidestep rules to have his wife’s trips covered by taxpayer funding.
The report also found Zinke had weighed making his wife an Interior Department volunteer so she could receive travel benefits. Zinke also brought agency security detail with him on a family vacation, which cost taxpayers more than $25,000.
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