Wisconsin Political Speech Raid
Subpoenas hit allies of Scott Walker as his re-election campaign looms.
Updated Nov. 15, 2013 6:53 p.m. ET
Americans learned in the IRS political
targeting scandal that government enforcement power can be used to
stifle political speech. Something similar may be unfolding in
Wisconsin, where a special prosecutor is targeting conservative groups
that participated in the battle over Governor
Scott Walker's
union reforms.
In recent weeks,
special prosecutor
Francis Schmitz
has hit dozens of conservative groups with subpoenas demanding
documents related to the 2011 and 2012 campaigns to recall Governor
Walker and state legislative leaders.
Copies
of two subpoenas we've seen demand "all memoranda, email . . .
correspondence, and communications" both internally and between the
subpoena target and some 29 conservative groups, including Wisconsin and
national nonprofits, political vendors and party committees. The groups
include the League of American Voters, Wisconsin Family Action,
Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce, Americans for
Prosperity—Wisconsin, American Crossroads, the Republican Governors
Association, Friends of Scott Walker and the Republican Party of
Wisconsin.
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker
Associated Press
One subpoena also demands "all
records of income received, including fundraising information and the
identity of persons contributing to the corporation." In other words,
tell us who your donors are.
***
The
probe began in the office of Milwaukee County Assistant District
Attorney Bruce Landgraf, though no one will publicly claim credit for
appointing Mr. Schmitz, the special prosecutor. The investigation is
taking place under Wisconsin's
John Doe
law, which bars a subpoena's targets from disclosing its contents
to anyone but his attorneys. John Doe probes work much like a grand
jury, allowing prosecutors to issue subpoenas and conduct searches,
while the gag orders leave the targets facing the resources of the state
with no way to publicly defend themselves.
That
makes it hard to confirm any details. But one target who did confirm
receiving a subpoena is
Eric O'Keefe,
who realizes the personal risk but wants the public to know what
is going on. Mr. O'Keefe is director of the Wisconsin Club for Growth,
which advocates lower taxes, limited government and other conservative
priorities. He has worked in political and policy circles for three
decades, including stints as national director of the Libertarian Party
in 1980 and a director of the Cato Institute, and he helped to found the
Center for Competitive Politics, which focuses on protecting political
speech.
Mr. O'Keefe says he received his
subpoena in early October. He adds that at least three of the targets
had their homes raided at dawn, with law-enforcement officers turning
over belongings to seize computers and files.
Mr.
O'Keefe and other sources say they don't know the genesis of the probe,
and Mr. Schmitz declined comment. The first public reference appeared
in an October 21 blog post by
Daniel Bice
of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Mr. Bice is well known for his
Democratic sources.
The kitchen-sink
subpoenas deserve skepticism considering their subject and targets. The
disclosure of conservative political donors has become a preoccupation
of the political left across the country. In the heat of the fight over
Governor Walker's reforms, unions urged boycotts of Walker contributors
and DemocraticUnderground.com published a list of Walker donors for
boycotting.
The subpoena demand for the
names of donors to nonprofit groups that aren't legally required to
disclose them is especially troubling. Readers may recall that the
Cincinnati office of the IRS sent the tax-exempt applications of several
conservative groups to the ProPublica news website in 2012.
The
subpoenas don't spell out a specific allegation, but the demands
suggest the government may be pursuing a theory of illegal campaign
coordination by independent groups during the recall elections. If
prosecutors are pursuing a theory that independent conservative groups
coordinated with candidate campaigns during the recall, their goal may
be to transform the independent expenditures into candidate committees
after the fact, requiring revision of campaign-finance disclosures and
possible criminal charges.
***
Another
reason for skepticism is the probe's timing as Mr. Walker's 2014
re-election campaign looms. This is the second such investigation
against Mr. Walker in three and a half years, following one that began
in the office of Milwaukee County Democratic District Attorney
John Chisholm
in spring 2010.
That probe
examined whether staffers used government offices for political purposes
while Mr. Walker was Milwaukee County Executive, but after three years
turned up nothing on Mr. Walker and embarrassingly little else. The
final charges included a case of an aide sending campaign emails on
county time, two Walker aides stealing money, and charges of child
enticement against the domestic partner of a former staffer.
Mr.
Walker's Democratic recall opponent, Milwaukee Mayor
Tom Barrett,
nonetheless used the probe against the Governor, saying in a
debate that "I have a police department that arrests felons, he has a
practice of hiring them." So it's notable that the new batch of
subpoenas began flying just days before Democrat
Mary Burke
announced her candidacy for Governor. District Attorneys are
partisan elected officials in Wisconsin, and Mr. Landgraf works for Mr.
Chisholm. Neither of them returned our call for comment.
The
investigation's focus on campaign-finance law also falls into the
wheelhouse of the Government Accountability Board, Wisconsin's political
speech regulator. The GAB, which is made up of retired judges appointed
by the Governor, has a history of pushing aggressive regulations of
issue advertising. Mr. O'Keefe's Wisconsin Club for Growth has fought in
court with the GAB over regulating political speech.
A
person who has seen one of the Wisconsin search warrants tells us that
the warrants were executed based on the request of
Dean Nickel,
who filed an affidavit for probable cause. Mr. Nickel is a former
head of the Wisconsin Department of Justice Public Integrity Unit and
has worked as an investigator for the GAB. Mr. Nickel told us he is a
contractor for the GAB but wouldn't discuss the John Doe probe. GAB
Director and General Counsel
Kevin Kennedy
declined to comment.
***
Perhaps
the probe will turn up some nefarious activity that warrants this
subpoena monsoon and home raids. But in the meantime the effect is to
limit political speech by intimidating these groups from participating
in the 2014 campaign. Stifling allies of Mr. Walker would be an enormous
in-kind contribution to Democrats. Even if no charges are filed, the
subpoenas will have served as a form of speech suppression.
Mr.
O'Keefe told us that the flurry of subpoenas "froze my communications
and frightened many allies and vendors of the pro-taxpayer political
movement in Wisconsin and across the country." Even if no one is ever
convicted of a crime, he says, "the process is the punishment."
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