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Christie: Acting AG to help 'land' Mueller investigation
03:40 - Source: CNN
CNN  — 

House Democrats are kicking off their investigations into the Trump administration by probing acting Attorney General Matt Whitaker’s connections to a Florida company that was shut down by the Federal Trade Commission over what court documents called “a scam that has bilked thousands of consumers out of millions of dollars.”

The top Democrats on the House Oversight, Judiciary, Intelligence and Energy and Commerce Committees jointly sent seven letters requesting documents and briefings about Whitaker’s role on the advisory board of the company, World Patent Marketing, which was hit with a $26 million judgment when it was shut down earlier this year.

The letters represent an opening salvo of how House Democrats plan to investigate the Trump administration when they take over in January. The letters from the four presumptive incoming chairmen — Reps. Elijah Cummings of Oversight, Jerry Nadler of Judiciary, Adam Schiff of Intelligence and Frank Pallone of Energy and Commerce — suggest the committees are preparing, at least initially, to jointly investigate targets that multiple panels are interested in.

Whitaker’s appointment following the firing of Jeff Sessions last week has been slammed by Democrats as potentially unconstitutional, as well as an effort to undermine special counsel Robert Mueller, whose investigation Whitaker has publicly criticized.

“Our very first witness after January 3, we will subpoena, or we will summon, if necessary subpoena, Mr. Whitaker,” Nadler told CNN’s Jake Tapper Sunday on “State of the Union.”

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On Wednesday, the Justice Department issued a memo saying Whitaker’s appointment was constitutional.

But the new letters show that Democrats’ plans to scrutinize Whitaker’s past in addition to the fact he wasn’t confirmed by the Senate or his potential hostility to the Mueller probe, which he is now supervises.

In 2014, Whitaker was named an advisory board member to World Patent Marketing, a company that promised to help investors get patents. Federal Election Commission filings show the company’s owner donated to Whitaker’s 2014 Senate campaign, and a payment record shows Whitaker was paid at least $9,375 by the company from October 2014 to February 2016.

Court records in the FTC case, which the company agreed to a settlement with the FTC in May, show Whitaker was involved enough to accuse a customer of “blackmail or extortion” when the customer threatened to complain to the Better Business Bureau.

DOJ spokeswoman Kerri Kupec said last week that Whitaker “has said he was not aware of any fraudulent activity. Any stories suggesting otherwise are false.”

The Democratic letters were sent to Whitaker, former World Patent Marketing CEO Scott Cooper, the FTC, the Patent and Trademark Office, the Postal Inspection Service and the New York and Southeast Florida offices of the Better Business Bureau.