The District’s campaign finance fiasco orchestrated by admitted shadow campaign mastermind Jeffrey Thompson is going to be shaking out for a while, considering another guilty plea from a DC political hand and the unsealing of a court document suggesting more charges could be on the way.
Kelvin Robinson, a former chief of staff to Mayor Anthony Williams, pleaded guilty Tuesday morning to felony charges that he took $33,500 in unreported contributions from Thompson for two DC Council campaigns he waged in 2010.
According to the statement of offense entered with Robinson’s plea, Thompson associate Jeanne Clarke Harris, one of the first to plead guilty in the scandal, wired the money through companies she owned to a firm owned by Robinson.
Thompson, working through Harris, gave Robinson about $12,500 to run for an at-large Council seat. After he aborted that campaign for the Ward 6 race, Robinson told Thompson he would need $90,000 to run that campaign. Thompson furnished $26,000, including $5,025 for office space, $9,800 for direct mail, and about $10,400 for yard signs, posters, and other campaign swag. (Maybe if Thompson had fronted a bit more money, Robinson would have done better than a 25 percent showing against Tommy Wells.)
Robinson, who was charged May 20, is the second DC Council candidate in a week to appear in court in connection with Thompson’s schemes. Last week, former Council member Michael A. Brownwas sentenced to 39 months in federal prison for accepting $55,000 in bribes. Brown’s plea also included evidence he benefitted from Thompson’s largesse multiple times, including his successful 2008 campaign.
More local politicians could be on their way. A March 10 court order in Thompson’s case, unsealed Monday, lists six mayoral and Council candidates— identified only by letters—who could face charges. The exception is “Mayoral Candidate A,” whom Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly ordered prosecutors to name during Thompson’s plea hearing as Mayor Vince Gray.
The Justice Department prefers not to name individuals who are under investigation but not charged (like Gray), but Kollar-Kotelly ordered Gray to be identified because Thompson’s part in Gray’s 2010 run was “necessary” and “integral” to Thompson’s plea. She also noted that it was already publicly known that his 2010 campaign was under investigation.
Kollar-Kotelly left the other five candidates connected to Thompson under wraps because revealing their names “could hinder the ongoing grand jury investigation.”
But thanks to today’s proceeding, we now can identify “DC Council Candidate B” as Robinson. The description of another pseudonymous figure in Thompson’s case—”D.C. Council Candidate D”—matches Council member Vincent Orange, who has said he’s innocent.
Robinson will be sentenced in August and faces between one and 12 months in prison.
Benjamin Freed joined Washingtonian in August 2013 and covers politics, business, and media. He was previously the editor of DCist and has also written for Washington City Paper, the New York Times, the New Republic, Slate, and BuzzFeed. He lives in Adams Morgan.
More Fallout in Jeffrey Thompson Campaign Finance Scandal
An aide to former Mayor Anthony Williams pleads guilty to covering up another shadow campaign.
The District’s campaign finance fiasco orchestrated by admitted shadow campaign mastermind Jeffrey Thompson is going to be shaking out for a while, considering another guilty plea from a DC political hand and the unsealing of a court document suggesting more charges could be on the way.
Kelvin Robinson, a former chief of staff to Mayor Anthony Williams, pleaded guilty Tuesday morning to felony charges that he took $33,500 in unreported contributions from Thompson for two DC Council campaigns he waged in 2010.
According to the statement of offense entered with Robinson’s plea, Thompson associate Jeanne Clarke Harris, one of the first to plead guilty in the scandal, wired the money through companies she owned to a firm owned by Robinson.
Thompson, working through Harris, gave Robinson about $12,500 to run for an at-large Council seat. After he aborted that campaign for the Ward 6 race, Robinson told Thompson he would need $90,000 to run that campaign. Thompson furnished $26,000, including $5,025 for office space, $9,800 for direct mail, and about $10,400 for yard signs, posters, and other campaign swag. (Maybe if Thompson had fronted a bit more money, Robinson would have done better than a 25 percent showing against Tommy Wells.)
Robinson, who was charged May 20, is the second DC Council candidate in a week to appear in court in connection with Thompson’s schemes. Last week, former Council member Michael A. Brown was sentenced to 39 months in federal prison for accepting $55,000 in bribes. Brown’s plea also included evidence he benefitted from Thompson’s largesse multiple times, including his successful 2008 campaign.
More local politicians could be on their way. A March 10 court order in Thompson’s case, unsealed Monday, lists six mayoral and Council candidates— identified only by letters—who could face charges. The exception is “Mayoral Candidate A,” whom Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly ordered prosecutors to name during Thompson’s plea hearing as Mayor Vince Gray.
The Justice Department prefers not to name individuals who are under investigation but not charged (like Gray), but Kollar-Kotelly ordered Gray to be identified because Thompson’s part in Gray’s 2010 run was “necessary” and “integral” to Thompson’s plea. She also noted that it was already publicly known that his 2010 campaign was under investigation.
Kollar-Kotelly left the other five candidates connected to Thompson under wraps because revealing their names “could hinder the ongoing grand jury investigation.”
But thanks to today’s proceeding, we now can identify “DC Council Candidate B” as Robinson. The description of another pseudonymous figure in Thompson’s case—”D.C. Council Candidate D”—matches Council member Vincent Orange, who has said he’s innocent.
Robinson will be sentenced in August and faces between one and 12 months in prison.
Benjamin Freed joined Washingtonian in August 2013 and covers politics, business, and media. He was previously the editor of DCist and has also written for Washington City Paper, the New York Times, the New Republic, Slate, and BuzzFeed. He lives in Adams Morgan.
Most Popular in News & Politics
Washington DC’s 500 Most Influential People of 2025
Ed Martin’s Nomination Is in Trouble, Trump Wants to Rename Veterans Day, and Political Drama Continues in Virginia
“Absolute Despair”: An NIH Worker on Job and Budget Cuts, RFK Jr., and Trump’s First 100 Days
Stumpy Stans Can Now Preorder a Bobblehead of the Beloved Tree
Slugging Makes a Comeback for DC Area Commuters
Washingtonian Magazine
May Issue: 52 Perfect Saturdays
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
DC Might Be Getting a Watergate Museum
DC-Area Universities Are Offering Trump Classes This Fall
Viral DC-Area Food Truck Flavor Hive Has It in the Bag
Slugging Makes a Comeback for DC Area Commuters
More from News & Politics
This Pop-Up Museum Is All About the Teenage Experience
Jeanine Pirro: 5 Things to Know About the Fox News Host Trump Picked to Be DC’s Top Prosecutor
Trump Fires Librarian of Congress, Fox News Host to Be Next Top DC Prosecutor, Possibly Rabid Actual Fox Terrorizes Arlington
9 Embassies to Check Out During the EU Open Houses This Weekend
Trump Yanks Ed Martin’s Nomination
“Les Miz” Castmembers Plan Boycott of Trump Appearance, Ed Martin Wants to Jail a Guy for Trespassing on Federal Property, and We Found Some Swell Turkish Food
DC Might Be Getting a Watergate Museum
The Ultimate Guide on How to Date in DC