Businessman and longtime DC government contractor Jeffrey Thompson was charged today with two conspiracy charges in connection with allegations that he funded a “shadow campaigns” behalf of numerous local and federal candidates, according to a criminal information document filed by US Attorney Ron Machen. A criminal information suggests that Thompson will plead guilty when he appears in court Monday afternoon after a three-year investigation.
Thompson is charged with one federal count of conspiracy to defraud and one District count of conspiracy to commit a crime. According to the charging document, Thompson allegedly used the businesses he ran to funnel $668,800 in “excessive and unreported” donations to a mayoral campaign in 2010. Prosecutors also allege that Thompson acted “in coordination with and in support” of the candidate. Details in the criminal information make clear that Mayor Vince Gray’s campaign was the beneficiary.
Additionally, Thompson is also charged with financing illicit donations to seven other candidates in city elections, including a 2006 mayoral candidate who received about $278,000 in unreported aid, several candidates in races for at-large seats on the DC Council, and candidates in wards 1, 4, and 6.
The federal count against Thompson alleges he funneled unreported money to at least 13 candidates between 2006 and 2012, including a 2008 presidential campaign that received $608,750. A guilty plea entered last year by one of Thompson’s former associates revealed that effort was waged on behalf of Hillary Clinton.
In total, proseuctors allege that Thompson, going back to 2006, spent almost $2 million to illicitly wire money to more than a dozen candidates for District offices, including schemes that used as many as 75 individuals to make straw contributions.
But the biggest single shadow campaign Thompson is accused of financing is the one on behalf of Gray’s 2010 mayoral bid. The criminal information does not mention the mayor by name, though Machen’s investigation has yielded guilty pleas by four of Gray’s former campaign associates. Gray himself has not been accused of any wrongding.
Gray’s 2014 campaign manager, Chuck Thies, sounds vindicated about the Thompson charges. “Mayor Gray called for this investigation,” he tells Washingtonian by text message. “People who break laws must face justice.”
In a later statement from Gray’s campaign, Thies says he expects Gray’s opponents in the current mayoral campaign to add the charges against Thompson to their talking points.
“We urge the media to be cautious when reporting the facts of this case and avoid the innuendo that our political opponents will gladly promote as gospel,” Thies says.
Thompson will appear in US District Court at 1:30 PM today. Read the criminal information below.
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.
Jeffrey Thompson Charged With Conspiracy
Thompson is charged with financing "shadow campaigns" on behalf of DC Mayor Vince Gray and many other candidates.
Businessman and longtime DC government contractor Jeffrey Thompson was charged today with two conspiracy charges in connection with allegations that he funded a “shadow campaigns” behalf of numerous local and federal candidates, according to a criminal information document filed by US Attorney Ron Machen. A criminal information suggests that Thompson will plead guilty when he appears in court Monday afternoon after a three-year investigation.
Thompson is charged with one federal count of conspiracy to defraud and one District count of conspiracy to commit a crime. According to the charging document, Thompson allegedly used the businesses he ran to funnel $668,800 in “excessive and unreported” donations to a mayoral campaign in 2010. Prosecutors also allege that Thompson acted “in coordination with and in support” of the candidate. Details in the criminal information make clear that Mayor Vince Gray’s campaign was the beneficiary.
Additionally, Thompson is also charged with financing illicit donations to seven other candidates in city elections, including a 2006 mayoral candidate who received about $278,000 in unreported aid, several candidates in races for at-large seats on the DC Council, and candidates in wards 1, 4, and 6.
The federal count against Thompson alleges he funneled unreported money to at least 13 candidates between 2006 and 2012, including a 2008 presidential campaign that received $608,750. A guilty plea entered last year by one of Thompson’s former associates revealed that effort was waged on behalf of Hillary Clinton.
In total, proseuctors allege that Thompson, going back to 2006, spent almost $2 million to illicitly wire money to more than a dozen candidates for District offices, including schemes that used as many as 75 individuals to make straw contributions.
But the biggest single shadow campaign Thompson is accused of financing is the one on behalf of Gray’s 2010 mayoral bid. The criminal information does not mention the mayor by name, though Machen’s investigation has yielded guilty pleas by four of Gray’s former campaign associates. Gray himself has not been accused of any wrongding.
Gray’s 2014 campaign manager, Chuck Thies, sounds vindicated about the Thompson charges. “Mayor Gray called for this investigation,” he tells Washingtonian by text message. “People who break laws must face justice.”
In a later statement from Gray’s campaign, Thies says he expects Gray’s opponents in the current mayoral campaign to add the charges against Thompson to their talking points.
“We urge the media to be cautious when reporting the facts of this case and avoid the innuendo that our political opponents will gladly promote as gospel,” Thies says.
Thompson will appear in US District Court at 1:30 PM today. Read the criminal information below.
Jeffrey E. Thompson criminal information by Benjamin Freed
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
Meet DC’s 2025 Tech Titans
The “MAGA Former Dancer” Named to a Top Job at the Kennedy Center Inherits a Troubled Program
White House Seriously Asks People to Believe Trump’s Letter to Epstein Is Fake, Oliver North and Fawn Hall Got Married, and It’s Time to Plan Your Apple-Picking Excursion
Scott Bessent Got in Another Argument With a Coworker; Trump Threatens Chicago, Gets Booed in New York; and Our Critic Has an Early Report From Kayu
Trump Travels One Block From White House, Declares DC Crime-Free; Barron Trump Moves to Town; and GOP Begins Siege of Home Rule
Washingtonian Magazine
September Issue: Style Setters
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
These Confusing Bands Aren’t Actually From DC
Fiona Apple Wrote a Song About This Maryland Court-Watching Effort
The Confusing Dispute Over the Future of the Anacostia Playhouse
Protecting Our Drinking Water Keeps Him Up at Night
More from News & Politics
How a DC Area Wetlands Restoration Project Could Help Clean Up the Anacostia River
Pressure Grows on FBI Leadership as Search for Kirk’s Killer Continues, Kennedy Center Fires More Staffers, and Spotted Lanternflies Are Everywhere
What Is Free DC?
Manhunt for Charlie Kirk Shooter Continues, Britain Fires US Ambassador Over Epstein Connections, and Sandwich Guy Will Get a Jury Trial
Can Two Guys Ride a Rickshaw over the Himalayas? It Turns Out They Can.
Trump Travels One Block From White House, Declares DC Crime-Free; Barron Trump Moves to Town; and GOP Begins Siege of Home Rule
Donald Trump Dines at Joe’s Seafood Next to the White House
White House Seriously Asks People to Believe Trump’s Letter to Epstein Is Fake, Oliver North and Fawn Hall Got Married, and It’s Time to Plan Your Apple-Picking Excursion