Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders ’ office potentially violated state laws on purchasing, state property and government records when it purchased a $19,000 lectern for the Republican governor that’s prompted nationwide attention, an audit requested by lawmakers said Monday.

Legislative auditors referred the findings in the long-awaited audit of the lectern to local prosecutors and the attorney general, and lawmakers planned to hold a hearing Tuesday on the report. The report cited several potential legal violations, including paying for the lectern before it was delivered and the handling of records regarding the purchase.

Sanders’ office, which has dismissed questions about the lectern, called the audit’s findings “deeply flawed” and a “waste of taxpayer resources and time.”

  • ThePowerOfGeek
    link
    English
    657 months ago

    How the hell did that thing cost $19k? It looks like something you’d get from a 1970s Ikea.

    Ohh right… Nepotism and/or money laundering!

    • circuscritic
      link
      fedilink
      597 months ago

      None of the above. It was used to hide improper/illegal expenditures. If I recall correctly it was vacation expenses, or something else that stupid. Basically lecturn cost $1k or $2k, and the rest got funneled back to cover those costs.

      • @modeler
        link
        357 months ago

        That lectern as pictured is a cheap copy worth way less than $1000. The allegation is that she paid her friend for costs of a trip to Paris of which there are social media photos at expensive nightlife locations.

      • FuglyDuck
        link
        English
        117 months ago

        That’s…. Pretty much text book money laundering.

        • @Cornelius_Wangenheim
          link
          317 months ago

          It’s embezzlement. Money laundering is taking illegally acquired money and making it appear to be legitimate.

        • circuscritic
          link
          fedilink
          3
          edit-2
          7 months ago

          It has literally nothing to do with money laundering.

          It’s theft/embezzlement, and probably some other financial fraud related crimes, none of which are money laundering.

          • FuglyDuck
            link
            English
            17 months ago

            Not exactly.

            They could have just straight up embezzled it. The purpose of buying something overpriced is to make that purchase seem reasonable on a line item.

            The lectern itself is money laundering to cover up embezzlement, yes. Because some one is gonna notice 15k missing pretty quickly.

    • @Jimmycakes
      link
      87 months ago

      It’s art ok. You wouldn’t understand.

      • @AnUnusualRelic
        link
        English
        57 months ago

        It’s not just any lectern, it’s an advanced lectern. You can put papers on it and stuff, it can even hold a microphone!

        • Matt
          link
          fedilink
          English
          37 months ago

          Lecture 2.0 Advanced Ultra Pro