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Home arrow Leading The News arrow Sen. DeMint hit with FEC fine over contributions
Leading The News PDF Print E-mail
Sen. DeMint hit with FEC fine over contributions
Posted: 12/19/08 10:24 AM [ET]

Federal Election Commissioners have approved an agreement by which Sen. Jim DeMint's (R-S.C.) campaign will pay a $25,000 fine for accepting contributions above legal limits, according to files made public Friday.

The freshman senator, who has emerged as a leading conservative voice, accepted $68,000 in excessive contributions during his 2004 bid to replace ex-Sen. Ernest "Fritz" Hollings (D-S.C.). 

Most of the contributions, made during the primary and runoff elections, could have been applied to the general election, though federal law requires donors to be notified of such an application. DeMint’s campaign could not locate those notifications, according to the FEC complaint.

The committee also failed to file nearly two dozen notices of contributions in excess of $1,000, mostly in advance of the primary runoff in which DeMint faced former South Carolina Gov. David Beasley (R). Contributions of that size made within about three weeks of the election must be reported within 48 hours. 

Attorneys for the DeMint campaign said the period requiring 48-hour notices for the runoff began before the primary, when three strong candidates remained in the race. DeMint secured his spot in the runoff by just 1 percent, beating out former South Carolina State Treasurer Thomas Ravenel (R) by a mere 4,000 votes.

DeMint’s campaign agreed to pay the fine and refund $5,000 in contributions above the limit.

The FEC also released judgments against Kalyn Free, who ran for the Democratic nomination in Oklahoma’s 2nd District in 2004, and against Suzanne Haik Terrell (R), who narrowly lost a 2002 challenge to Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.). 

The judgment against Terrell requires the candidate's committee to refund more than $625,000 in contributions and pay a fine of $42,543 for accepting illegal corporate contributions. Several individuals will pay fines ranging from $2,500 to $8,000 for their roles in the campaign.

 
 
 
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