WASHINGTON – A former candidate for the U.S. House of
Representatives was sentenced today after pleading guilty to wire fraud and
willfully violating the Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA) by operating
fraudulent and unregistered political action committees.
Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the
Justice Department’s Criminal Division and Assistant Director in Charge Nancy
McNamara of the FBI’s Washington Field Office made the announcement.
Harold Russell Taub, 30, of Cranston, Rhode Island, was
sentenced to serve 36 months in prison followed by three years of supervised
release by U.S. District Judge William E. Smith for the District of Rhode
Island. Taub was also ordered to pay
$1,102,439 in restitution to the victims of his crimes.
According to Taub’s guilty plea, in late 2016, Taub began
soliciting donations to an organization he called Keeping America in Republican
Control (KAIRC), which he represented to be a legitimate political committee
organized in accordance with federal law to support Republican candidates at
the state and federal level. In March
2018, Taub began soliciting donations to another purported political action
committee, Keeping Ohio in Republican Control (KOIRC), with the stated purpose
of supporting Republican candidates in Ohio.
Taub collected a total of approximately $1,630,439 in contributions to
KAIRC and KOIRC, but never registered either entity with the FEC or made required
reports to the FEC, as required by FECA.
Taub admitted as part of the plea that he held KAIRC and
KOIRC out as legitimate, federally-registered political actions committees on
his website, in social media posts, and in email solicitations that reached
hundreds of donors. Taub represented that
all of KAIRC and KOIRC’s staff were volunteers and that “100 percent” of
donations were used to support candidates.
However, of the more than $1.6 million in contributions to KAIRC and
KOIRC, Taub used more than $1 million for purely personal expenses. In furtherance of his fraudulent scheme, Taub
also repeatedly used the name of a former Ambassador and high-level military
officer without the knowledge or permission of the person, even after being
instructed not to do so.
The FBI investigated the case. Trial Attorney Peter M. Nothstein of the
Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section is prosecuting the case.
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