Hampton case sends a message to lobbyists, Capitol Hill staff
Its salacious subtext aside, the indictment of former Nevada Senate staffer Doug Hampton on allegations he violated federal lobbying restrictions will reverberate among congressional staff and lobbyists, according to ethics attorneys quoted in Roll Call this morning.
A federal grand jury indicted Hampton on charges he violated a conflict of interest law in contacting his former boss, Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev., beginning weeks after he started work as a lobbyist in the spring of 2008. The federal "revolving door" law enacted in 2007 banned such contacts for a year.
Hampton has accused Ensign of being complicit in the scheme by calling Nevada friends and finding him lobbying work, and by making his staff available to help Hampton clients.
And in soap opera fashion, the entire episode stemmed from Ensign and Hampton’s wife conducting an extramarital affair, which led to Hampton leaving Ensign’s staff and needing a new career.
Defense attorney Stanley Brand, a former House counsel, told Roll Call the lobbying ban has become "a standard feature" when the Justice Department builds corruption cases.
“Obviously the department is relying on this now routinely where they think it’s appropriate,” Brand said. “It should put everybody on notice.”