Read it here: Federal election complaint against Crist consultant
Friday, November 6th, 2009 by Michael C. BenderUPDATE: Here are some thoughts on the complaint from Paul Ryan of the Campaign Legal Center, who weighed in at our request:
The complaint alleges that the activity is illegal because, it alleges, Heffley is a “common vendor” to both the Crist campaign and the Web site. However, the complaint goes on to acknowledge that the Crist campaign isn’t paying Heffley and the complaint provides no evidence that the Web operation is paying Heffley. A person or company is only a “common vendor” under federal campaign finance laws if they’re being paid by both the candidate and the outside group that’s running campaign ads, Web communications, etc.
At any rate, it’s entirely appropriate for a person who suspects the law is being broken to file a complaint with the FEC and I don’t mean to imply otherwise here. … It then becomes the FEC’s job to investigate to learn the facts and determine whether the law’s been broken. … If Crist was behind the Web site, or if coordination occurred between Crist’s campaign and someone who paid for the Web site, either through a common vendor or otherwise, then federal law was likely broken.
Here’s a copy of the complaint Tampa Republican Club President Liz Wessel filed this week with the Federal Election Commission against Rich Heffley, one of Gov. Charlie Crist’s top political consultants.
Wessel said there was something “shady and unethical” about Heffley working on an anonymous Web site aimed at embarrassing Crist’s U.S. Senate primary opponent, Marco Rubio. Heffley has maintained Crist’s campaign had nothing to do with the site.
“I don’t think Charlie Crist is playing by the rules,” she said. “He’s reflecting poorly on all Republicans.”
Wessel voted for Crist in 2006 and donated $150 to his campaign that year (her husband gave Crist $4,800 in September). But she said Crist has “let the people of Florida down.”



Where's the money? Use The Post's interactive database of who wants and who's getting federal dollars.
Use these interactive graphics to find and contact Palm Beach County and Treasure Coast legislators.
Sentenced to die for crimes judged heinous and cruel, inmates await execution in a 9 feet by 6 feet cell.