Representative Matt Gaetz (R-FL) published a detailed letter on Thursday to the House Ethics Committee declaring he will no longer cooperate in the investigation against him. The letter and its attached exhibits provide overwhelming evidence that the ethics investigations star witness Joel Greenberg fabricated allegations that Gaetz engaged in drug use and sexual contact with a 17-year-old female as part of an effort to get his criminal prison sentence reduced.
Additionally, Gaetz accuses the committee of purposefully circumventing several procedural norms to prolong the ethics investigation past its typical limit as an act of political retribution.
“It seems the fix is in,” Gaetz writes to the House Ethics Committee. He adds: “The Committee has refused to establish an Investigative Subcommittee, as is customary, perhaps because doing so would have time-limited this investigation long ago, and diluted the influence of those on the full committee who are seeking revenge.” Former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) has pursued several attempts to remove Gaetz from Congress stemming from the latter’s successful ouster of the California Republican from power last year.
The Florida Congressman notes that the Ethics Committee has repeatedly “released public statements which cast [him] in a negative light” but chosen to ignore the plethora of exculpatory evidence he has provided. In a significant revelation, Gaetz details testimony from a jailhouse informant who has provided testimony that exonerates him entirely.
According to the informant who met Joel Greenberg in prison, the disgraced Florida politician—who is in prison for sex trafficking and financial fraud—is colluding with his victim to frame Gaetz. Greenberg hopes that by offering damning testimony—notably absent physical evidence—against Gaetz, federal officials will see fit to reduce his prison sentence. Additionally, the informant states that Greenberg’s sex trafficking victim, at the time a 17-year-old female, is working with Greenberg in exchange for monetary compensation.
Gaetz’s letter cites a Florida civil lawsuit revealing text messages Greenberg sent in which he claims to be paying for his victim’s own attorneys. In addition, Gaetz notes that he has provided the committee with evidence that the 17-year-old has subsequently sought monetary compensation from Greenberg in exchange for her backing his accusations.
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My final response to the Ethics Committee: pic.twitter.com/iCBR3fyB6D
— Rep. Matt Gaetz (@RepMattGaetz) September 26, 2024