“Strange Method” of Cashiers Check Deposit Raises Questions for Stephanie Villafuerte, Ritter Inaugural Fund
by Ben DeGrow | 6:56 pm, November 30, 2009 | Comments Off
You thought Governor Bill Ritter’s ethical troubles with his inaugural fund were old news? You thought the saga of Ritter staffer and Obama US Attorney nominee Stephanie Villafuerte would only make one headline today?
Well, my friends, things may have grown much more intriguing with the revelation in a new investigation from my Independence Institute colleague Todd Shepherd:
A check for $30,000 written by Greg Kolomitz to repay the “Ritter Inaugural Fund” was not immediately deposited into that account, but rather was turned into a cashiers check by Stephanie Villafuerte.
Villafuerte is currently deputy chief of staff for the Governor, and is also nominated by President Obama to become the next Federal attorney for Colorado.
An attorney for the inaugural fund said that the monies were in fact deposited into the inaugural account less than 24 hours after the cashiers check was created, but simultaneously refused to release the bank statements verifying that claim.
Given Villafuerte’s close involvement in the political persecution of former ICE agent Cory Voorhis and the timing of the fund transfer immediately after an audit report on the inaugural fund had been filed, the findings and counter claims in this story provide a lot more questions than answers.
It sure looks like time for some more digging by political reporters, and time for some tough questions for Bill Ritter and Stephanie Villafuerte.
Comments
Praise for PPC From Our Lefty "Fan"
- "Zany-ass bombast-entertainment...Hackneyed weirdo communist pseudo-nostalgia" --Alan Franklin, ProgressNow
Featured Posts
- Oklahoma’s Constitutional Amendment Would Pit Taxpayers Against Unions
It takes courage to stand up against the onslaught. I hope this young man from Oklahoma knows what’s coming and is ready for it.
- Friday’s Unemployment Numbers: Correcting the Corrections
- Romney Woos Grand Junction, Earns Sen. King’s Endorsement
- The Borking of Netflix: movie service finds privacy law to be an inconvenience
- Rich Americans Are Fleeing the Country
- ObamaCare Advisers Predict Death of Health Insurance Companies
- Housing: Prices and Ownership Still Correcting




