Arizona attorney general to investigate Gov. Hobbs for alleged ‘pay to play’
A possible "pay to play" scandal has hit the governor's office with accusations involving a foster care facility. Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes is investigating into allegations of a potential "pay to play" scandal involving Gov. Katie Hobbs, following a report that alleges that Hobbs rewarded a high-dollar political donor with taxpayer dollars to care for foster children. The local group home Sunshine Residential Homes, a major donor to the governor and the state Democratic Party, is also part of the investigation. The report alleges that in exchange, Hobbs directed the Department of Child Services to approve a nearly 60% increase in the daily rate Sunshine residential Homes charges for a child. The Governor's Office called the allegations a partisan attack led by Republicans.

Publicados : 10 meses atrás por Dennis Welch no Politics
PHOENIX (AZFamily) — Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes has opened an investigation into what a state senator called a possible “pay to play” scandal involving Gov. Katie Hobbs.
The case centers on a report that claims Hobbs rewarded a high-dollar political donor with taxpayer dollars to care for foster children.
The local group home Sunshine Residential Homes is also part of this investigation.
According to published reports, the organization is a big donor to the governor and the state Democratic Party.
Over the past couple of years, Sunshine has donated around $400,000 to the two entities. $100,000 of that went directly into the governor’s inaugural fund in December 2022, about a month before Hobbs was sworn in.
In return, Hobbs is accused of directing the Department of Child Services to approve a nearly 60% increase in the daily rate Sunshine Residential Homes charges to care for a child.
The report also claims other child care providers were denied increases.
Republican state Sen. T.J. Shope from Coolidge said the report prompted him to ask Mayes and Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell to look into it.
“The reality is we’re not a prosecutorial entity. The Legislature, we have a prosecutor in the county. We have a prosecutor in the state. They have criminal divisions and civil divisions and they’re going to go ahead and take a look at this and determine whether or not there’s a there, there,” Shope said.
In response, Mayes’ office sent a letter to Mitchell’s office telling them that the attorney general will investigate this issue, not the county attorney.
The Governor’s Office described this as a partisan attack led by Republicans.
See a spelling or grammatical error in our story? Please click here to report it.
Do you have a photo or video of a breaking news story? Send it to us here with a brief description.