“False and without merit,” says Frederick. Or is it?
By JR Hoeft | Thursday, March 12th, 2009 | PoliticsIn the AP story just released on the RPV saga, Chairman Jeff Frederick stated that the charges were “false and without merit.” One of charges he was speaking of were:
1. Failure to transmit, in a timely manner, online contributions made to the Republican Party of Virginia and processed by his own company. Withholding 7% of online contributions made to the RPV for a period of weeks during the summer of 2008 after repeatedly assuring the Executive Committee that he was not using his company as a vendor for RPV.
Of note is this FEC form obtained by Bearing Drift is a payment from RPV of $1384 in October 2008 to “ChargedContribution.com”. This site is managed by Gen-X Strategies – Frederick’s firm.
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About the author
Conservative to the core; liberal with his opinion! J.R. has been involved in politics for over a decade and has worked on several campaigns in Hampton Roads. He has served on the Executive Committee of the Republican Party of Chesapeake and the Central Committee of the Republican Party of Virginia. He is also the director of “Blogs United” in Virginia. E-mail J.R.. Follow J.R. on Twitter.







Comments
6 Responses to "“False and without merit,” says Frederick. Or is it?"
[...] for RPV. [ed. Chairman Frederick called this allegation "False and without merit". Please see this post which includes a payment to Frederick's [...]
[...] Drift has the entire letter and a they do a little digging of their own, countering Frederick’s claim that he did nothing wrong with party [...]
Deleted by editor. Had nothing to do with the thread.
[...] Second, Frederick supporters asked for incontravertable proof. Got that. [...]
What a wonderful tact to disrupt the party, right before the Gubenitorial campaign. Who’d of thought the VRP would find such a creative way to destory themselves and make the taking of the House, Senate and Governor’s mansion so easy!
[...] “False and without merit” is how Frederick described it at first… until a simple FEC search turned up about $1,384 of merit. [...]
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