Jim McElhatton
Articles by Jim McElhatton
Top GSA official returns to work after opulent Vegas conference
More than a month after he was put on leave when a video surfaced showing him joking about the lavish spending at a taxpayer-funded General Services Administration (GSA) $823,000 conference in Las Vegas, a top official at the agency has quietly returned to his job. Published May 29, 2012
Key figure in lavish Vegas junket leaves GSA
Jeffrey Neely, the central figure in a lavish taxpayer-funded Las Vegas convention that saw magic acts and federal workers sipping martinis on a red carpet, has left the General Services Administration. Published May 24, 2012
High-level officials partied with GSA in Vegas
More than a dozen General Services Administration employees and executives from Washington were listed as attendees for the lavish taxpayer-funded Las Vegas conference in 2010 that featured magic shows, a mind reader and a red-carpet event where federal workers acted like Hollywood movie stars. Published May 23, 2012
GOP senators slam federal judges’ plan for retreat at Maui resort
Two senior Republican senators want to know why a group of federal judges and court employees plan to hold a convention this summer at the Hyatt Regency Maui Resort & Spa, an oceanfront hotel where the website invites prospective guests to "frolic," "pamper" and "play." Published May 21, 2012
More images, videos reveal GSA fun at 2010 Vegas conference
Except for the cocktails, beer and wine, many of the scenes from the now infamous 2010 General Services Administration conference gave the appearance of a fun summer camp. Published May 21, 2012
GSA’s mentalist also a hit at Alabama Army base
A lavish 2010 Las Vegas conference for federal workers costing taxpayers more than $800,000 famously featured the services of a motivational speaker and mind reader, but it wasn't the trade show magician's first government gig. Published May 17, 2012
GSA figure skipped training at posh resort
The Chateau on the Lake in Branson, Mo., bills itself as a resort getaway with poolside attendants, a luxury spa and mountaintop tennis courts overlooking the clear waters of Table Rock Lake. Published May 16, 2012
Howard University Hospital worker accused of selling health records
Six weeks after Howard University Hospital told more than 34,000 patients that a contractor's laptop containing their personal health information had been stolen, federal authorities have filed criminal charges against a hospital worker accused of selling people's medical records. Published May 15, 2012
Figure in brokerage failure out as adviser to EPA
Bradley I. Abelow, a key figure in the collapse of brokerage house MF Global Holdings Ltd., has left his post as chairman of an outside board providing financial advice to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Published May 14, 2012
Documents withheld in GSA scandal
The watchdog agency for the General Services Administration is declining to release hundreds of thousands of documents about travel fraud investigations, saying the disclosure could interfere with ongoing law enforcement proceedings. Published May 10, 2012
Money to Thompson goes back to Williams’ first term
On the day before the D.C. financial control board returned city finances to local officials more than a decade ago, it approved a preliminary $1.8 million, no-bid deal with a company run by health care contractor Jeffrey E. Thompson to open a 24/7 health clinic for low-income residents of Southeast. Published May 8, 2012
Possible D.C. health plan buyer settled Kentucky fraud suit in 2011
One of the companies that has emerged as a potential buyer for a troubled local health plan that covers many D.C. Medicaid recipients settled a $2 million fraud lawsuit filed by Kentucky state officials last year. Published May 8, 2012
Feds wondered who funded push to probe Google
The chairman of the Federal Trade Commission and a top FTC staffer traded emails in 2010 about whether Facebook and other tech companies were secretly funding a nonprofit group pushing hard for regulators to investigate Google Inc. Published May 2, 2012
Secret files missing at National Archives
The National Archives and Records Administration has lost track of dozens of boxes of confidential and secret government files at its records center just outside of Washington, the latest in a series of such incidents spanning more than a decade. Published May 1, 2012
Lawyers in Solyndra case rack up billings
One month after the chief restructuring officer for failed solar panel maker Solyndra reported no wrongdoing by the company, documents show federal investigators have remained busy in recent months scouring the company's financial documents, internal emails and computers. Published April 26, 2012
Thompson cohort pays politicians, not overdue taxes
Myrtle Gomez and her company, Nursing Enterprises Inc., have donated more than $20,000 to D.C. and federal politicians over the years, even as the D.C.-based home health agency has struggled to pay years of overdue taxes. Published April 23, 2012
Thompson’s ties to politically active businesses confirmed
A health insurance plan owned by D.C. contractor Jeffrey E. Thompson has confirmed his ties to a handful of little-known businesses that helped fuel his rise as a highly sought-after fundraiser for city politicians. Published April 17, 2012
Bankruptcy trustee seeks money from Rawlings death settlement
The father of a 14-year old boy fatally shot by an off-duty Metropolitan Police Department officer in 2007 might have thought his legal battle was over when the District settled rather than fight a multimillion-dollar wrongful death lawsuit last fall. Published April 12, 2012
D.C. library official quits, is rehired as consultant
The D.C. Public Library system's chief business officer quietly resigned from his $164,500-a-year job last summer, but quickly won a no-bid contract that pays him the same amount of money for many of the same responsibilities — including helping to manage the library contracts office. Published April 10, 2012
Feds call bankrupt energy firm an ‘empty shell’
Not yet two years after the Department of Energy awarded $43 million in loan guarantees for Beacon Power's energy storage plant, government attorneys are calling the bankrupt solar company and its affiliates little more than "empty shells" benefiting lawyers and other bankruptcy professionals. Published April 9, 2012