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Ex-Speaker Hastert conducted business in government office to tune of $1.8 million in taxpayer cost, paper finds

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(MCT) — CHICAGO—Former U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert has conducted private business ventures through a little-known government office that has cost taxpayers about $1.8 million, a Chicago Tribune investigation has found.

Federal law allows former House speakers to maintain a government-financed office for up to five years to wind down matters relating to their tenure. They are not permitted to use the office for financial gain.

But the Tribune found that a secretary in the ex-speaker’s government office used e-mail to coordinate some of his private business meetings and travel, and conducted research on one proposed venture. A suburban Chicago businessman who was involved in the business ventures with Hastert said he met with Hastert at least three times in the government office to discuss the projects.

A government watchdog group, told of the Tribune’s findings, called for an ethics investigation into Hastert’s use of the Office of the Former Speaker in west suburban Yorkville.

Hastert, an Illinois Republican, said he did not misuse the office. “I didn’t work on any private business out of there,” he said.

Hastert, 70, spent nearly 21 years in Congress, leading the House for eight years until January 2007 and leaving later that year. He now works as a lobbyist for Dickstein Shapiro in Washington and has a consulting business, Hastert & Associates, in Illinois. Meantime, he collects three government pensions totaling about $106,000 a year.

Court records, interviews and dozens of e-mails link the Office of the Former Speaker to J. David John, a Burr Ridge businessman who made six of the e-mails public in a lawsuit in DuPage County against Wheaton College, a small, evangelical Protestant institution.

John, 48, and Hastert are both graduates of Wheaton. John said in court papers that he met Hastert about 16 years ago, and both men wrestled at Wheaton and remain fans of the sport.

John graduated from Wheaton in 1985 and later earned a master’s degree from Columbia University and an MBA from the University of Chicago. He is the managing U.S. partner for Interstate, a London-based company that specializes in product and brand identity and has worked with Formula One auto racing.

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