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FBI searches home of PUCO chief

FBI agents remove items from the German Village home of Public Utilities Commission of Ohio Chairman Sam Randazzo in Columbus, Ohio on Monday, Nov. 16, 2020. (Adam Cairns/The Columbus Dispatch via AP)

CLEVELAND — An FBI spokesperson confirmed Monday that agents conducted a search of a Columbus home owned by the chairman of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio earlier in the day.

Agents were seen carrying boxes from a home owned by PUCO chair Sam Randazzo and his wife. The FBI declined to provide details about why the home was searched.

PUCO spokesperson Matt Schilling on Monday said the agency has no comment or information about the search and that Randazzo was not available for an interview.

Randazzo was appointed chairman of the PUCO in April 2019 after working for decades as an attorney specializing in public utility law and as a lobbyist. He is considered one of the most knowledgeable experts on public utility law in the state.

Republican Gov. Mike DeWine selected Randazzo as chair from a list of four names submitted by the PUCO’s Nominating Council. The state Senate then confirmed his appointment.

The PUCO chair is one of the most powerful positions in state government, wielding extraordinary influence on matters regarding the regulation of utilities in the state to include utility profits and rates charged to customers. As PUCO chair, Randazzo also is chair of the Ohio Power Siting Board, which has oversight on approval for new electric-generating facilities.

The search comes nearly four months after the FBI arrested then-Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder and four others in connection to a $60 million bribery scheme funded by Akron-based FirstEnergy Corp., which was seeking a $1 billion legislative bailout for its two aging nuclear power plants in the state.

Householder and four others were subsequently indicted on racketeering charges in federal court. Householder has pleaded not guilty. Two of the men indicted with Householder have pleaded guilty to charges. The FBI would not confirm whether Monday’s search was related to that bribery probe.

Randazzo resigned as a partner in the Columbus office of the Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, law firm McNees Wallace & Nurick at the end of 2018. He served on PUCO Nominating Council from 2007 until 2019, which required him to file annual annual financial reports with the Ohio Ethics Commission during that time.

In 2007, Randazzo reported earning $750,000 from an organization incorporated in 2003 called IEU-Ohio Administration, describing his work as legal and management consulting. He reported $1.1 million in income from the business in 2008.

Randazzo listed IEU-Ohio Administration earnings through 2019. Starting in 2009, officials were no longer required to report specific amounts income from sources listed on the report.

In the resume he submitted in his application for the PUCO appointment, he said he began working as general counsel for a group called Industrial Energy Users-Ohio in 1992. On its website, the group describes itself as a “non-profit trade organization of energy-intensive Ohio industrial and commercial manufacturers working for reliable energy supplies at reasonable prices.”

In 2010, he began reporting earnings from the law firm and a company called MRS-Energy LLC. In 2011, he began reporting income from a company called Sustainability Funding Alliance.

MRS-Energy was listed on his financial filings through 2018 and Sustainability Funding Alliance through 2019.

Schilling, the PUCO spokesperson, previously declined an Associated Press request to provide information about MRS Energy LLC, Sustainability Funding Alliance or IEU-Ohio Administration. He said Monday that he didn’t have any information about the companies referenced.

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AP writers Julie Carr Smyth and Andrew Welsh-Huggins in Columbus contributed to this report.

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