Acting AG’s forms show nonprofit pay

Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker was paid more than $900,000 by a conservative nonprofit in the 21 months before joining the Justice Department, according to his financial-disclosure form released Tuesday.

The documents make clear that Whitaker’s main income in the years immediately before Trump’s election came from his role as the executive director of a nonprofit called the Foundation for Accountability and Civic Trust, which he joined in 2014.

Financed by a conservative political fund whose donors are undisclosed, the nonprofit hired right-leaning firms for publicity and legal services. Whitaker oversaw attacks on several of Trump’s favorite targets, including Democrats Hillary Clinton, Elizabeth Warren and Kamala Harris.

Whitaker also disclosed receiving $15,000 from CNN for media appearances and “consulting fees,” as well as a salary of $103,400 from his own law and consulting firm. He reported earning $1,875 in legal fees from World Patent Marketing, a Florida company accused by U.S. regulators last year of bilking consumers out of millions of dollars.

The form offers the first formal insight into Whitaker’s legal and financial background since he was installed as acting attorney general by President Donald Trump on Nov. 7. Whitaker had previously served for 13 months as the chief of staff to Attorney General Jeff Sessions, whom Trump forced out.

Whitaker filed his financial form as required when he worked for Sessions, but it has been going through revisions based on reviews by Justice Department ethics officials.

The form was released after critics — including top House Democrats who will take over control of key committees in January — demanded that the Justice Department make it public.

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