Saturday, March 15, 2025

A New Beltway Mystery: Follow the Biden EPA Money

A New Beltway Mystery: Follow the Biden EPA Money


The biggest heist in human history.

Here's what makes this potentially criminal, according to the reporting of Real Clear Investigation's Jim Varney: They didn't just push out billions to their political cronies, but then they covered their tracks attempting to make it impossible to trace the money.

In law, that is evidence of conscienceness of guilt. If you shoot someone while hunting, you could claim that you thought your friend was a deer so you didn't have a guilty mind.

But if you attempt to conceal the body, or flee the scene and pretend you weren't there, juries can infer from your actions that you knew you were guilty of a crime.    

... a political deal was struck between the White House's Office of Management and Budget and EPA, current agency officials told RealClearInvestigations. As a hedge against future administration attempts to curb the program, the deal classified the now-suspect $20 billion in a novel way making it hard to track.

Zeldin has asked the EPA's inspector general and the Department of Justice to investigate the unorthodox arrangement.


...

The fund was broken into three parts. The two largest, the National Clean Investment Fund (NCIF) and the Clean Communities Investment Accelerator (CCIA), received huge sums, totaling $20 billion. Notably, as RCI reported last October, grants went to nonprofits that had paltry assets, had been granted their nonprofit status only the month before, or had people associated with them that had previously served various federal or state Democratic administrations. For example, the Coalition for Green Capital, Wise's former outfit, was awarded $5.1 billion.

Three weeks later, an arrangement was made between OMB and EPA in which the money was designated "non-exchange" rather than "exchange" -- a first for EPA funds, according to current officials. That label allowed for the money to be moved to recipients in lump funds rather than parceled out over the length of the deals with the nonprofits, which in most cases were slated to run until 2029, 2030, or later, records show.

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