State Investigates Political Contributions of S.P. Firm's Employees
- Print print this page
- Discuss 10 comments, Blog about
Advertisement
Hobbs Upchurch & Associates is cooperating with the North Carolina State Board of Elections in an investigation of campaign finance contributions.
A statement issued by a company representative says that the Southern Pines engineering firm, along with other contributors, has been contacted concerning these inquiries.
“Hobbs Upchurch & Associates, P.A. has fully and completely cooperated with the State Board of Elections,” according to the statement. “Until the board’s inquires are completed, Hobbs Upchurch & Associates, P.A., or its employees cannot comment further on the matter.”
The statement was released today following calls by The Pilot to the firm’s Southern Pines office. Company leaders Fred Hobbs and David Upchurch were not available at the time.
Hobbs is a former state senator and prominent Democratic Party leader. He was a delegate to the National Democratic Convention in 2004.
Reports from state sources say that employees of the engineering firm donated more than $70,000 to the campaign of state Sen. Marc Basnight, a Dare County Democrat and Senate president pro tempore.
“As previously reported, the North Carolina State Board of Elections is making inquiries into the donations and expenditures of several political campaigns, including former Republican gubernatorial candidate Pat McCrory, Gov. Beverly Perdue and Senate President Pro Tem Marc Basnight,” the statement said.
State law bars one individual from making a campaign contribution under someone else’s name. It also bars corporations from making donations to candidates.
Wilmington businessman Rusty Carter pleaded guilty plea last month to misdemeanor charges of making illegal contributions through his employees. He was fined $5,000 and sentenced to one year of probation. As a condition of probation, he was barred from making political donations for two years.
Basnight forfeited $84,000 received from Carter employees, and Perdue forfeited $64,000.
Hobbs Upchurch has won more than $570 million in grants from state and federal sources, such as the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the North Carolina Rural Center and the state Clean Water Management Trust Fund, according to a story on the website of Raleigh television station WRAL.
Basnight told the station that he has no reason to questions donations from Hobbs Upchurch employees but said he would forfeit any funds determined by the state board to be improper.
Hobbs Upchurch holds a number of contracts awarded by Moore County, but none of these projects is involved in the current inquiry.
Contact Florence Gilkeson by e-mail at florence@thepilot.com.
More like this story
Advertisement














Comments
SoPines4ever 2 years, 11 months ago
I can't imagine Hobbs Upchurch employees donating $70,000 to Mr. Basnight. That would mean if an employee donated the maximum, $5,000, it would have taken 35 of them for that total. Sounds fishy to me.
SCCstudent 2 years, 11 months ago
Isn't that called "back door politics"? Elected officials in Washington bring taxpayer money back to their respective states to be funneled to contributors as opposed to those who pay the bills in the form of tax rebates? No supprise that this is still going on in Politics. Visit http://www.opensecrets.org for a real eye opener, and check out Howard Coble and Richard Burr.
gardengirl 2 years, 11 months ago
Integrity. Does it exist? How do people & politicians (they're not people - haha) live with themselves? This is disappointing & reprehensible - shame on you Hobbs Upchurch & Associates!!
NOTW 2 years, 11 months ago
No offense SoPines4ever, but your math is not right. Maybe you're just checking to see if anybody is paying attention. ;)
SoPines4ever 2 years, 11 months ago
@NOTW
Sorry for the math error! Maybe one of TODA's senior moments creeping in years too early! But still, 14 people donating $5000 each, or 35 people donating $2000 each, to a state senator from the coastal region? Please...
theonewithsense 2 years, 11 months ago
Who are the real crooks? The politicians or the businessmen?
Nothing will happen but a slap on the wrist. The businessmen will still find a way to buy the government contracts from shady politicians.
SoPines4ever 2 years, 11 months ago
Upon further investigation, this article is very misleading. Read this,
http://www.wral.com/news/local/politics/story/7704052/
This link says that the $70,000 in contributions were over a 10 year period. That's much more believable than leading the readers to think it was in one year.