Michael R. Blood and Julie Watson, Associated Press
UPDATED Wednesday, August 22, 2:38 p.m.
(AP) — U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter of California said Wednesday that he's not worried about a federal indictment alleging he used campaign money on vacations and other personal expenses and is "excited" to go to trial.
The Republican referred to the U.S. Justice Department as "the Democrats' arm of law enforcement" and said the FBI and the department are "a politically motivated group of folks."
"We're excited about going to trial with this, frankly," Hunter told KGTV in San Diego. "This is modern politics, and modern media mixed in with law enforcement that has a political agenda. That's the new Department of Justice."
The congressman and his wife were charged by a federal grand jury Tuesday with using more than $250,000 in campaign funds to finance family trips to Italy and Hawaii, golf outings, school tuition, theater tickets — even fast food purchases — and attempting to conceal the illegal spending in federal records.
The indictment brings a jolt of uncertainty into the November contest, in a year when Democrats have targeted a string of Republican-held House seats across California.
"People disregard a lot of political issues, but the word 'indictment' catches their attention," Claremont McKenna College political scientist Jack Pitney said.
In the strongly Republican district, "Hunter is probably still the favorite, but not as overwhelmingly as he was before," he added.
Asked for comment, a Hunter spokesman sent an Aug. 6 letter from the congressman's attorney, Gregory A. Vega, to U.S. Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein asking him to postpone the indictment.
Vega contended that there was a "rush to indict."
There was "politically motivated" pressure to wrap up the investigation to tarnish Hunter before the general election after he handily won the June primary, Vega said.
Hunter was among the earliest Republican members of Congress to endorse President Donald Trump, and Vega's letter suggested his outspoken support made him a target for what he described as politically biased prosecutors.
The indictment depicts a couple freely dipping into campaign cash for years to bankroll their personal lifestyle, while their household budget was awash in red ink. The spending ranged from the banal to the lavish, from movie tickets to a $6,288.74 family vacation at a resort in Lahaina, Hawaii.
In a statement, House Speaker Paul Ryan called the charges "deeply serious" and said Hunter will be removed from his committee assignments, pending resolution of the case. House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi said Ryan should call on Hunter to resign.
Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat and potential 2020 presidential contender, used Twitter to urge her supporters to donate to Hunter's Democratic rival, Ammar Campa-Najjar, underscoring the race's new dynamics.
Hunter is a familiar name in the 50th Congressional District in San Diego and Riverside counties — his father held the seat for years. University of California, San Diego, political scientist Thad Kousser said Hunter would be on safe ground if the race centered on the Trump agenda in an area with a Republican pedigree.
Now, the indictment "makes it a race about (Hunter), about corruption and in some ways, ties him to Donald Trump's biggest vulnerabilities," Kousser said.
He was referring to the guilty plea Tuesday of Michael Cohen, Trump's former personal lawyer, on campaign finance violations and other charges on the same day Trump former campaign chairman Paul Manafort was convicted of eight financial crimes.
Another early Trump supporter, Republican U.S. Rep. Chris Collins of New York, ended his re-election bid this month, days after his indictment on insider trading charges.
Hunter's Democratic opponent, Campa-Najjar, stopped short of calling on the congressman to resign.
"I think justice should run its course," he said.
Campa-Najjar said Hunter was "in it for his own interests" and that it is time to "get rid of the corruption and greed that has held Washington captive for too long."
The California secretary of state's office says there is no process in the elections code for Hunter to remove his name from the ballot, and there can be no write-in candidates for the November election.
In a statement, California Republican Party Chairman Jim Brulte said "individuals are presumed innocent" until a jury convicts them.
"The congressman and his wife have a constitutional promise to their day in court, and we will not prejudge the outcome," Brulte said.
According to the indictment, Hunter tried to set up a day tour of a U.S. naval facility in Italy in 2015 to justify the use of campaign funds during a vacation with his family. When the proposed date didn't work out, he told his chief of staff: "Tell the Navy to go (expletive) themselves," the documents said.
In March 2015, Hunter told his wife, Margaret, he wanted to buy "Hawaii shorts" but ran out of money, the indictment said. She told him he should buy them at a golf pro shop so they could later describe the purchase as "some (golf) balls for the wounded warriors," according to court documents.
The couple spent more than $1,500 on video games in 2015, prosecutors said. In April 2015, Margaret Hunter spent nearly $1,000 in campaign funds to fly her mother and her mother's boyfriend to Poland and later told the campaign treasurer they were campaign trips to New Orleans and Kentucky.
"The Hunters spent substantially more than they earned," the indictment said. "They overdrew their bank account more than 1,100 times in a 7-year period resulting in approximately $37,761 in 'overdraft' and 'insufficient funds' bank fees."
The House Ethics Committee had investigated allegations that Hunter improperly used campaign funds to pay for tens of thousands of dollars in personal expenses. The panel said in March that it was delaying the inquiry at the request of the Justice Department.
His lawyers said in 2017 that Hunter and his wife repaid the campaign about $60,000.
Hunter's office said at the time that one of the charges he repaid was a $600 fee for flying a pet bunny with his family. There was no intent to stick donors with the cost, then-Hunter spokesman Joe Kasper said.
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Associated Press writers John Antczak, Christopher Weber, Robert Jablon and Michael Balsamo contributed from Los Angeles.
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