Progressive Dems' Bell Questions Raimondo's Failure to Report In-Kind Contribution

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Progressive Dems' Bell Questions Raimondo's Failure to Report In-Kind Contribution

Progressive Democrat Sam Bell is questioning Governor Raimondo's campaign finance reporting connected to controversial developer Lance Robbins.
Sam Bell, the State Director for the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats of America, is questioning Governor Gina Raimondo's campaign assertion that because the space used for their campaign kick-off at controversial developer Lance Robbins' Hope Artiste Village was an in-kind contribution under $100, that it did not need to reported. 

While state Republican party chair Brandon Bell said he is considering filing an elections complaint against Raimondo for failing to report the fair market value of the in-kind contribution, Sam Bell is claiming that as the rental of the space was done "in concert" with the campaign, and that it still had to be reported, regardless of the monetary amount. 

Sam Bell on Record

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"17-25-10 points to 17-25-23 for the definition," said Bell of the state statute, and how it applies to the Raimondo case. 

"It includes this line: 'There is any arrangement, coordination, or direction with respect to the expenditure between the candidate or the candidate's agent and the person making the expenditure," said Bell. "That clearly covers renting a space."

"The $100 limit on unreported in-kinds is meant to cover something like me sending out fifty letters to my friends urging them to vote for someone, or if I started a grassroots group to advocate for a candidate and held a house party for her with some of my neighbors for us to gather, drink $30 of wine, eat $40 of cheese," said Bell.

"The point is that to take advantage of the $100 limit, you can't coordinate with the campaign. Raimondo's interpretation that you just don't have to report in-kinds under $100 is pretty clearly [bunk]," said Bell. "What is true is that you may not have to report who the donor was but you still have to report the dollar amount."

Proof of Who Paid for Space

Bell said the campaign -- or Robbins himself -- had to prove who actually paid Hope Artiste Village for the use of the space. 

"Legally speaking, a real live human being has to pay HAV for the space," said Bell. "You cannot just have the owner direct HAV to provide it for free."

"If no individual paid for it, then it is a corporate in-kind contribution, which is illegal," said Bell. 

Editor's Note: A previous version contained statements from Bell who said were not on the record. 


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