Lawrence Scott Strikes Again
So-called “Republican consultants” and their work against Republican candidates has been a topic of
discussion here at Red Maryland and on the Red Maryland Network. Specifically, on The
Broadside, we discussed the case of consultant Kevin Igoe, who worked for
the campaign of Independent U.S. Senate candidate, Rob Sobhani against the
Republican nominee Daniel Bongino. Igoe,
a former executive director of the Maryland Republican Party and Maryland
delegate to the 2012 Republican National Convention, took $10,000 from the
Sobhani campaign, according Federal Election Commission records.
However, we can’t discuss shady Republican consultants
without talking about one Lawrence Scott.
Our colleague Greg Kline has chronicled
Scott’s chicanery over the last several years.
This past election, Scott worked on behalf of Democratic
judicial candidate, David Densford. Densford defeated
attorney Joe Stanalonis. Judicial
elections are supposed to be non-partisan.
However, for all intents and purposes the 7th Circuit Judicial
race in St. Mary’s County, morphed into a partisan race.
Governor O’Malley appointed Densford to
the bench in 2011. Densford, according
to state campaign records, is a donor to Democratic candidates, including O’Malley.
Stanalonis, a conservative Democrat, was essentially the Republican
nominee. The St.
Mary’s County Republican Central Committee, former Governor Bob
Ehrlich, and Ehrlich’s Appointments Secretary and Change Maryland Chairman,
Larry
Hogan. All endorsed Stanalonis. Why
the county Republican committee did not run a candidate is unclear.
Indeed, during the race, Densford painted
Stanalonis as a Republican (see page 16), and Stanalonis issued mailers
highlighting Densford’s ties to O’Malley.
Densford paid Scott’s consulting firm Scott Strategies, over
$50,000 according to state campaign finance records. Densford’s campaign issued
robocalls and mailers featuring another Scott client, St. Mary’s County
Commissioner, Cynthia Jones, a Republican.
The Densford-Stanalonis race became unusually contentious
for a judicial campaign. Stanalonis
accused Densford of masterminding a complaint with the Maryland Judicial
Campaign Conduct Committee. The
committee issued a report finding that Stanalonis violated
standards of conduct in contested judicial elections. The committee holds no legal power to
sanction candidates.
Interestingly, Maloney just happened to represent Lawrence Scott
in a motor tort case in Anne Arundel County Circuit Court this past April, one day after the primary election.
Whether there is any illegality here, is open
to question. However, there is a strong appearance
of impropriety with Maloney authoring a negative opinion of Stanalonis, the opponent of Scott’s client.
It can be argued that Stanalonis wasn’t technically a
Republican. However, the fact that a Republican central committee, former
Republican governor, and one of his cabinet secretaries endorsed him, made him
the Republican-backed candidate. And the
Democratic donor, Densford, surely had no qualms campaigning against Stanalonis
as such.
In fact, the nitpicky
MJCCC report
authored by Maloney contains a footnote stating, “Judge Densford won the
Democratic primary, and challenger Joseph Stanalonis won the Republican primary”.
Either way you slice it, Lawrence Scott worked for a Democrat
against a Republican.



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