Conlosh owes up to $30,000 in late filing fees
Torus Tammer
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -- Councilman Chuck Conlosh may owe as much as $30,000
in late fees as a result of delinquent campaign statement filings -- some
of which date back to 1997.
City records show Conlosh, who is up for reelection next month, has
not filed several campaign statements from his 1996 run for City Council
and his unsuccessful 1998 bid for the state Assembly.In an Aug. 24 letter
to Conlosh from the city clerk’s office, the councilman was informed that
he had two weeks to file the necessary paperwork. On Sept. 12, the
clerk’s office then notified Conlosh’s campaign treasurer, David Gould,
about the delinquent filings. At that time, a verbal agreement was made
to have all late filings submitted by Sept. 26, Gould said.
By Oct. 4, only half of the campaign statements had been filed. Again,
the city sent another letter to Conlosh requesting that all outstanding
documents -- one by Monday and the remaining three by today.
As of Wednesday, those documents were not filed.
But Gould said the city clerk’s office has the obligation to notify
the person when a report is due and when a report was not filed. He added
that he believes Conlosh, who could not be reached for comment, was
delinquent only until recently because he didn’t know about it.
Gould said it’s hard to file a report that is three years old on short
notice.
“We have make to sure everything is accurate before we file,” he said.
The Fair Political Practices Commission, the governing body that has
the final say in enforcing campaign laws, said anyone who files a
statement or report late is liable for $10 a day until it is filed.
The state’s Political Reform Act of 1974 puts a cap on funds raised or
spent during an election period. For each delinquent filing, Conlosh
cannot be fined more than what he had raised, the act states.
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