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Post by Logan on Jul 9, 2016 4:06:47 GMT -6
Utah Legislature is investigating questioned billings from public-land-transfer lawyers, consultantsThe Utah Legislature is re-evaluating the $912,000 it has paid to lawyers and other outside consultants after an advocacy group pointed out some expenditures — such as first-class air travel and stays at high-end hotels — appear to fall outside the scope and restrictions outlined in their contracts. The contracts are part of lawmakers' outsourced efforts to force the federal government to relinquish title to 31 million acres of public land in Utah. A team of legal experts provided a 140-page analysis telling lawmakers they had a good case. But invoices submitted by the Davillier Law Group and its lead associate on the Utah project, John Howard, of San Diego, were littered with inaccuracies, irregularities and reimbursements for prohibited pricey accommodations, Campaign for Accountability (CfA) alleged in a letter Wednesday to the Legislature's Commission for the Stewardship of Public Lands. Commission co-chairman Rep. Keven Stratton acknowledged the lawyers' invoices contained problems and said an intensive internal review of the billings is underway to determine whether they reflect the terms of the contracts. Read more: www.sltrib.com/news/4095491-155/utah-legislature-is-investigating-questioned-billings
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