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Audit Of Former Oregon Secretary Of State Who Moonlighted At A Marijuana Company Will Remain Online, Officials Say

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“The public interest in this case is best served by independent auditors providing evidence-supported recommendations to state government.”

By Ben Botkin, Oregon Capital Chronicle

Oregonians still can access the audit of the Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission after former Secretary of State Shemia Fagan’s (D) moonlighting scandal with cannabis company La Mota put the audit under intense scrutiny.

Oregon Secretary of State LaVonne Griffin-Valade (D), who released her review of the audit on Monday, said in a release that it is of the same quality as others by the agency and should be treated the same way and remain posted online.

“The public interest in this case is best served by independent auditors providing evidence-supported recommendations to state government,” she said. “Neither my review nor any other has uncovered a reason to think this report is anything short of that standard.”

Last month an independent review called on the Secretary of State’s Office to take the audit down while the agency reviewed the audit, which was linked to the rapid downfall of Griffin-Valade’s predecessor, Shemia Fagan. Fagan resigned in May over her $10,000-per-month consulting contract.

Griffin-Valade’s memo outlines the findings of a month-long review and seeks to demonstrate that Fagan’s actions didn’t affect the contents of the audit report. In October, an independent review of the audit concluded that auditors could have done more to address the public perception of the audit and its conflicts of interest with Fagan’s consulting work. Griffin-Valade said she agreed with that assessment, which California-based Sjoberg Evashenk Consulting completed for the Oregon Department of Justice.

Griffin-Valade directed state auditors to change audit processes, including limiting the secretary’s role in the scope of planning audits and documenting conflicts of interest throughout the audit. The office also plans to overhaul its process that determines how audit subjects are picked during planning and will contract with a third-party independent consultant to make more improvements to audit planning.

The Oregon Government Ethics Commission has two pending cases on Fagan: one on her consulting contract and another on her travel and whether she improperly brought family members on trips or double-dipped into her campaign fund and the state.

This story was first published by Oregon Capital Chronicle.

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