Arkansas lawmakers are delving into the unusual controversy over the purchase a $19,000 lectern for Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders.
Arkansas lawmakers on Thursday voted to audit the purchase of a $19,000 lectern for Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, delving into an unusual controversy that’s prompted questions about the seemingly high cost of the item and claims that the governor’s office violated the state’s open-records law.
The all-Republican executive committee of the Legislative Joint Auditing Committee also voted to audit the Republican governor’s travel and security expenditures that were retroactively shielded from public release under a new Freedom of Information Act exemption Sanders signed last month.
The 39-inch tall (1-meter), blue and wood-paneled lectern was purchased in June with a state credit card for $19,029.25. It has become the focus of intense scrutiny in recent weeks and has gained national attention. The Republican Party of Arkansas reimbursed the state for the purchase on Sept. 14, and Sanders’ office has called the use of a state credit card for the lectern an accounting error. Sanders’ office said it received the lectern in August.
Apologies for link parameters, it's the only way I could bet it to display without Alibaba booting me to the app deeplink.
Edited to add: it's definitely a knock off and not the exact same factory as the hickabee model, but the "have the same one as the white house!" pitch makes it funny enough to leave up.
Even if it was a historical piece… buying it is a waste of money (restoring, sure, buying no.)
All you really need is a podium sturdy enough to handle a few heavy books, and offer some concealment- either to hide props or whatever or in case the speaker feels the need to adjust,
Sure, but I was mostly thinking about plausible deniability of money laundering rather than good fiscal management. I don't expect the latter from huckabee begin with.
Honestly, it's probably a lot more effective to launder money by getting a food truck or something and dropping a "small" deposits of a few grand added to the tips jar once or twice a week is going to be essentially unnoticeable.
any cash business, really. Especially those that don't look out of place for tip jars.
It's also possible that they have a contract with the states corrections facilities to only buy furniture from them. WA state has to buy all it's furniture for anything public from Correctional Industries for example
The price tag makes it a bit much I agree, though they charge an insane markup. Chairs are like 800 for base model, tables upwards 1200. Not exactly 19,000 but it isn't beyond them I would imagine.
That’s pretty standard if not affordable for handmade tables and chairs, and it’s a factor of ten away from the lectern, nowhere even remotely close to $19k.
North Carolina has a similar policy, before you purchase anything, you're supposed to check to see if Correction Industries sells it, if so, you need to purchase it from them unless you have a valid exemption (like for instance a medical condition that requires a certain type of chair)
They may have used a furniture contractor. Our office had some dude who looked like the mafia stooge wearing a gold chain in the Simpsons to demo some chairs for us and they were shit quality and priced 3-4x higher than Amazon. I can see how going through a process like this but completely corrupt could produce a podium 20x the base cost.
According to the Associated Press, the company that sold the lectern is Beckett Events, LLC. It’s an event planning company in Virginia founded by a former lobbyist.
It's about 80% buzzwords. You know what, good for her for fleecing the government. She probably saw what was getting approved and thought she could do just as well as others by scamming the government. She flew a little too close to the sun here though I think.