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Eyman, Committees Pay AG $20,000 For Investigation Delays

Ted S. Warren
/
AP Photo
FILE - In this Feb. 9, 2015, file photo, initiative promoter Tim Eyman waits for his turn to speak before the Senate Ways and Means Committee at the Capitol in Olympia, Wash.

State officials say Tim Eyman and his political committees have paid $20,000 in costs connected to delaying an investigation of campaign-finance practices.

In return, the Washington State Attorney General's Office said in a Thursday news release they requested and a judge approved dismissing a contempt proceeding against Eyman.

The attorney general's office says Eyman reimbursed the office $10,000 to cover fees incurred after Eyman refused to turn over information subpoenaed in the investigation. A subsequent trip to court resulted in a ruling that said the office could seek documents directly from the federal government and Eyman's banks.

The office received another $10,000 from Eyman's political committees, along with nearly $13,000 from Citizen Solutions, which is also under investigation related to its dealings with Eyman.

Eyman has proposed numerous tax-limiting initiatives over the years. The state Public Disclosure Commission said last year it discovered several potential violations of campaign-finance law.