EPA’s Inspector General Retires Amid Ongoing Pruitt Ethics Probes

WASGINGTON DC, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, UNITED STATES - 2013/06/03: EPA building, Environmental Protection Agency. (Photo by John Greim/LightRocket via Getty Images)
WASGINGTON DC, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, UNITED STATES - 2013/06/03: EPA building, Environmental Protection Agency. (Photo by John Greim/LightRocket via Getty Images)

WASHINGTON (AP) — The head of the Environmental Protection Agency’s internal watchdog office announced his retirement Tuesday, leaving subordinates to pursue ongoing ethics probes involving former EPA chief Scott Pruitt and his team.

Arthur A. Elkins Jr., inspector general for the agency since 2010, said in a statement he was leaving for an unspecified job outside of the federal government.

The EPA Office of the Inspector General is an independently-funded operation charged with investigating and reviewing the agency’s conduct. Its work since last year has included probes of a series of allegations that Pruitt and his aides misused the office for the benefit of Pruitt and his family.

Pruitt resigned earlier this summer.

The inspector general’s public affairs staff declined an interview request for Elkins after Tuesday’s announcement. A spokesman, Jeffrey Lagda, said Elkins’ departure was not in protest of any action by the agency regarding the investigations of Pruitt’s leadership.

Elkins’ departure “will definitely not impact any of the ongoing OIG reviews related to allegations regarding former EPA Administrator Pruitt and his staff,” Lagda said in an email.

Elkins had carried out his office’s oversight responsibilities “honorably and professionally,” Andrew Wheeler, the agency’s acting administrator, said in a statement.

Elkins’ deputy, Charles Sheehan, will take over as acting inspector general. Sheehan has been with the agency’s watchdog office since 2012.

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  1. Put another way…

    Fuck it, I am outta here…

  2. Avatar for ghost ghost says:

    “Nope, sorry, can’t handle the lack of ethics anymore. I’m outta here.”

    Really, can anyone blame him?

    ETA: @asturcot great minds…

  3. This is perfectly normal, like quitting football at halftime.

  4. So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish

  5. OT This is YUGE!

    The Supreme Court today denied a stay, and lifted a temporary stay by Chief Justice Roberts, in Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington’s (CREW) landmark dark money case against Crossroad GPS and the Federal Election Commission (FEC). This decision, following similar decisive decisions by the district court and court of appeals this week, means that effective immediately, anyone making more than $250 in express advocacy ads — ads that tell viewers who to vote for or against — must now disclose the identities of all contributors who gave more than $200 in a year. They must also identify who among those contributors earmarked their contributions for express ads. Because of this decision, the contributors for a major category of dark money spending this fall will have to be disclosed to the public.
    SCOTUS denies stay, new disclosure ruling goes into effect - CREW | Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington

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