By Associated Press - Monday, March 3, 2014

ELWOOD, Ind. (AP) - The mayor of Elwood’s use of campaign funds has sparked an investigation by state police and the FBI, a former campaign official said.

Former Elwood police chief Sam Hanna, who was treasurer of Mayor Ron Arnold’s campaign committee, said state police detectives and FBI agents have interviewed him several times. He told The Herald-Bulletin (https://bit.ly/1jM724w ) that they asked about out-of-state travel and personal expenses that Arnold rung up in 2012 and 2013.

Arnold denies wrongdoing and said he wasn’t aware of the investigation. His campaign finance records show he spent about $7,000 for wireless phone service and nearly $4,000 for cable TV. Money also was allegedly used to pay for hotel rooms in Los Angeles, Louisville, Ky., and Nashville, Tenn.

Hanna said Arnold paid for the purchases with a debit card that at times carried a negative balance. Hanna said he questioned some of the expenditures when he signed off on Arnold’s 2012 and 2013 campaign finance reports.

“I was concerned,” Hanna said.

FBI spokeswoman Wendy Osborne said she could neither confirm nor deny whether Arnold was being investigated. State police Capt. Dave Bursten confirmed his agency has an ongoing official misconduct investigation in which the victim is the city of Elwood, but he would not identify the target of the probe.

Madison County Prosecutor Rodney Cummings said last week that he initially denied a state police request for Arnold’s campaign bank records, but approved it after investigators told him the campaign had paid for cable bills and a hotel room in California.

“There are several possible statute violations,” Cummings said. “You can’t use campaign funds for your own personal use.”

Arnold said he had not traveled to California, but had made a payment to the home address of a hotel chain which is based in Los Angeles.

“I know people all over the state,” Arnold said. “I could have been fundraising, campaigning or conducting duties as the mayor. Those should have been rightly paid by my campaign committee.”

A state audit raised questions in December about travel expenses Arnold racked up during a business trip to Japan.

“I won’t engage in politics of personal destruction,” Arnold said.

Elwood is a city of about 8,500 people about 40 miles northeast of Indianapolis.

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Information from: The Herald Bulletin, https://www.theheraldbulletin.com

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