Connect with us

News from the South - Tennessee News Feed

Speaker Mike Johnson lives in a D.C. house at the center of a pastor’s secretive influence campaign

Published

on

tennesseelookout.com – Joshua Kaplan, Justin Elliott, Alex Mierjeski – 2025-02-28 17:31:00

Speaker Mike Johnson lives in a D.C. house at the center of a pastor’s secretive influence campaign

by Joshua Kaplan, Justin Elliott and Alex Mierjeski, Tennessee Lookout
February 28, 2025

This story was originally published by ProPublica.

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

In 2021, Steve Berger, an evangelical pastor who has attacked the separation of church and state as “a delusional lie” and called multinational institutions “demonic,” set off on an ambitious project. His stated goal: minister to members of Congress so that what “they learn is then translated into policy.” His base of operations would be a six-bedroom, $3.7 million townhouse blocks from the U.S. Capitol.

Recently, the pastor scored a remarkable coup for a political influence project that has until now managed to avoid public scrutiny. He got a new roommate.

House Speaker Mike Johnson has been staying at the home since around the beginning of this year, according to interviews and videos obtained by ProPublica.

The house is owned by a major Republican donor and Tennessee car magnate who has joined Berger in advocating for and against multiple bills before Congress.

Over the past four years, Berger and his wife, Sarah Berger, have dedicated themselves to what they call their D.C. “ministry center.” In addition to Johnson, who is an evangelical conservative, the pastor has built close relationships with several other influential conservative politicians. Dan Bishop, now nominated for a powerful post in the Trump White House, seems to have also lived in the home last year while he was still a congressman, according to three people.

Conservative donor Lee Beaman of Nashville owns a Washington, DC townhouse shared by U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson and evangelical Pastor Steve Berger. (Ballotpedia)

A spokesperson for Johnson said that the speaker “pays fair market value in monthly rent for the portion of the Washington, D.C. townhome that he occupies.” He did not answer a question about how much Johnson is paying. House ethics rules allow members of Congress to live anywhere, as long as they are paying fair-market rent.

The spokesperson added that Johnson “has never once spoken to Mr. Berger about any piece of legislation or any matter of public policy.” Berger and Bishop did not respond to requests for comment.

The Bergers have described their mission as galvanizing political allies to take action. “It’s just iron sharpening iron,” Sarah Berger said on a podcast last summer, explaining the couple’s approach to political influence. “Like, ‘Oh yeah, that’s why I’m standing firm on this policy.’”

Steve Berger claims to have personally spurred legislation. “It’s a humbling thing,” he said in a sermon in late 2022. “You get a text message from a senator that says: ‘Thank you for your inspiration. Because it has caused me now to create a bill that is going to further righteousness in this country.’”

Berger’s interests extend beyond his staunch social conservatism. He and the donor who owns the house, Lee Beaman, have publicly advocated together for numerous specific policy changes, including a bill that would make it easier to fire federal employees and a regulation that would reduce fuel efficiency standards for the automotive industry. After the 2020 election, they both signed a letter declaring that President Donald Trump was the rightful winner and calling for Congress to overturn the results.

Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, did not respond to questions about how he ended up staying at the home. Beaman did not respond to requests for comment.

The earliest date ProPublica was able to confirm Johnson being at the Berger house was in mid-December. A video reviewed by ProPublica shows Johnson visiting the home on Dec. 15 with two women who appear to be his wife and daughter. They lingered outside before entering, while Johnson pointed around the building and down to the basement entrance as if he was giving a tour. Two days later, Berger sent a note to his supporters on social media: “I so wish I could tell you all the massive doors that broke open this week.”

Since the beginning of the year, videos and interviews show, Johnson has regularly left the house in the morning and returned in the evening. One day that Johnson was there recently, Berger was also at the home, opening the front door barefoot in pajama bottoms. (It appears Johnson may primarily be staying in the home’s two-bedroom basement.)

Washington pieds-à-terre can prove a significant expense for members of Congress as they split time between the capital and their home districts. Johnson is less wealthy than many other lawmakers. He worked at conservative nonprofits before he entered public service, and on his most recent financial disclosure form he did not declare a single asset. When Johnson was elevated to the speakership in 2023, news reports indicated that rather than renting an apartment, he might be sleeping in his office. (Lawmakers must report debts, income and many financial holdings on disclosure forms but aren’t required to list living expenses like rent.)

The Berger home is in an upscale D.C. neighborhood full of lobbyists and corporate attorneys. Though it’s not clear what the home’s basement would fetch on the open market, it’s not unusual for two-bedrooms in the area to rent for as much as $7,000 a month. Discounts on rent are generally prohibited by House ethics rules as improper gifts, experts said.

In sermons and on social media, Berger has mentioned some of the topics he’s discussed with Johnson and other members of Congress. Last year, Berger, a passionate supporter of the Israeli right-wing, said he’d had “a great conversation” with the speaker about Israel.

A Feb. 9, 2024 Instagram post from Steve Berger. (Instagram)

Recently, Johnson has described his conversations with Trump to the pastor, according to Berger. After Russia invaded Ukraine, Berger said in a sermon that he’d advised “some congressmen” to see the conflict through the lens of Ezekiel 38 and 39, parts of the Bible some see as prophesying a great war before the Second Coming. He did not specify what that meant from a policy perspective.

An energetic 60-year-old with a white goatee and penchant for preaching in sneakers and jeans, Berger has strong views on a wide range of issues, including economic policy and public health. He is vehemently opposed to the World Health Organization, which Trump moved to withdraw the U.S. from last month, and recently predicted that COVID-19 vaccines will result in “young people dropping dead all over the place.” He attacked the World Economic Forum at length in a recent sermon, accusing it of “taking advantage” of COVID-19 “to implement their satanic plot.”

Berger is also against same-sex marriage, saying “it opens the door to all manner of sexual depravity and wickedness” — though he has said he has “friends who are practicing homosexuals, people I care about.” He opposes homosexuality and “heterosexual sin” in equal measures, he’s said, referring to acts like watching pornography and sex between unmarried adults.

Berger’s operation is organized as a nonprofit called Ambassador Services International, which runs on a budget of around $1 million per year, according to tax filings. The home where it is registered in Washington — and where Johnson has been staying — was purchased in early 2021. Once the home of abolitionist Frederick Douglass and later housing the Smithsonian Museum of African Art, it was advertised at the time as a “four-level Second Empire-style townhouse of impeccable elegance and exceptional scale,” offering “bespoke tranquility in a coveted location.”

The buyer was Crockett Ventures LLC. Corporate filings show its sole owner is Beaman, the donor and businessman, who built a fortune on a chain of car dealerships started by his father. He has given millions to Republican political groups, including large donations to the Trump campaign and political committees for the Heritage Foundation and the House Freedom Caucus. He’s also served as the treasurer of a congressional campaign.

Beaman was once so fed up with the restrictions that came with owning a home on a “government-controlled lake” that he bought a sprawling property with a 50-acre private lake of its own, according to a profile in an architecture book. He became a fixture of Nashville media in recent years because of sordid allegations made by his fourth wife during their divorce, including that he made her watch what he called “training films” of him having sex with a prostitute. Beaman’s lawyers wrote at the time that his wife’s filing contained “impertinent and scandalous matter only meant to harass Mr. Beaman.”

Beaman has attended a Tennessee church that Berger founded, but it’s not clear what role, if any, he plays in the pastor’s influence project in Washington. It’s also unclear whether the pastor’s nonprofit pays for the use of the Capitol Hill townhouse.

Berger came to prominence in his home state as the longtime pastor of Grace Chapel, a large church outside Nashville whose members have included the current governor of the state. In 2021, Berger left the church and he and his wife launched their project in Washington.

He soon began Bible study sessions with senators, representatives and congressional aides, according to the Bergers. Meanwhile, Sarah Berger spent her time “in relationship with and pouring into the lives of congressional wives,” tax filings say.

Steve Berger quickly made connections at the highest levels of the Republican Party.

“Listen, I have confessed things to Steve that I wouldn’t normally confess to anyone else,” Mark Meadows, a White House chief of staff in the first Trump administration who remains an important ally of the president, said at a 2023 event with Berger. “We have been praying together, having a Bible study each and every week. Not just me, but several members of Congress.”

A group of congressmen gathered on stage together to speak at the pastor’s 60th-birthday party in October, including Bishop, Rep. Barry Moore, Rep. Andy Ogles and Rep. Warren Davidson. All four are current or former members of the hardline conservative House Freedom Caucus. (None of the four responded to requests for comment.)

Evidence suggests that Bishop also recently lived at the Capitol Hill townhouse. Three neighbors told ProPublica that the FBI visited them this month asking about Bishop, seemingly as part of the background check for his White House job. “They said that address,” said one neighbor, adding that the agent showed a photo of Bishop. “They said: ‘He lived there up to a couple months ago. Do you know him?’”

Trump has nominated Bishop to be deputy director of the Office of Management and Budget, the powerful White House office that recently moved to freeze funding streams across the federal government. Berger celebrated the nomination on Instagram: “I want to congratulate my dear friend and brother, Congressman Dan Bishop, for accepting this incredible opportunity.”

Jeff Frankl contributed research.

Do you have any information we should know about Steve Berger or Speaker Mike Johnson? Josh Kaplan can be reached by email at joshua.kaplan@propublica.org and by Signal or WhatsApp at 734-834-9383. Justin Elliott can be reached by email at justin@propublica.org and by Signal or WhatsApp at 774-826-6240.

 

 

Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com.

The post Speaker Mike Johnson lives in a D.C. house at the center of a pastor’s secretive influence campaign appeared first on tennesseelookout.com

News from the South - Tennessee News Feed

Community advocates call for improvements of micro-transit system, while federal grant uncertain

Published

on

www.youtube.com – WBIR Channel 10 – 2025-02-28 21:32:14

SUMMARY: The microtransit system in Knoxville, known as CAT Connect, has faced criticism for not meeting expectations. Designed to function like Uber or Lyft by connecting passengers to fixed routes, it primarily serves one North Knoxville neighborhood, leaving others without adequate access. Justice Knox, a grassroots group, proposed the system in 2019, but advocates say it lacks necessary software and fails to provide essential services, like access to jobs and fresh food. While neighboring cities like Chattanooga and Birmingham have successful microtransit services, Knoxville’s program has delivered only 50 rides since launching in August 2024, raising concerns.

YouTube video

Justice Knox said the katConnect system is not meeting expectations in connecting those who live outside bus routes’ range.

Source

Continue Reading

News from the South - Tennessee News Feed

Megan Boswell trial cost nearly $30,000

Published

on

www.wkrn.com – Murry Lee – 2025-02-28 08:05:00

SUMMARY: Megan Boswell’s nine-day murder trial in Sullivan County cost nearly $30,000, totaling $29,619.96, primarily due to lodging for the sequestered jury, a rare occurrence in nearly two decades. With a budget of about $98,000 for the year, the trial expenses significantly impacted court finances. The jurors received $30 daily, and meal costs amounted to $4,987, mitigated by included breakfast. The county expects around $9,000 in reimbursement from the state, but will still bear over $20,000 in costs. The trial was a significant emotional and logistical challenge, requiring extensive preparation from the sheriff’s and district attorney’s offices.

Read the full article

The post Megan Boswell trial cost nearly $30,000 appeared first on www.wkrn.com

Continue Reading

News from the South - Tennessee News Feed

Stockard on the Stump: Republican lawmaker irritated that colleagues might wear a wire

Published

on

tennesseelookout.com – Sam Stockard – 2025-02-28 05:01:00

Stockard on the Stump: Republican lawmaker irritated that colleagues might wear a wire

by Sam Stockard, Tennessee Lookout
February 28, 2025

Republican state Rep. Todd Warner is peeved at the possibility House Speaker Cameron Sexton wore a wire for federal authorities five years ago as they investigated an alleged kickback scheme involving a mysterious business.

“I find it very disturbing that we have members that may be doing that kind of stuff behind the scenes. To me, that’s a tactic the Democrats would pull, like they pulled on President Trump. Here we have it going on in Tennessee. We have members trying to take out three conservatives, myself one of them, and I just find it very troubling,” said Warner, a Chapel Hill farmer and construction company owner.

A court filing identified three confidential sources helping federal prosecutors in their investigation of former House Speaker Glen Casada and his formed aide Cade Cothren. But the total number of informants who participated in the investigation is unknown and the government refuses to identify any of them. Prosecutors say the information is privileged and they don’t have to identify them because they don’t plan to call them to testify, according to the filing.

In January 2021, FBI agents raided the homes and offices of Warner, Casada, Cothren and former Chattanooga state Rep. Robin Smith, who wound up pleading guilty and is cooperating with federal prosecutors. They also looked into the office of former Rep. Kent Calfee of Kingston, but he is not a target of their investigation.

Cothren and Casada stand accused of running a kickback scheme to help the former staffer after he was fired in 2019 for his part in racist and sexist text messages. A few months later, Casada resigned after a no-confidence vote by the House Republican Caucus.

According to federal documents, Cothren secretly ran the vendor, Phoenix Solutions, so his identity wouldn’t be known, and Casada and Smith directed business to him from Republican House members. Cothren was paid nearly $52,000 to do constituent mailers for House members. 

The House Republican Caucus also hired the vendor, purportedly run by the bogus “Matthew Phoenix,” and paid him roughly $140,000 to do caucus work. 

Thus, Warner entered office four years ago with a dark cloud surrounding him but has said little publicly about the FBI investigation. He remains unindicted but continues to do business with a political consulting company called Dixieland Strategies, whose owners remain a mystery but have links to Phoenix Solutions. 

A dependable conservative by most measures, Warner isn’t exactly on Speaker Sexton’s Christmas gift list after trashing Gov. Bill Lee’s private-school voucher bill for more than a year. 

Nor is he tight with Lt. Gov. Randy McNally after calling for him to step down amid revelations McNally sent messages containing heart emojis to a young, gay man on social media two years ago. McNally emerged from the situation somewhat unscathed after Senate Republicans gave him a vote of confidence.

Delayed multiple times, the trial for Casada and Cothren is scheduled for April 22, and talk around the Capitol is that the legislature will adjourn before it starts. Otherwise, they might not have a quorum, since roughly 20 lawmakers and General Assembly employees have been subpoenaed by the defense to testify. 

In their latest filing, attorneys for Casada and Cothren say federal prosecutors are refusing to identify confidential informants who wore wires, secretly recorded caucus meetings and provided documents. The Casada-Cothren attorneys say they need to know those people’s identities so they can call them to the witness stand.

The filing indicates Speaker Sexton or someone in his office most likely provided the feds with secret recordings. Folks are envisioning all sorts of scenarios as they try to figure out the IDs of the three main informants.

Republican House Leadership from left Rep. Jeremy Faison,, Speaker Cameron Sexton and House Majority Leader William Lamberth.
(Photo: John Partipilo/ Tennessee Lookout)

Sexton declined to comment on the latest filing, saying he doesn’t discuss pending litigation. But he acknowledged recently he was among about 20 lawmakers who were subpoenaed by the defense in January. He was uncertain why since he’s cooperating with the prosecution.

House Majority Leader William Lamberth also declined to say whether he wore a wire or secretly recorded conversations for the feds.

Some of Warner’s irritation could be a little misdirected.  

McNally, an Oak Ridge Republican, wore a wire for federal investigators in Operation Rocky Top for three years starting in 1986 as part of an investigation into the state’s bingo industry and lawmaker bribes. He’s been hailed as a hero since then. 

The investigation led to 50 convictions, including one for House Democratic Leader Tommy Burnett. Democratic Rep. Ted Ray Miller of Knoxville committed suicide, as did Secretary of State Gentry Crowell.

All that considered, why should Sexton be treated any differently if he worked with the feds to ferret out corruption? 

The caveat is that McNally recorded lobbyists only, not fellow lawmakers, according to reports.

Someday they might name the speaker’s office for Sexton, depending on the case’s outcome. Or, everything could crumble if, somehow, the Casada-Cothren case implodes.

Legislative Democrats declined to say much about the matter Thursday other than they wouldn’t be surprised if someone was wearing a wire.

Of course, secret recording devices might not be what they once were. Instead of running the risk of wearing a wire and microphone around Capitol Hill, an informant only needs to press the record button on their cell phone. 

So don’t go around hugging everyone in Cordell Hull to see if they’re wired. There’s already enough illness going around that joint, and it doesn’t need to spread.

Denial ain’t just in Egypt

House and Senate Judiciary committees this week passed Speaker Sexton’s constitutional amendment giving judges discretion to deny bail for a long list of violent crimes.

Sexton took the unusual step of attending the House meeting where he discussed how mom-and-pop bail companies support the measure because it’ll help them compete with corporations. 

He also guided District Attorneys General Conference director Steve Crump into saying that bail bond companies will get people out of jail for only $1. That might be the case, if they want to starve or risk their company for one defendant. But it really isn’t relevant.

The idea is that judges should be able to refuse to set bail for people who break the law repeatedly and endanger society. Sounds logical.

The problem is we have this nitpicking thing called “presumption of innocence.” And even though probable cause hearings are used to determine whether someone likely committed a crime, they aren’t exactly the end-all, be-all for justice. 

Things can get a little complicated, especially when juries start gumming up the works.

The legislature passed the constitutional amendment on bail in 2024. In the second round, though, it must receive a two-thirds vote of the House and Senate before it can go on the next gubernatorial ballot.

Considering Sexton likely has the House wrapped up, including Democrats such as Rep. G.A. Hardaway and Rep. Joe Towns of Memphis, most of the focus lies on the Senate’s 33 members.

The measure passed the Senate Judiciary 6-3 with Chairman Todd Gardenhire voting no, along with two Democratic Sens. Sara Kyle and London Lamar. Hallway talk is that one senator flipped after seeing a colleague vote for the bill. No reason to sink yourself at this point for a lost cause.

Still, getting two-thirds could be much tougher in that august body than in the hang ’em high House.

Opening juvenile records?

In the wake of the Antioch High School shooting this year, Lamberth is amending a bill by Republican Rep. John Gillespie of Memphis to allow public access to records for juveniles accused of heinous crimes.

The Antioch High shooter, who died that day after shooting a girl to death, reportedly had a criminal history and had made threats to hurt people at school.

“We know that there’s a history there. I believe that you and every single other Tennessean, when you have a juvenile who murders someone inside the school system, that you have a right to know what was their prior criminal history, what was their psychological information,” Lamberth said Thursday.

Such information would enable the media and others to find out how he entered the school and killed a girl, Lamberth said.

Another part of the bill could force school systems to tell the parents about a threat inside a school.

This is a major departure from recent events in which Metro Police refused to divulge writings of the person who killed six people at The Covenant School in Nashville’s Green Hills area. A Davidson County chancellor ruled that the writings belong to Covenant parents and are exempt from the state’s Public Records Act, a serious judicial stretch but one that hasn’t caught the ire of the General Assembly. 

Sen. Bo Watson, a Hixson Republican, has introduced a resolution encouraging Tennessee teachers to use the name ‘Gulf of America’ as the Gulf of Mexico was recently rebranded by President Donald Trump (Photo: John Partipilo/Tennessee Lookout)

Shark-infested waters

Primed by presidential pomposity, state Sen. Bo Watson is encouraging Tennessee teachers, mainly geography teachers, to use the names Gulf of America and Mount McKinley when referring to the Gulf of Mexico and Denali, the indigenous name that replaced McKinley.

Watson, a Hixson Republican and chairman of the Senate finance committee, filed a resolution this week backing President Donald Trump’s executive order “Restoring Names that Honor American Greatness.” 

Watson acknowledges the change doesn’t fit with Tennessee’s curriculum and says it only needs to be adjusted. 

“It’s an executive order from the president,” Watson says, no different from a bill the Senate passed this week validating an order that depends on the Centers for Disease Control, not the World Health Organization, to declare a pandemic. That dratted WHO.

Dear President Trump, would it be OK if we at least keep the Gulf of Mexico on maps and in classrooms. Otherwise, we might not know where we’re swimming while in the Redneck Riviera, which you also might consider renaming. It should be noted that Aztecs started calling the body of water in question the Gulf of Mexico many centuries ago, and maps started referring to it as such in 1550. Oh, and one more thing, if it must be referred to as the Gulf of America, does that mean John Mellencamp has to change the lyrics to his hit song ‘Little Pink Houses’?

“Go to work in some high rise / and vacation down at the Gulf of Mexico / Ooh yeah.”

You know, one day I thought I might be president, but “just like everything else those old crazy dreams kinda came and went.”

Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com.

The post Stockard on the Stump: Republican lawmaker irritated that colleagues might wear a wire appeared first on tennesseelookout.com

Continue Reading

Trending