Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, seen in this 2020 file photo testifying during a House Oversight and Reform Committee hearing, resigned Monday after five years in the position. File photo by Tom Williams/Pool via Reuters

Postmaster General says he’s been cleared in federal probe investigating staff campaign contributions

Politics

WASHINGTON (AP) — Postmaster General Louis DeJoy said Thursday that the Justice Department has closed without criminal charges an investigation into political fundraising activity at his former business.

"As I said from the beginning and have maintained throughout this process, I was confident that after a thorough review the Justice Department would find all of my activities to be lawful," DeJoy said in a statement provided to The Associated Press. "I have always adhered to the law in my personal and professional life."

He added that he was "not surprised" that the department had concluded its investigation and that he was "pleased that this episode is over."

WATCH: In Senate testimony, DeJoy denies intent to disrupt mail-in voting

The Justice Department declined to comment. But it is standard practice for department officials to reveal to defense lawyers that their investigations have concluded without charges rather than make that announcement themselves. A DeJoy spokesman said DeJoy's lawyer had received that notification from the department.

DeJoy, a wealthy former logistics executive and GOP donor, was appointed postmaster general in 2020 by the Board of Governors controlled by then-President Donald Trump. He remains in the position in the Biden administration. He confirmed the existence of a Justice Department investigation last June when his spokesman said investigators were examining campaign contributions made by employees who worked for him when he was in the private sector.

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Postmaster General says he’s been cleared in federal probe investigating staff campaign contributions first appeared on the PBS News website.

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