U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann is engaged in settlement negotiations in a lawsuit alleging that senior members of her presidential campaign stole a proprietary e-mail list of home-school families from the computer of an Iowa campaign staffer, according to sources close to the case.
The Minnesota Republican reportedly traveled to Des Moines Monday to meet with attorneys for Barb Heki, an Iowa woman who sued the campaign last year alleging the theft of the list, which eventually was used to contact Iowa home-schoolers.
Lawyers for Bachmann and the campaign did not respond to requests for comment on the talks. Bachmann's congressional office also declined to comment or provide an account of her whereabouts on Monday.
Heki, the campaign's former home school coalition director, referred questions to her new litigation attorney, Jeffrey Wright, who also declined to comment. In the past, Heki has sought a public apology from Bachmann, which has not been forthcoming.
The campaign has previously called the use of the list "inadvertent," a view that Heki and campaign whistleblower Peter Waldron, a Florida pastor, have disputed publicly. Campaign officials eventually negotiated a $2,000 payment to rent the list from the Network of Iowa Christian Home Educators (NICHE).
Heki said she was blamed for misappropriating the database and was removed from the nonprofit's board. One of the counts in her suit alleges libel and slander.
Iowa state senator involved
The suit implicates Iowa state Sen. Kent Sorenson in the alleged theft. Sorenson, once Bachmann's Iowa campaign chairman, is now the subject of an inquiry by the Iowa Senate Ethics Committee, which called for a special investigator last week.
Sorenson also is being investigated for taking payments to support Bachmann — a possible violation of Iowa Senate ethics rules intended to bar lawmakers from taking paid positions in presidential campaigns.