Scrutiny of Sen. Jeff Hayden, DFL-Minneapolis, intensified Thursday after new revelations that he took a trip to New York in 2012 using money from a state-funded organization that serves the city's low-income residents.
Community Action of Minneapolis paid $749 for airfare to New York for Hayden and his wife, Terri, according to records obtained by the Star Tribune.
The revelation raises new doubts about Hayden's earlier statements that he paid for all of his own expenses relating to the group. Hayden has a seat on the board, but appointed his wife to serve on his behalf.
Hayden declined to comment Thursday, referring to previous statements.
Hayden is now at the center of a state Senate ethics complaint that alleges he benefited financially from the organization and failed to oversee the group's finances, after a state audit concluded leaders misspent $800,000 in taxpayer money on trips, alcohol and celebrity cruises.
"If there are documents that show that the organization paid for him and he didn't reimburse them, then it contradicts what he said in the hearing and what he said publicly," said Senate Minority Leader David Hann, R-Eden Prairie.
The audit first raised questions about a New York trip earlier this summer, noting that a board member and their spouse attended. Auditors did not name Hayden and his wife by name.
The Star Tribune obtained a copy of a receipt showing that Community Action of Minneapolis paid for the Haydens' round-trip Sun Country flight to John F. Kennedy International Airport. Hayden and his wife left Minneapolis on Aug. 19, 2012, and returned five days later.