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Epoch Times
4 days ago
- Politics
- Epoch Times
House Ethics Panel Tells AOC to Pay Additional $3,000 for 2021 Met Gala
The House Ethics Committee has determined that Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) underpaid for services and gifts related to her high-profile appearance at the 2021 Met Gala, including the 'Tax the Rich' gown and a free ticket for her partner. In a report released Friday, the bipartisan, 10-member committee instructed Ocasio-Cortez to pay vendors $2,733.28 from her personal funds to cover the fair market value of goods she received. Additionally, it told her to pay $250 to compensate the Met for the meal provided to her then-boyfriend, Riley Roberts, who accompanied her to the event.


Time of India
5 days ago
- Politics
- Time of India
'Tax the Rich': AOC flouted House Rules in 2021 Met Gala, accepted gifts, gave boyfriend free ticket
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez flouted House rules in her Met Gala 2021 'Tax the rich' appearance. A House Ethics Committee found Rep Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez at fault for his much-discussed 2021 Met Gala appearance, where she wore her headline-making 'Tax the Rich' gown. The probe report released Friday revealed that AOC underpaid for costs and will now have to pay $3,000 for her 2021 Met Gala appearance. The 10-member committee, comprising five Democrats and five Republicans, concluded that Ocasio-Cortez paid under fair market value for clothing and accessories. It also determined that her partner, Riley Roberts, who is now her fiancé, was not covered under House rules, which at the time only let spouses and dependent children receive free tickets to charitable events. The committee said it will not issue any sanction against Ocasio-Cortez as long as she pays $2,733 to vendors for the additional value of her clothes and donates $250 for Riley's ticket. AOC's team only paid $990.76 for her glamorous appearance including renting the Brother Vellies couture dress designed by Aurora James, as well as luxury shoes, jewelry, a floral hairpiece and handbag. The fair market value is around $3,724,04 Mike Casca, AOC's chief of staff, said in a statement: 'The Congresswoman appreciates the Committee finding that she made efforts to ensure her compliance with House Rules and sought to act consistently with her ethical requirements as a Member of the House. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Why CVS Hides This Cheap 87¢ ED Medication Health Alliance by Friday Plans Undo She accepts the ruling and will remedy the remaining amounts, as she's done at each step in this process.' The investigation into who paid AOC for her and her boyfriend's Met Gala appearance began in 2022 and her campaign eventually paid for all the costs. Ethics rules prevent members of Congress from accepting gifts such as 'a gratuity, favor, discount, entertainment, hospitality, loan, forbearance, or other item having monetary value.' They are permitted to attend charity events, but only if invited by the organization hosting the event. The investigation earlier found out that OAC and her partne were originally invited to the $35,000-per-ticket event as guests of Vogue, and not by the Metropolitan Museum of Art itself. But because Vogue, and its longtime editorial director, Anna Wintour, are deeply involved in organizing the event, the investigators found the invitation permissible.


The Hill
5 days ago
- Politics
- The Hill
Ethics panel directs Ocasio-Cortez to make more payments for Met Gala ‘Tax the Rich' outfit
The House Ethics Committee has directed Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) to make around $3,000 in additional payments in relation to her attendance at the 2021 Met Gala and the iconic 'Tax the Rich' dress she wore there, saying it would consider the matter of her Met Gala attendance closed after those payments. Ocasio-Cortez had already made payments to account for the rental cost of the dress and accessories in 2022, but in a report released publicly on Friday, the Ethics Committee found the estimated rental cost to be 'unrealistic' and below market value, amounting to an impermissible gift not in compliance with federal law and House rules — even though it said the violations were not 'knowing and willful.' Ocasio-Cortez is expected to pay the difference, which would bring an end to the years-long investigation into her Met Gala attendance. While Ocasio-Cortez previously paid $990.76 for the cost of renting her Met Gala ensemble from designer Brother Vellies, the committee found that the designer's accountant previously 'vastly undervalued the apparel,' and found $3,724.04 to be closer to fair market value for the rental — saying it would be 'appropriate' for her to repay an additional $2,733.28 to comply with the Gift Rule. The Ethics Committee also found that Ocasio-Cortez should donate the $250 cost of her now-fiance's meal at the gala to the Met's Costume Institute. The panel noted that Ocasio-Cortez made 'significant steps' to comply with House gift rules, and that her attendance at the event otherwise complied with House rules. 'The Congresswoman appreciates the Committee finding that she made efforts to ensure her compliance with House Rules and sought to act consistently with her ethical requirements as a Member of the House,' Mike Casca, Ocasio-Cortez's chief of staff, said in a statement. 'She accepts the ruling and will remedy the remaining amounts, as she's done at each step in this process.' Ocasio-Cortez separately previously paid for the cost of makeup, hotel rooms, transportation, and other 'similar benefits' in connection with attending the Met Gala, totaling around $7,500. With the new costs directed by the committee, Ocasio-Cortez will have personally paid over $10,000 for the Met Gala evening, her counsel told the Ethics Committee. 'It would be nonsensical to suggest that the Congresswoman should have been prepared to pay for aspects of items and services that she didn't know about and didn't authorize,' her counsel said in a May 2025 letter. The Ethics Committee first released a report from the Office of Congressional Ethics — now called the Office of Congressional Conduct — in 2023 that scrutinized Ocasio-Cortez's Met Gala attendance and suggested she may have accepted impermissible gifts related to the event. That report showed frustration from some vendors about payments for hair and makeup services for the event being delayed for months, as well as payments for her Met Gala ensemble and other associated costs being paid months later. After further investigation, the Ethics Committee determined that the delay in making payments was not intentional and Ocasio-Cortez was not personally aware of the extent of the delays. But the panel also determined that Ocasio-Cortez's payments for her outfit were below market value, and that efforts to estimate the cost 'failed to account for the true cost of such unique goods, particularly considering that they were custom-made for the congresswoman and likely had no further use after the event.' And it dinged Ocasio-Cortez's team for bringing up the mass-market clothing rental service Rent the Runway as a data point when assessing costs associated with renting a Met Gala outfit, as a Brother Vellies accountant testified and a publicist testified. 'The comparison of a one-of-a-kind, custom-made designer gown to those sold commercially and rented to numerous individuals on Rent the Runway is simply inapposite,' the Ethics Committee said. Ocasio-Cortez's counsel told the panel in 2024 that Rent the Runway was brought up only when estimating if the congresswoman could afford to attend the event, and that the congresswoman did not direct others to use those estimations to influence the cost of a rental. The panel estimated that cost of goods to create the dress was $6,279.10 rather than $1,000 — making the 'true retail value of the gown designed for Representative Ocasio-Cortez was likely approximately $18,837.30, and $2,976.29 would be a more reasonable fair market value for rental of the gown' rather than It also said the invoice provided by Brother Vellies did not account for a custom flower hairpiece that Ocasio-Cortez wore, and that Ocasio-Cortez should pay $36.71 to account for the rental of that hairpiece. The panel found previous invoices of $160 for rental of shoes, $170 for rental of a handbag, and $78.47 for rental of jewelry to be permissible.