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Miami-Dade contractors employed Capitol Hill lobbyist

Medley defense contractors, who received federal earmarks through Lincoln Diaz-Balart, employed a lobbyist who pleaded guilty in a corruption probe.

dchristensen@MiamiHerald.com

Medley defense contractors who won millions in federal earmarks through Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart employed a Capitol Hill lobbyist who pleaded guilty recently in an unfolding congressional corruption probe.

There is no indication that Miami-Dade's Mark Two Engineering and Locust USA are ensnared in that probe, and company officials say they have not been contacted by authorities.

The lobbyist, Cecelia Grimes, admitted in July to destroying evidence sought by the FBI in its ongoing investigation of ex-Rep. Curt Weldon, R-Pa.

She's the second former Weldon associate to plead guilty and cooperate. Ex-Weldon chief of staff Russell Caso admitted conspiring to help a consulting firm obtain federal funds in exchange for secret payments to his wife.

Court records show the FBI is exploring whether Weldon, once the powerful vice chairman of the House Armed Services and Homeland Security committees, supported earmark requests in exchange for fees paid to Grimes' lobbying firm.

The firm, now defunct, was Grimes & Young. Grimes' partner was Cindy Young, daughter-in-law of veteran Rep. C.W. ''Bill'' Young, R-St. Petersburg.

Records show Mark Two paid Grimes, Weldon's friend and ex-real estate agent, $20,000 in 2006 to lobby the House for ``defense appropriations and authorizations.''

Grimes approached Locust President Enrique J. Enriquez after he spoke before Weldon committees regarding the contracting needs of small companies, said Locust attorney Nick Christin.

But Christin said Grimes ``never generated any business for Mark Two or Locust.''

William Box, chairman of both companies, said he didn't know Mark Two paid Grimes to lobby. ''That's news to me,'' he said. ``I'm bothered that we apparently paid $20,000 for nothing.''

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