Obama-Backed Florida Senate Candidate Misrepresented Career Details

Congressman Patrick Murphy of Florida has long been considered by national Democrats as the party’s best chance to snatch Republican Marco Rubio’s seat. The young, attractive, establishment-friendly House member (from a wealthy family, no less) looked like a much surer and smarter bet when Barack Obama endorsed him last year over the brash, obnoxious true progressive, fellow congressman Alan Grayson.

But a blockbuster report from Miami’s CBS affiliate about how Murphy has misrepresented his pre-political career—published the same day Rubio decided to run for reelection after all—shows the Senate hopeful may not be the golden candidate Democrats thought.

Here’s the scoop from CBS Miami:

Portraying himself as an experienced CPA and small business owner has always been critical to the political persona created for his campaigns. They conveyed a sense of seriousness and stability which he otherwise lacked. A CBS4 News investigation into Murphy’s history as both a CPA and a self-described small business owner, however, shows Murphy has in some cases exaggerated his experience and in other instances made claims that were misleading or outright false. For instance, he has never worked a day in his life as a Certified Public Accountant. And he was never a small business owner.

The station’s thorough investigation discovered that while Murphy has claimed in campaign ads to have worked as a CPA, he was never licensed as one in the state of Florida:

Murphy joined Deloitte & Touche on September 16, 2007 working in the firm’s Miami office located at 200 South Biscayne Boulevard. Yet despite working in Miami, Murphy has never held a CPA license in the state of Florida. Instead, he obtained a license in Colorado. And because the requirements are lower in Colorado, Florida does not accept the license as valid in Florida. As a result, none of the work Murphy did in Florida for Deloitte & Touche was as a CPA.

But Murphy’s made more than just one little résumé enhancement. The station also discovered that the “small business” he purported to have begun from the ground up—an oil-skimming contractor created to help clean up in the aftermath of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon spill—was actually a division of Murphy’s father’s large South Florida construction company. And the company never actually received a contract to clean up oil in the Gulf of Mexico. Instead, it purchased another company that actually performed the work, started by a local from Louisiana:

It would appear that rather than start a small business that did work in the Gulf, Murphy, with the support of his father and Coastal Construction, acquired a business that was already doing the work. (Thomas Murphy did not return calls seeking his comment for this story.) The Murphy campaign, however, says Patrick Murphy was involved with Crescent SR through, what it termed “an informal partnership” that started in June. The campaign maintains it was Murphy who developed the plans for the Crescent oil skimming operation. Reached by phone, Beery said he cannot remember when he first met Patrick Murphy but he was certain of one thing. “I started the concept before I met Patrick,” Beery said.

The entire report is worth reading, from the accounts of Murphy’s campaign stonewalling CBS Miami to the revelation that Murphy’s former company has spent more money storing its four skimming boats for the past five years than it made in the immediate aftermath of the oil spill.

According to the average of the few polls of the Democratic primary, Murphy leads Grayson by nine percentage points. The Senate primary for both parties is August 30. The filing deadline for any other candidates is Friday, June 24.

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