Top Senate Democrat demands details of Mnuchin aide's Palm Beach trip

Mnuchin: Plane request was about national security, not personal travel
Mnuchin: Plane request was about national security, not personal travel

A leading senator wants more details about a trip taken by a Trump administration official who flew to Florida earlier this year on the private plane of hedge-fund billionaire Nelson Peltz, according to a letter reviewed by CNN on Wednesday.

The letter by Senator Ron Wyden, the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, calls on the Treasury Department to outline the purpose and dates of a trip taken by Eli Miller, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin's chief of staff.

The letter asks Treasury's general counsel to detail how much of the trip to Palm Beach was paid for by Peltz, a founding partner of Trian Fund Management. Wyden also wants an estimate of what the trip was worth.

"Ethics laws permit executive branch employees to accept gifts motivated by a "family relationship or personal friendship," Wyden wrote. But guidelines from the Office of Government Ethics suggest that that the employee "should consider declining the gifts when they believe that 'their integrity or impartiality would be questioned if they were to accept the gift."

Related: Top aide to Steven Mnuchin flew with hedge-fund billionaire

On Tuesday, a Treasury Department spokesperson confirmed Miller accepted Peltz's invitation to fly with him to Palm Beach earlier this year, but said no ethics law was violated given their previous friendship.

"The Treasury ethics office advised Mr. Miller that he was permitted to accept a seat on a plane from a friend with whom he has a pre-existing relationship under federal ethics law," said a Treasury spokesperson.

Treasury added in a statement: "The Trump administration works to ensure all officials follow appropriate rules and regulations when traveling."

Wyden also asked for the facts Treasury ethics officials used to determine the nature of Miller and Peltz's prior relationship.

Government ethics rules bar officials from accepting gifts from individuals that could be trying to influence government policy. Exceptions are made if the individual has a previous relationship with the government official.

Wyden is also seeking to learn what other gifts Miller may have received from Peltz or others.

Related: Treasury IG set to review Mnuchin's controversial trip

Treasury's inspector general's office confirmed on Tuesday it is planning to investigate the Florida trip, which was first reported by the Washington Post.

Anne Tarbell, a spokeswoman for Peltz's Trian, declined to comment.

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