

The congressman’s request came after a defendant in the case said in a court document that she steered $1.1 million in welfare money to former NFL star Brett Favre at the direction of Bryant. Bennie Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat, asked the Justice Department to investigate Bryant in connection with the welfare fraud case. Mississippi Today reported that Pigott sent a draft copy of the subpoena via email to both the Attorney General’s Office and the welfare agency’s general counsel before he filed it.Įarlier this month, U.S. “I hope I don’t need to explain that an attorney needs to remain in close communication with his client at all times.” “Attorneys represent clients, and MDHS is the client in this case,” Anderson said. In a statement, Anderson said Pigott had filed “an extensive subpoena” seeking records from the athletic foundation “without any prior discussion” with Human Services officials. Robert Anderson, executive director of the Department of Human Services, said in a statement that Pigott’s contract expires at the end of July and won’t be renewed, news outlets reported. He added: “Pigott worked well with my office, communicating regularly with us about the status of the case and how we could share information.”

“Firing Pigott is a mistake,” White posted Saturday on Twitter. He criticized the decision to drop Pigott. Shad White, Mississippi’s state auditor, has said the welfare fraud his office uncovered amounts to the state’s largest public corruption case in two decades. “All I did, and I believe all that caused me to be terminated from representing the department or having anything to do with the litigation, was to try to get the truth about all of that,” Pigott told Mississippi Today. Pigott was seeking records related to $5 million in welfare money the university foundation received to build a volleyball stadium, and included communications between the foundation and former Mississippi Gov. Pigott said he was fired about a week after he filed a subpoena for records from the University of Southern Mississippi Athletic Foundation. The decision to remove Pigott as lead attorney in the civil case was first reported by Mississippi Today, a nonprofit digital news operation that has reported extensively on the welfare scandal. attorney recruited roughly a year ago to help recoup $77 million in welfare funds identified by the state auditor.

The state Department of Human Resources will find a new lawyer to replace Brad Pigott, a former U.S. (AP) - A former federal prosecutor investigating millions in misspent welfare dollars in Mississippi has been dropped from the case by the state agency that hired him. Business & Finance Click to expand menu.
