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Expects Yuge Games
Oklahoma has a colorful history of public corruption scandals, often involving local officials, state contracts, and ethics lapses. While the massive 1980s County Commissioner scandal (over 230 convictions for kickbacks on road supplies) remains the state's all-time biggest, here are some of the juiciest from the past two decades.
This one exploded under Gov. Kevin Stitt's administration and became known as the "Tourism Scandal." The Oklahoma Department of Tourism and Recreation awarded a no-bid contract to Swadley's Bar-B-Q to renovate and operate foggy bottom kitchens (restaurants) in state parks. Swadley's allegedly overbilled the state by millions (e.g., $4 million+ in inflated costs for equipment and work), leading to the contract's termination. Investigations revealed potential conflicts, sole-source bidding issues, and mismanagement. The state sued Swadley's (settlement talks involved taxpayers potentially covering costs), and it prompted ethics reform pushes. Attorney General Gentner Drummond cited it as an example of preventable self-dealing, with accusations of a cover-up to avoid embarrassing the administration.
One of the largest education-related fraud cases in state history. Founders of the virtual charter school network allegedly embezzled tens of millions in public funds through self-dealing (e.g., routing money to their for-profit management company). Federal and state probes led to charges; it's tied to conflicts of interest and misuse of school funds.
The state Auditor and Inspector (a Democrat) and his wife were convicted on federal corruption charges for accepting bribes/gifts from abstract companies in exchange for favorable audits. It highlighted influence-peddling in regulatory roles.
A probe into job-swapping for political gain led to convictions of lawmakers like Rep. Randy Terrill (R) for bribery related to maneuvering a Senate seat and state job.
More recent cases include health care fraud takedowns, bank fraud by failed institution leaders, and nonprofit embezzlement (e.g., a 2025 indictment of a Black Lives Matter OKC leader for alleged wire fraud/money laundering). Oklahoma often ranks moderately high in per-capita public corruption convictions, with ongoing ethics debates (e.g., vetoed anti-corruption bills in 2025). These are documented via DOJ records, state audits, and legislative probes.
Swadley's Foggy Bottom Kitchen Scandal
This one exploded under Gov. Kevin Stitt's administration and became known as the "Tourism Scandal." The Oklahoma Department of Tourism and Recreation awarded a no-bid contract to Swadley's Bar-B-Q to renovate and operate foggy bottom kitchens (restaurants) in state parks. Swadley's allegedly overbilled the state by millions (e.g., $4 million+ in inflated costs for equipment and work), leading to the contract's termination. Investigations revealed potential conflicts, sole-source bidding issues, and mismanagement. The state sued Swadley's (settlement talks involved taxpayers potentially covering costs), and it prompted ethics reform pushes. Attorney General Gentner Drummond cited it as an example of preventable self-dealing, with accusations of a cover-up to avoid embarrassing the administration.
Epic Charter Schools Fraud
One of the largest education-related fraud cases in state history. Founders of the virtual charter school network allegedly embezzled tens of millions in public funds through self-dealing (e.g., routing money to their for-profit management company). Federal and state probes led to charges; it's tied to conflicts of interest and misuse of school funds.
State Auditor Jeff McMahan Conviction
The state Auditor and Inspector (a Democrat) and his wife were convicted on federal corruption charges for accepting bribes/gifts from abstract companies in exchange for favorable audits. It highlighted influence-peddling in regulatory roles.
Legislative Bribery Cases
A probe into job-swapping for political gain led to convictions of lawmakers like Rep. Randy Terrill (R) for bribery related to maneuvering a Senate seat and state job.
More recent cases include health care fraud takedowns, bank fraud by failed institution leaders, and nonprofit embezzlement (e.g., a 2025 indictment of a Black Lives Matter OKC leader for alleged wire fraud/money laundering). Oklahoma often ranks moderately high in per-capita public corruption convictions, with ongoing ethics debates (e.g., vetoed anti-corruption bills in 2025). These are documented via DOJ records, state audits, and legislative probes.