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"Senator Ensign is confident he has complied with all ethics rules and laws and will cooperate with any official inquiries," Ensign's office said Friday in an e-mailed statement. The Senate Ethics Committee did not immediately respond Friday to messages seeking comment. In March, a federal grand jury in the Justice Department's criminal probe issued a subpoena to the National Republican Senatorial Committee. According to another grand jury subpoena in March obtained by KLAS-TV, a recipient was ordered to produce documents relating to, among others, Ensign and both Michael and Lindsey Slanker. On Friday, Nevada Republican strategist Sig Rogich told the AP he met voluntarily with the Senate ethics investigators for about 25 minutes on Tuesday. He said questions focused on a single brief meeting he had with Doug Hampton at Ensign's request. "I told them I had one 10-minute meeting with Mr. Hampton, that I had not met him before, nor seen him since," Rogich said. Rogich said he did not offer Hampton a job. In March, Rogich was one of several Las Vegas business owners who said they provided material under subpoena to a federal grand jury investigating the Hampton affair. Cindy Hampton was a campaign treasurer for two committees connected to Ensign. Doug Hampton served as an administrative assistant on Ensign's Senate staff. Neither have worked for Ensign since May 2008.
[Associated
Press;
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