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    D.C. officials skirt residency rule with shared pied-a-terre

    Two D.C. agency directors have a lot in common. They are married to women who live outside the District and they own homes in Maryland, yet they bunk together in a subterranean bachelor pad in Northeast -- a direct result of a D.C. law that says such officials must reside in the District.

  • **FILE** Natwar M. Gandhi, chief financial officer of the District of Columbia, responds to questions during an interview in Washington on April 9, 2012. (The Washington Times)

    D.C. CFO Gandhi to resign

    D.C. Chief Financial Officer Natwar M. Gandhi is resigning after 13 years holding the post, he announced Friday.

  • Natwar M. Gandhi, chief financial officer of the District of Columbia responds to questions during an interview in Washington on Monday, April 9, 2012. (The Washington Times)

    Fiscal year ends with $417M budget surplus in D.C.Tax revenue from new residents a big part

    The District of Columbia ended fiscal 2012 with a $417 million budget surplus, a windfall that illustrates how the fiscal climate in the nation's capital differs from much of the nation.

  • Buddy Roogow is executive director of the D.C. Lottery, which will award a contract to run the new Instant Ticket game. The contract process will be the subject of a D.C. Council hearing. (Barbara L. Salisbury/The Washington Times)

    D.C. Lottery game bidder back with new partner

    The majority subcontractor on the $38 million D.C. Lottery contract is competing for a new game with a different foreign partner in a process that could involve one of his well-connected friends at D.C. Lottery.

  • Barbara B. Lang, President and CEO, D.C. Chamber of Commerce talks about the future of the D.C. Council in the halls of the John A. Wilson Building in Washington, D.C., Thursday, June 7, 2012, a day after D.C. Council Chairman Kwame R. Brown resigned after federal prosecutors accused him of lying on a loan application. (Rod Lamkey Jr/The Washington Times)

    CFO: D.C. ‘ballpark fee’ not going to increase

    The District's top budget minder says the city does not need to raise the "ballpark fee" it imposes on businesses to pay down the massive debt it took to build a home for the Washington Nationals, a long-term endeavor in the nation's capital as other sports-crazed cities grapple with the role of public funds in high-stakes stadium deals.

  • ** FILE ** D.C. Lottery Director Buddy Roogow (Rod Lamkey Jr./The Washington Times)

    D.C. Lottery boss is accused of 'unethical behavior'

    The possibility of manipulation of the 2009 D.C. Lottery contract is not the only corruption angle that has drawn the attention of government investigators.

  • D.C. Chief Financial Officer Natwar M. Gandhi

    D.C. tax employee charged with stealing $300,000 from city

    A city lawmaker and frequent critic of D.C. Chief Financial Officer Natwar M. Gandhi is calling for a closer look at how the District evaluates people who are hired to work at the Office of Tax and Revenue amid allegations an employee bilked the city for $300,000 in fraudulent tax returns.

  • SEC joins scrutiny of D.C. CFO's office

    Troubles mounted on disparate fronts for D.C. Chief Financial Officer Natwar M. Gandhi on Tuesday with fresh accusations of employee-driven fraud in his office's tax division and an "informal inquiry" from the Securities and Exchange Commission compounding the scrutiny the city's purse-minder has endured for weeks.

  • Natwar M. Gandhi

    D.C. Council votes to require CFO to publish all audits

    The D.C. Council unanimously passed legislation Tuesday that requires the D.C. office of the chief financial officer to actively disclose its internal audits in the wake of scrutiny of the office's procedures and its ability to police itself.

  • Fans have been flocking to Nationals Park this season, starting with Gavin Kearney, 4, holding the hand of his father, Gus, at the April 3 exhibition game against Boston. (Andrew Harnik/The Washington Times)

    Security, traffic control in on-deck circle for Nats

    The Washington Nationals and half of D.C. Mayor Vincent C. Gray's Cabinet are ironing out plans to beef up security, vendor inspections and traffic control in and around Nationals Park next week when the city hosts its first baseball postseason game in almost 80 years, officials said Wednesday.

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