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Sink, Scott trade barbs on scandals

Use ad, website to attack

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Alex Sink (left) and Rick Scott, Florida gubernatorial candidates, meet for their first face-to-face debate at Univision's studios in Miami on Friday. Their answers to panelists' questions were translated into Spanish.ASSOCIATED PRESSAlex Sink (left) and Rick Scott, Florida gubernatorial candidates, meet for their first face-to-face debate at Univision's studios in Miami on Friday. Their answers to panelists' questions were translated into Spanish.
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Florida's two gubernatorial candidates launched dueling media attacks Monday designed to portray the other as scandal-prone and untrustworthy in a race most pollsters say is too close to call.

Democrat Alex Sink unveiled an unusually long two-minute television ad hammering her Republican opponent, Rick Scott, for his role in one of the nation's largest medical fraud scandals in history.

Mr. Scott fired back later in the day with a new website dedicated to "Sink scandals," which he said exposes his opponent's hypocrisy.

The competing personal attacks came as a new poll showed the candidates in a virtual dead heat with the election only three weeks away. Mrs. Sink is the state's chief financial officer and Mr. Scott is a political newcomer and former top health care executive.

The Sink ad, done in documentary style and dubbed the "Fraud Files," highlights Mr. Scott's troubled tenure as the former head of the Columbia/HCA hospital chain. The multimillionaire Republican candidate was ousted as head of the medical group in 1997 after the federal government accused the chain of filing Medicaid and Medicare claims for services it didn't perform.

The company eventually reached a plea agreement that totaled $1.7 billion - the largest recovery ever reached by the U.S. government in a health care fraud investigation.

The ad also attacks Mr. Scott over his business dealings with Solantic, a chain of health care clinics he co-founded that the state of Florida is investigating for possible overbilling of Medicare, a claim Mr. Scott denies.

The ad will begin airing Wednesday evening in the Tampa market, a politically crucial battleground area.

Mr. Scott in turn launched www.SinkScandals.com, which his campaign said is designed to counter the Democrat's claim that in her career as banker and state official she had not been touched by scandal.

The Republican claimed that Mrs. Sink abused her position as Florida's chief financial office by granting permission for convicted felons to sell insurance in Florida. The action, though legal, exploited a loophole in state and federal laws designed to keep felons out of the financial service industries, he said.

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About the Author
Sean Lengell

Sean Lengell

Sean Lengell joined The Washington Times in August 2006 as a business reporter to cover transportation and labor issues. He moved to the national desk in early 2007 to cover Congress and national politics.

Mr. Lengell worked at the Tampa (Fla.) Tribune from 1995 to 1997 and from 1998 to 2006, covering local government, police and general-assignment duties.

In 1994 ...

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