Neronha Finds McKee Directed ILO Group Contract in a Manipulated Process

The Attorney General said there are no charges in the case due to cloudy and contradictory evidence

File photo. Rhode Island Gov. Daniel McKee has defended his approach.
File photo. Rhode Island Gov. Daniel McKee has defended his approach.
Ian Donnis/The Public’s Radio
1 min read
Share
File photo. Rhode Island Gov. Daniel McKee has defended his approach.
File photo. Rhode Island Gov. Daniel McKee has defended his approach.
Ian Donnis/The Public’s Radio
Neronha Finds McKee Directed ILO Group Contract in a Manipulated Process
Copy

Rhode Island Gov. Daniel McKee directed a $5.2 million federally funded state contract to a company formed for that purpose, although there is insufficient evidence to bring a charge in the case, according to findings released on Oct. 29 by Attorney General Peter Neronha.

A legal memo and related documents from Neronha mark the end of a three-year probe into the contract awarded by the state to the ILO Group, which was meant to help with school reopenings after the COVID-19 pandemic.

According to Neronha, McKee intentionally and against the findings of a state review team directed the lucrative contract “to a company formed for that purpose by” ILO Group CEO Julia Rafal-Baer, who was close to Michael C. McGee, an associate of the governor.

An email sent by Rafal-Baer on the same day the school reopening RFP was posted by the state “further supports the conclusion the procurement process was manipulated from the outset,” Neronha writes.

The email reads in part: “It’s a fixed RFP but luckily I know the person it’s fixed for (smiling winking emoji).”

McKee, whose office did not immediately respond to a request for comment, has maintained that he did nothing wrong in connection with the ILO Group contract.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

The president and CEO of The Public’s Radio and Rhode Island PBS said she is “very concerned.”
With pizza, mentorship, and a mic, Roberto Gonzalez and his student-led program give youth a voice—turning curiosity into confidence and classrooms into launchpads for global storytelling
The state senator who represents Providence says the city should explore new ways to raise revenue
Speaker Shekarchi calls the effort important for retaining the company
Former Senate president died with $148K cash on hand as of March 31
In an executive order, President Trump directs the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to stop funding NPR and PBS. They say he can’t. PBS chief Paula Kerger calls it “blatantly unlawful”.
The payment resolves a federal lawsuit against former patrolman Michael Pessoa, who was convicted in 2023 of punching a handcuffed suspect in the face and filing false reports to cover up the incident
Rhode Island celebrates the arrival of spring with the tradition of May Breakfasts. The oldest, at Cranston’s Oaklawn Community Baptist Church, has been going strong for 156 years
‘It’s been remarkable for us to see just such a positive impact that she has’