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Authorities raid home, office of R.I. House speaker

A Rhode Island state trooper stood outside the office of House Speaker Gordon Fox on Friday.Erika Niedowski/AP

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Law enforcement officials raided the office and home of House Speaker Gordon Fox on Friday as part of a criminal investigation by the U.S. attorney’s office, FBI, IRS and state police.

Officials would not say who or what was being investigated, but authorities worked for hours inside the Democratic House speaker’s Statehouse office while state police troopers stood outside.

Authorities entered the office carrying an evidence bag and empty cardboard boxes Friday morning. Fox’s spokesman, Larry Berman, said state police had asked everyone working in the office to leave, but he didn’t know why.

At around 4 p.m., a dozen authorities exited Fox’s office carrying boxes and other items.

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Several news outlets reported that Fox returned to his home on the East Side of Providence on Friday afternoon, shortly after FBI agents removed boxes from his house. He did not comment.

Jim Martin, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office, wouldn’t comment when asked whether the House speaker was being investigated. He said two federal search warrants had been executed, but he wouldn’t say whether they were connected to Fox.

Fox is just the latest politician to be wrapped up in a criminal investigation in Rhode Island, a state with a long history of elected officials getting into trouble with the law. Former Independent Providence Mayor Buddy Cianci, one of the longest-serving mayors in U.S. history, went to prison in 2002 for racketeering conspiracy after a federal probe found he presided over widespread corruption in office. Former Republican Gov. Edward DiPrete went to prison in the 1990s after admitting he took bribes in offcie

Fox has represented Providence for more than two decades in the state’s part-time General Assembly, and he became the nation’s first openly gay House speaker in 2010. He has a private law practice.

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A spokeswoman for Democratic Gov. Lincoln Chafee said he wasn’t commenting on the investigation.

‘‘He has been briefed on the situation, and he continues to be updated by R.I. State Police Colonel Steven O'Donnell,’’ Faye Zuckerman wrote in an email.

Lawmakers were already maneuvering Friday to replace Fox. House Majority Leader Nick Mattiello told The Associated Press that he was among those who hoped to become the next House speaker. He was camped out in a restaurant in the city’s Federal Hill neighborhood Friday afternoon making calls to fellow lawmakers and called an ‘‘informational caucus’’ for Friday evening to talk about ‘‘the future of the House.’’

He said the news of the raids was ‘‘unsettling,’’ but he stopped short of calling for Fox to relinquish his leadership position.

‘‘I don’t know the facts that led to today’s event,’’ Mattiello said. He said he hadn’t spoken to Fox yet but planned to call him.

Asked at the Statehouse on Friday afternoon if Fox had plans to resign, Berman said, ‘‘Not that I'm aware of.’’

‘‘I'm sure he’s talking to advisers about his future,’’ he added.

Berman said he wasn’t aware that any other lawmakers were questioned as part of the investigation.

He said that Fox has had many great accomplishments as speaker and that whatever this investigation is about, ‘‘I don’t think it reflects on his legislative’’ achievements.

In January, Fox agreed to a settlement with the state ethics commission for failing to disclose he had done more than $40,000 in legal work for a Providence economic development agency. Fox acknowledged breaking a law that requires elected officials to annually report whether they received more than $250 in income from a government agency and agreed to pay a $1,500 civil fine.

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Albin Moser, a lawyer who represented Fox in the recent complaint before the state ethics commission, wouldn’t comment on Friday’s events or say whether he is still representing Fox.

Jason Grammitt of the state ethics commission said the office wasn’t involved in the investigation but wouldn’t comment on whether its staff had referred anything from its earlier investigation to federal or state authorities.