Democrats on the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee have reportedly opened an investigation into whether three associates of President Trump Donald John TrumpBubba Wallace to be driver of Michael Jordan, Denny Hamlin NASCAR team Graham: GOP will confirm Trump's Supreme Court nominee before the election Southwest Airlines, unions call for six-month extension of government aid MORE, including a Mar-a-Lago club member, influenced hiring decisions at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).

Committee Chairman Mark Takano Mark Allan TakanoCongress missed the point when it came to helping veterans During Suicide Prevention Month, Trump needs to do more for troops' mental health The Hill's Coronavirus Report: Fauci says focus should be on pausing reopenings rather than reverting to shutdowns; WHO director pleads for international unity in pandemic response MORE (D-Calif.) sent a letter Friday to the VA announcing the investigation and requesting information on correspondence top VA officials had with former Marvel Entertainment CEO Ike Perlmutter, physician Dr. Bruce Moskowitz and lawyer Marc Sherman.

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Of the three, just Perlmutter is a Mar-a-Lago member, while The Wall Street Journal reports that Moskowitz retains "privileges" at the Florida resort.

“The Committee on Veterans’ Affairs is opening an investigation into this relationship so that Congress, veterans, and the American people can better understand the scope and nature of this relationship between the Department and these individuals who have not served in the U.S. military nor U.S. government, and are not accountable to veterans and the American people,” the congressman wrote.

“Government officials and private individuals who seek to use the Department for personal enrichment, or who make poor decisions that waste taxpayer dollars or negatively affect the delivery of veterans’ healthcare and benefits must held to account,” Takano continued.

White House officials didn't immediately return requests for comment Friday from The Hill. A representative for the three men told The Wall Street Journal that they are innocent of accusations of improper influence, and are willing to cooperate with officials.

“Our only goal was to help improve veterans care,” the men told the Journal in a joint statement. “We didn’t seek or receive any personal or financial gain. We never imagined that volunteering our personal time to improving veterans’ health care would open us up to criticism.”

Their influence with Dr. David Shulkin David Jonathon ShulkinVA inspector general says former top official steered M contract to friend Schumer demands answers in use of unproven coronavirus drug on veterans Former Trump VA secretary says staffer found plans to replace him in department copier MORE, President Trump's former VA chief, extended to Shulkin creating a private email account solely for contacting the three men, according to emails obtained by the Journal.

“Dear Friends—I have set up a new email address just for our secure communication on issues in the future,” Shulkin wrote.

The three men contended to the Journal that they held no power over decisionmaking at the VA, and never offered consensus on decisions made by the agency. Rather, they argue, their purpose was to provide Shulkin with advice when necessary.

“We never sought to exert influence over anyone at the VA. That wasn’t our purpose,” the men said in the joint statement, according to the Journal. Shulkin's role, they wrote, was to “make independent judgments to consider our advice when appropriate and reject it when it wasn’t.”