Roy Cooper, the Democrat Governor of North Carolina, who ignited the culture-changing transgender bathroom policy on the country, is now being called into question over a massive play for pay scheme using environmental policies to bully an energy company and to leverage payouts for Pipelines.

Investigators into the matter concluded that Cooper forced Duke Energy into creating a $57.8M slush fund as a condition of getting an environmental permit for the pipeline.

Local news, WBTV, reported: “A report released Wednesday morning by investigators hired by an oversight committee of the North Carolina General Assembly concluded that ‘criminal violations may have occurred’ in the process used by Governor Roy Cooper and his staff to issue a critical permit for the Atlantic Coast Pipeline in early 2018.”

Even the Liberal State Papers, the News & Observer and the Charlotte Observer, surprisingly published the details of the shocking discoveries by the Republican Party, this week and called for an investigation, although they did try to frame the narrative that Cooper was innocent.

Let's look at how #ncpol media choose to cover a brutal report criticizing Gov. Roy Cooper.@newsobserver chooses to cast doubt on the investigation@WRAL goes with burying under irrelevant detail @WBTV_News is only outlet to play it straight pic.twitter.com/Jwim0RiEe9 — Andrew Dunn (@andrew_dunn) November 20, 2019 From The News & Observer: Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper set out in late 2017 to create a “mitigation fund” intended to offset environmental damage resulting from construction of the Atlantic Coast Pipeline, a natural gas pipeline that is planned to roughly follow I-95 through North Carolina. But what resulted is a misbegotten fund that’s causing ongoing political damage — for him. The need to investigate further was the report’s main conclusion: “[T]he information suggests that criminal violations may have occurred. An investigative agency with the authority to compel cooperation and the production of documents could potentially obtain additional information to identify violations of criminal statutes.”