Utah Rep. Mia Love does not appear to be out of the woods just yet over a complaint filed with the Federal Election Commission over funds she raised for a GOP primary race she allegedly knew she would not have.

That’s despite Love claiming in a statement Monday night that the FEC has cleared her of any wrongdoing after she agreed to re-designate roughly $370,000 in campaign contributions made between the GOP nominating convention in April and the June primary date, when Love did not face a Republican challenger.

She also returned more than $10,000 to donors in the third filing quarter for donations that her campaign legal team deemed she needed to return.

Love told reporters Monday that her campaign received a call from an FEC employee who told the campaign that it could “keep all the primary funds that we have raised through the convention and that the agency attorneys agree with the legal assessments made” by Love’s campaign finance legal team.

But the group that filed the initial complaint forcing Love to revisit her primary funding, the Alliance for a Better Utah, said that phone conversation is not tantamount to a clearance from the FEC on the matter.