If it feels like it’s been forever since we discussed Ryan Zinke’s grift-y, ethically questionable ways, that’s because it has. Though the Interior secretary made a name for himself blaming Obama for his private jet use; running his agency like he’s the Queen of England; and potentially having a hand in the curious case of a two-person company based in his tiny hometown winning a $300 million contract to restore Puerto Rico’s hurricane-ravaged electrical grid—a charge he denies—he simply couldn’t keep up with the daily onslaught of corruption stories stemming from his fellow Cabinet member, Scott Pruitt. Luckily, now that the ex-Environmental Protection Agency chief and winner of 2018’s Most Blatantly Corrupt Trump Official award has departed the administration, Zinke has taken up the grifter mantle.

Politico reports that the Interior Department’s inspector general is investigating Zinke’s dealings with Halliburton chairman David Lesar. At issue is whether or not a planned development backed by Lesar in Zinke’s hometown of Whitefish, Montana, includes a special gift for the secretary—one he just so happens to have dreamed of his entire adult life. And it sure looks like that might be the case!

In Whitefish, brewers and city officials told Politico that Zinke has long sought to build a microbrewery of his own, a project that over six years led him to submit plans to the City Council, discuss the move with other business leaders, and personally join in a review process to change local zoning laws to make them more hospitable to such a business.

Meanwhile, a planned development in Whitefish backed by David Lesar, the chairman of Halliburton—the nation’s largest oil services company, which would be one of the biggest winners in the Interior Department’s drive to roll back regulations—includes plans for just such a microbrewery.

Of course, just because Zinke made no secret about wanting to own a microbrewery, and just because Lesar happens to be building one, doesn’t necessarily mean its intended for the Cabinet member, whose deregulatory push could help out Halliburton big time. Although, there is this: