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Government Accountability Office investigators determined Pruitt broke the law by exceeding a $5,000 cap on office improvements without notifying Congress, as well as by violating the Antideficiency Act. (The EPA has declined to file a required report on the violation to the GAO, the president, and Congress, despite threats from Democrats to withhold some funding.) Pruitt initially claimed that the booth was a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility, which government officials use to discuss sensitive or classified information, but conceded to Congress in 2018 that it didn’t meet SCIF standards.

The EPA already had a SCIF, but it was on the other floor, and thus apparently not close enough to the toilet for Pruitt’s particular needs. Nonetheless, he only placed one outbound call from the booth, records obtained by the Washington Post showed:

He placed only one phone call to the White House, newly released records from the agency show. It lasted five minutes...The new documents do not show how many incoming calls Pruitt received in the soundproof booth, which he installed last year. In April, Pruitt testified before the House Energy and Commerce Committee that he used the booth sparingly.

“It’s for confidential communications, and it’s rare,” he told Rep. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.).

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Andrew Wheeler, Pruitt’s equally pollution-loving but ever-so-slightly more-prudent successor, said in 2018 he had never used the booth. No word on the toilet, though.