Bryan Smith is an attorney at Smith, Driscoll & Associates in Idaho Falls. He also serves as a board member and vice chair of the Idaho Freedom Foundation and, since July 2023, as Idaho's Republican National Committeeman, giving him significant reach within the Republican National Committee and state party politics. The Idaho Republican Party announced his appointment in a July 30, 2023 press release; he won the seat by acclamation.
In CV10-21-1197, Smith appeared as counsel for Dustin Hurst, the IFF operative who co-published the smear campaign using Christensen's secret recording.
But Smith's involvement predates the lawsuit by years. Text messages recovered in discovery, sent between EmmaLee Robinson and Greg Pruett before the Keep Idaho Free articles were published, include a message stating: "Bryan told me he will defend either of us for free and told me two days ago there isn't a chance Graf will do it."
That message was sent before a single article was published. The legal safety net was in place before the operation began.
Smith's connection to Gregory Graf is not new to CV10-21-1197. In 2018, he was the attorney for Doyle Beck, another IFF board member, when Beck filed a separate lawsuit against Graf. That case established the same pattern: when Graf's journalism documented IFF network activity, the network responded with a lawsuit. By the time Christensen filed his own defamation case in 2021, the same attorney had already used this playbook against the same journalist.
Smith, Driscoll & Associates has also drawn significant public attention for its medical debt collection practice. The firm's affiliated operation, Medical Recovery Services, became one of the most prolific filers of debt collection lawsuits in the state, a pattern that drew investigative scrutiny and eventually legislative response. In 2020, the Idaho Legislature passed the Idaho Patient Act, a law specifically designed to curb the aggressive debt collection practices associated with firms like Medical Recovery Services, protecting patients from surprise medical bills and predatory collection tactics. In March 2025, a court ordered Medical Recovery Services to pay $127,000 in attorney's fees after the firm had wrongly pursued a woman over a $460 hospital bill. In January 2026, the Idaho Supreme Court upheld the Idaho Patient Act, cementing the law's protections and validating the Legislature's judgment that the practices it targeted were a genuine problem.
Government Handouts: For Me, Not For Thee
The Idaho Freedom Foundation, where Smith serves as board vice chair, has long positioned itself as the ideological enforcer of anti-government-spending orthodoxy in Idaho politics. That makes it notable that Smith's own businesses received a combined $205,200 in federal Paycheck Protection Program loans during the COVID-19 pandemic. As reported by Boise State Public Radio, Smith, Driscoll & Associates received $133,000 and the affiliated Medical Recovery Services received $72,200.
When asked about it, Smith didn't apologize. He reframed the government money as something he was owed. "It's compensation for damages caused by the government in the first place," he said. "That's unlike some other programs that exist where the government just hands out money having not damaged the individual in the first place." He also said he "didn't think the PPP shouldn't have existed in the first place," but that "those are the rules of the road."
Medical Recovery Services: $72,200
Total: $205,200 in forgivable federal pandemic loans
Source: Boise State Public Radio, December 3, 2020
Campaign Donations: The Network He Funds
Smith's campaign finance contributions are a matter of public record and show a consistent pattern of support for IFF-aligned candidates across Idaho. He donates to the same network of candidates that Christensen belongs to — a network he also serves legally and institutionally through his IFF board seat and his pre-litigation arrangements with network participants.
sunshine.sos.idaho.gov → Donors & Donations → search "Bryan Smith"
The database covers 2020 through present. Filter by year to see 2023, 2024, 2025, and 2026 contributions.
Sources
- Robinson Deposition Exhibits, CV10-21-1197: text message "Bryan told me he will defend either of us for free"
- Court record, CV10-21-1197 (Bryan Smith as counsel of record for Dustin Hurst)
- 2018 Beck v. Graf case file (Bryan Smith as Doyle Beck's attorney)
- East Idaho News: "Medical Recovery Services ordered to pay $127k in legal fees after suing woman over $460 hospital bill" (March 2025)
- East Idaho News: "Idaho Supreme Court upholds law shielding patients from surprise medical collections, Idaho Patient Act" (January 2026)
- Idaho Patient Act (Idaho Legislature, 2020, passed to address Medical Recovery Services practices)
- Idaho Capital Sun: "Former Idaho congressional candidate named to GOP national committee" (August 1, 2023)
- Idaho Republican Party press release: New National Committeeman (July 30, 2023)
- Boise State Public Radio: "Idaho Freedom Foundation, Board Members, Received Millions In Federal Pandemic Loans" (December 3, 2020)
His Response
Chad Christensen found this site and posted a public Facebook response. He wrote approximately 1,000 words. He did not name a single specific documented fact and call it false.
Medical Debt, PPP Loans, and the Pre-Committed Defense
Bryan Smith's law firm, Smith, Driscoll & Associates, is affiliated with Medical Recovery Services, one of Idaho's most prolific medical debt collection filers. The Idaho Legislature passed the Idaho Patient Act in 2020 specifically to curb aggressive debt collection practices tied to the firm. In January 2026, the Idaho Supreme Court upheld the Idaho Patient Act. In March 2025, a court ordered Medical Recovery Services to pay $127,000 in attorney's fees after it wrongly sued a woman over a $460 hospital bill, as reported by East Idaho News.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Smith's interconnected entities received significant federal Paycheck Protection Program loans. Smith, Driscoll & Associates received $133,000. Medical Recovery Services received $72,200. Combined: $205,200 in forgivable federal loans. When asked about the loans by Boise State Public Radio in December 2020, Smith said: "It's compensation for damages caused by the government in the first place." His IFF board colleagues have consistently campaigned on reduced government spending and opposition to federal programs.
The clearest documentation of Smith's pre-committed role in the network comes from text messages recovered in discovery. Before a single Keep Idaho Free article was published, EmmaLee Robinson texted Greg Pruett: "Bryan told me he will defend either of us for free and told me two days ago there isn't a chance Graf will do it." Legal protection was arranged before the smear operation began. The free legal defense was on standby. The publication proceeded.
Frequently Asked Questions: Bryan Smith
Who is Bryan Smith Idaho?
Bryan Smith is an attorney at Smith, Driscoll & Associates in Idaho Falls, a member of the Idaho Freedom Foundation board, and Idaho's Republican National Committeeman since July 2023. He represented Dustin Hurst in the Christensen v. Graf defamation case (CV10-21-1197), represented Doyle Beck in an earlier 2018 lawsuit against the same journalist, and text messages recovered in discovery show he pre-committed to providing free legal defense to network participants before the Keep Idaho Free smear articles were published.
What is Bryan Smith's connection to Medical Recovery Services?
Bryan Smith's law firm is affiliated with Medical Recovery Services, one of Idaho's most prolific medical debt collection filers. The Idaho Legislature passed the Idaho Patient Act in 2020 specifically to address aggressive collection practices associated with the firm. In March 2025, a court ordered Medical Recovery Services to pay $127,000 in attorney's fees after it wrongly sued a woman over a $460 hospital bill. In January 2026, the Idaho Supreme Court upheld the Idaho Patient Act.
Did Bryan Smith receive PPP loans?
Yes. Smith, Driscoll & Associates received $133,000 in Paycheck Protection Program loans and Medical Recovery Services received $72,200 — a combined $205,200 in forgivable federal pandemic loans. When asked by Boise State Public Radio about the loans in December 2020, Smith said: "It's compensation for damages caused by the government in the first place." This is notable given Smith's board role at an organization that consistently campaigns against government spending.
What is Bryan Smith's role on the Idaho Freedom Foundation board?
Bryan Smith serves as a board member and vice chair of the Idaho Freedom Foundation. IdahoExtremism.org has described him as "the brains" of IFF's operation. He is also Idaho's Republican National Committeeman, a position he has held since July 2023 when he won the role by acclamation.
How did Bryan Smith provide pre-committed legal defense in the recording smear operation?
Text messages recovered in discovery in CV10-21-1197 show that before any Keep Idaho Free smear articles were published, EmmaLee Robinson texted Greg Pruett: "Bryan told me he will defend either of us for free and told me two days ago there isn't a chance Graf will do it." This message establishes that Bryan Smith had pre-committed to providing free legal defense to network participants before the publication that triggered the litigation. Smith went on to represent Dustin Hurst in that same case.