|
by Oui Scanlon's former boss, Tom DeLay, also took a golf trip to Scotland arranged by Jack Abramoff and apparently paid for by his lobbying clients. DeLay recently was forced to step down from his post as House majority leader because of an unrelated indictment in his home state. The investigation also has resulted in the indictment of David Safavian, who was the Bush administration's top procurement official at the White House Office of Management and Budget. In a criminal complaint filed last week, the Justice Department said Scanlon collected nearly $53 million from 2001 to 2004 from three Indian tribes, promising them lobbying and public relations services. Most of the money went instead into the pockets of Scanlon and Abramoff, the complaint said. Abramoff was not named in the complaint, but Scanlon's partnership with him has been revealed in a series of hearings in the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, where e-mails between the two described a financial scheme they called "Gimme five ". Three former associates of Abramoff and Scanlon who were summoned to testify declined to do so, citing their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. They included former Greenberg lobbyist Kevin Ring, who continues to represent the Choctaw tribe as a lobbyist, and Shawn Vasell, who like Ring was a congressional aide before joining Abramoff's lobbying team. A third former associate, Brian Mann, was a director of the American International Center, a foundation set up by Scanlon in Rehoboth Beach, Del. Money from tribes and other clients passed through the AIC and was paid to Reed as well as to Abramoff and Greenberg Traurig. In a 2001 memo, for example, Scanlon proposed a $3.2 million project for the Louisiana Coushatta tribe that he said would make the tribe "a politician's best friend -- or worst political nightmare." The program was to include political research, polling and building a political database, but there is little evidence the work ever was done.
More to follow below the fold »»
###
Case 1:05-cr-00411-ESH Document 1 Filed 11/17/2005 Page 1 of 8
United States vs Michael P.S. Scanlon
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
v. MICHAEL P. S. SCANLON, Defendant. INFORMATION The United States charges that:
18 U.S.C. § 371 – Conspiracy GENERAL ALLEGATIONS:
1. From in or about March 2000 through in or about 2001, Defendant Michael P.S. Scanlon (“SCANLON”) was employed by two different national law firms in Washington, D.C., at which he worked with a lobbyist who sought and represented clients for lobbying services throughout the United States and overseas (“Lobbyist A”). THE CONSPIRACY AND ITS OBJECTS
4. Beginning in at least January 2000 through in or about at least April 2004, in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, the defendant, MICHAEL P. S. SCANLON, did knowingly conspire, confederate and agree with Lobbyist A and with other persons known and unknown to the United States to commit offenses against the United States; that is to: PURPOSE OF THE CONSPIRACY 5. It was a purpose of the conspiracy for SCANLON and Lobbyist A to enrich themselves by obtaining substantial funds from their clients through fraud and concealment and through obtaining benefits for their clients through corrupt means. MANNER AND MEANS
6. The conspiracy was carried out through the following manner and means: OVERT ACTS 7. In furtherance of the conspiracy and to achieve its purposes, SCANLON and Lobbyist A committed the following overt acts, among others, in the District of Columbia and elsewhere: Fraud Scheme Mississippi Tribe
8. In or about 1995, Lobbyist A solicited a Native American Indian tribal client based in Mississippi (“Mississippi Tribe”) to hire him to provide lobbying services on various issues, including taxation of the tribe by the Federal government as well as other issues relating to Tribal sovereignty, and the Mississippi Tribe hired Lobbyist A. As SCANLON well knew and believed, Lobbyist A used his knowledge of lobbying and grass roots work, which was superior to the Mississippi Tribe’s knowledge of these areas, to secure the trust and confidence of the Mississippi Tribe. Louisiana Tribe
11. In or about March 2001, Lobbyist A and SCANLON solicited a Native American Indian tribal client based in Louisiana (“Louisiana Tribe”) to hire them to provide lobbying and grass roots services to the tribe. As SCANLON well knew and believed, Lobbyist A used his knowledge of lobbying and grass roots work, which was superior to the Louisiana Tribe’s knowledge of these areas, to secure the trust and confidence of the Louisiana Tribe. Michigan Tribe
14. In or about January 2002, Lobbyist A and SCANLON solicited a Native American Indian tribal client based in Michigan (“Michigan Tribe”) to hire them to provide lobbying and grass roots services to the tribe. As SCANLON well knew and believed, Lobbyist A used his knowledge of lobbying and grass roots work, which was superior to the Michigan Tribe’s knowledge of these areas, to secure the trust and confidence of the Michigan Tribe. Texas Tribe
17. In or about January 2002, Lobbyist A and SCANLON solicited a Native American Indian tribal client based in Texas (“Texas Tribe”) to hire them to provide lobbying and grass roots services to the tribe. Lobbyist A misrepresented to the Texas Tribe that he would work for free in anticipation of receiving a long-term lucrative contract in the future. As SCANLON well knew and believed, Lobbyist A’s representation that he would work for free was false because SCANLON intended to pay and did pay the fifty-percent kickback due Lobbyist A under the secret arrangement Lobbyist A had with SCANLON. Corruption Scheme
19. From in or about January 2000 through in or about April 2004, SCANLON and Lobbyist A, together and separately, provided a stream of things of value to Representative #1 and members of his staff, including but not limited to a lavish trip to Scotland to play golf on worldfamous courses, tickets to sporting events and other entertainment, regular meals at Lobbyist A's upscale restaurant, and campaign contributions for Representative #1, his political action committee, and other political committees on behalf of Representative #1. All in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 371.
NOEL L. HILLMAN
__________________________ Date:_____________________
PAUL E. PELLETIER
__________________________ Date:_______________________
PLEA AGREEMENT - 19 pages pdf file -
Scanlon Pleads Quilty in Conspiracy and Agreed to Pay $19.7M Former public-relations consultant and House GOP aide Michael Scanlon turned on his former business partner, Jack Abramoff, pleading guilty to one count of conspiracy to bribe public officials and defraud Indian tribes as part of a plea bargain with federal prosecutors. Scanlon, who has been cooperating with prosecutors since June, agreed to pay $19.7 million in restitution to the tribes, according to his plea agreement. He faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine, though his sentencing will be deferred until Scanlon has finished helping prosecutors with their case.
Update [2005-11-24 11:30AM PST by Oui]:
Lobbyist Accuses Ex-Partner in Fraud
Jack Abramoff says Adam Kidan hid his business failures and disbarment MIAMI (AP) Sept. 26, 2005 -- Prominent Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff and New York businessman Adam Kidan were once good friends who had known each other since their college days in the Washington area. They stayed in touch over the years and became business partners in a 2000 deal to buy a lucrative Florida fleet of gambling boats. Extended coverage is justified, as is seen so far :: The DeLay Cartel – Abramoff – Norquist – Ney, amazing how broad the indictments went last month! I didn’t realize the sleaze went so deep it touched SunCruz Casino and a murder wrap.
Rep. Bob Ney inserted comments into the Congressional Record in March 2000 that were critical of Gus Boulis, the then-owner of SunCruz, a Florida casino-boat chain Abramoff wanted to buy. The insertion “was calculated to pressure [Boulis] to sell on terms favorable” to Abramoff and his partners, the document said. So our nominees for "The Abramoff 6" are Tom DeLay (TX), Bob Ney (OH-18) Conrad Burns (R-MT), Dave Vitter (R-LA), Tom Feeney (FL-24), and Dan Rohrabacher (CA-46)
Adam R. Kidan and Jack A. Abramoff Indicted on Charges of Conspiracy and Wire Fraud Michael Scanlon, former DeLay press aide, helped his partner, Jack Abramoff, in acquiring the floating casino company, SunCruz. He persuaded Rep. Bob Ney to tout Adam Kidan in the Congressional Record. Ney made a floor statement in the House in October 2000, praising Kidan for his "renowned reputation for honesty and integrity." (Congressional Record, 10/26/00; Roll Call, 12/6/04)
THE HILL - Robert Ney “Mayor of Capitol Hill”
Oversaw the Process for Awarding the Wireless Contract WASHINGTON March 3, 2005 — A congressional committee led by Rep. Bob Ney awarded a $3 million wireless contract to a telecommunications provider that had retained and made contributions to a now-indicted lobbyist with close ties to Ney. The lobbyist, Jack Abramoff, has been charged with fraud in connection with an unrelated matter, his purchase of a Fort Lauderdale casino cruise line in 2001. Ney, R-St. Clairsville, denied through a spokesman that there was any link between his approval, as chairman of the House Administration Committee, of a contract to install cellular antennas in a House office complex, and Abramoff’s role as a lobbyist for the recipient, MobileAccess Network. “Ney never met with Abramoff on this matter,” his spokesman Brian Walsh said. “He was not lobbied by Abramoff.” Federal investigators are continuing what has been described as a wide-ranging probe of other dealings involving Abramoff, including his receipt of millions of dollars in lobbying fees from tribal clients. The company that won the wireless contract, Vienna, Va. based MobileAccess, also is part of the probe. MobileAccess, a provider of fiber-optic transmission systems, was based in Israel and doing business as Foxcom when it won the contract in late 2002. The company employed Abramoff as a lobbyist, paying his team $280,000 over two years, the Washington Post reported Tuesday. The company also made a $50,000 contribution to Abramoff’s charity, the Capitol Athletic Foundation. When Ney approved the contract, Ney did not know that MobileAccess had given $50,000 to Abramoff’s foundation, Walsh said. Ney has known Abramoff for years. The congressman has received tens of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions that either were donated by Abramoff or sent to Ney at Abramoff’s request.
What great hypocrisy — May 21, 2003
"Treason doth never prosper: what's the reason? For if it prosper, none dare call it treason."
RELATED DIARIES & COMMENTS ::
1. Conspiracy Indictment Next?! - Josh Marshall TPM Agrees ¶ DoJ Press Release
Scanlon Pleads Guilty in Conspiracy ¶ Abramoff & Bob Ney Accused ¶ Updated | 6 comments (6 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
Scanlon Pleads Guilty in Conspiracy ¶ Abramoff & Bob Ney Accused ¶ Updated | 6 comments (6 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
|
Login
We listened to PEN American Center's "State of Emergency" and found 1940s books by Curzio Malaparte only at Alibris
|
||||||||||
Booman Tribune Homepage admin@boomantribune.com powered by Scoop
More blogs about Blogs at Technorati.
|
||||||||||||
© 2009 Booman Tribune