Mr. Ethics, Tom DeLay (R-Tx), involved with yet more scandals

E-Z-B

CAGiversary!
Yet, the House GOP remain unfazed and are standing firm with the sinking ship:

A 3rd DeLay Trip Under Scrutiny
1997 Russia Visit Reportedly Backed by Business Interests

A six-day trip to Moscow in 1997 by then-House Majority Whip Tom DeLay (R-Tex.) was underwritten by business interests lobbying in support of the Russian government, according to four people with firsthand knowledge of the trip arrangements.

DeLay reported that the trip was sponsored by a Washington-based nonprofit organization. But interviews with those involved in planning DeLay's trip say the expenses were covered by a mysterious company registered in the Bahamas that also paid for an intensive $440,000 lobbying campaign.

It is unclear precisely how the money was transferred from the Bahamian-registered company to the nonprofit.

The expense-paid trip by DeLay and four of his staff members cost $57,238, according to records filed by his office. During his six days in Moscow, he played golf, met with Russian church leaders and talked to Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin, a friend of Russian oil and gas executives associated with the lobbying effort.

DeLay also dined with the Russian executives and two Washington-based registered lobbyists for the Bahamian-registered company, sources say. One of those lobbyists was Jack Abramoff, who is now at the center of a federal influence-peddling and corruption probe related to his representation of Indian tribes.

House members bear some responsibility to ensure that the sponsors for their travel are not masquerading for registered lobbyists or foreign government interests, legal experts say. House ethics rules bar the acceptance of travel reimbursement from registered lobbyists and foreign agents.

In this case, travel funds did not come directly from lobbyists; the money came from a firm, Chelsea Commercial Enterprises Ltd., that funded the lobbying campaign, according to the sources. Chelsea was coordinating the effort with a Russian oil and gas company -- Naftasib -- that has business ties with Russian security institutions, the sources said.

Questions on Three Trips

The 1997 Moscow trip is the third foreign trip by DeLay to be scrutinized in recent weeks because of new statements by those involved that his travel was directly or indirectly financed by registered lobbyists or a foreign agent.

Media attention focused on DeLay's travel last month after The Washington Post reported on DeLay's participation in a $70,000 expense-paid trip to London and Scotland in 2000 that sources said was indirectly financed in part by an Indian tribe and a gambling services company. A few days earlier, media attention had focused on a $106,921 trip DeLay took to South Korea in 2001 that was financed by a tax-exempt group created by a lobbyist on behalf of a Korean businessman.

DeLay on March 18 portrayed criticism of his trips and close ties to lobbyists as the product of a conspiracy to "destroy the conservative movement" by attacking its leaders, such as himself. "This is a huge, nationwide, concerted effort to destroy everything we believe in," DeLay told supporters at the Family Research Council, a conservative Christian group.

In that period, prominent Russian businessmen, as well as the Russian government, depended heavily on a flow of billions of dollars in annual Western aid and so had good reason to build bridges to Congress. House Republicans were becoming increasingly critical of U.S. and international lending institutions, such as the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) and the International Monetary Fund, which were then investing heavily in Russia's fragile economy.

Unlike some House conservatives who scorn such support as "corporate welfare," DeLay proved to be a "yes" vote for institutions bolstering Russia in this period. For example, DeLay voted for a bill that included the replenishment of billions of dollars in IMF funds used to bail out the Russian economy in 1998.

A DeLay aide said he tried to reform these institutions through the legislative process. DeLay voted to fund these agencies because their financing was usually included in appropriation bills that he generally supported, the aide said. They also noted that OPIC had the strong backing of the energy industry, including companies from Texas that received OPIC financing.

Meetings in Moscow

The Russian campaign is detailed in disclosures filed with the House by lobbyists. Those records state that Chelsea, with an address listed variously as a post office box on the British island of Jersey -- a tax haven off the French coast -- or a law firm in the Bahamas, paid at least $440,000 to fund lobbying aimed at building "support for policies of the Russian government for progressive market reforms and trade with the United States," according to lobbying registration documents.

The Washington offices of two lobbying and law firms collected the fees. Preston Gates Ellis and Rouvelas Meeds LLP -- where Abramoff then worked -- received $260,000 in 1997 and less than $10,000 in 1998; Cadwalader Wickersham and Taft LLP was paid $180,000 in 1997 and less than $10,000 annually for the next three years, according to the registrations. Their listed lobbying targets included members of the House and Senate and officials of the State Department and the Agency for International Development.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A28319-2005Apr5.html?nav=rss_business
 
Now #2:

DeLay daughter's baby shower held by Texas energy firm under investigation
Lobbyist Abramoff attended

By John Byrne | RAW STORY Editor

A Texas energy company being investigated with regards to improper fundraising by those connected with House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-TX) held a baby shower for DeLay's daughter Danielle Ferro in May 2002—and the event was attended by lobbyist Jack Abramoff, who paid for some of the congressman’s overseas travel, RAW STORY has found.

The shower, reported in the Washington, D.C. newspaper Roll Call Jun. 10, 2002 (article posted here), was held at the Washington offices of Reliant Energy Inc., a Texas-based power company that has given heavily to DeLay and his political action committees.

Donations collected from Reliant by a DeLay-linked political action committee are now the subject of a Texas state probe. DeLay’s daughter Danielle helped manage that committee, Texans for a Republican Majority, and her records have been subpoenaed by an Austin grand jury.

An energy lobbyist who counted Reliant among her clients set up the May 10, 2002 event which she estimated cost $250.

“Dani and I have been friends a long time,” the lobbyist told Roll Call.

Just a few weeks later, DeLay held a two-day golf tournament where Reliant chipped in $25,000 to the committee now being investigated in Texas—a contribution that a group later discovered was not reported in campaign filings. Shortly thereafter, DeLay conferenced on an omnibus energy bill.

DeLay was rebuked in October of last year by the Republican-controlled House ethics committee for creating an appearance of favoritism surrounding the Jun. 2, 2002 golf outing.

Among the shower's guests was Jack Abramoff, the lobbyist found to have paid for at least two DeLay trips that were fronted through a conservative nonprofit. The trips, taken in violated of House rules, ran a tab of more than $130,000.

“Some of the lobbyists who attended the shower include Jack Abramoff and Tony Rudy of the lobbying firm Greenberg Traurig, LLP,” Roll Call noted.

At the time, DeLay's office blasted those who questioned the shower.

Ferro is now under investigation by a Texas grand jury examining the fund-raising activities of Texans for a Republican Majority, a Texas state political action committee that was modeled on DeLay's highly effective national PAC. Emails obtained in the case show the Reliant appears to have been solicited by DeLay.

The Texas Observer reported, “In early June 2002, DeLay held a two-day golf tournament at the Homestead resort in Hot Springs, Virginia. The cost of attending the event was a corporate contribution of $25,000 to $50,000. Five energy companies were invited by Maloney to attend: El Paso Corp., Mirant, Reliant Energy, Westar Energy, and Williams Companies… The golfing took place just before a House-Senate conference on an omnibus energy bill.”

Reliant Energy's director of communications would not comment on the baby shower at the time, but admitted the company allowed the use of its conference room for the event.

"Reliant gave $65,000 in soft money to DeLay's leadership PAC, Americans for a Republican Majority, in 2000 and 2001," Roll Call noted. "Through its own PAC, Reliant has donated $37,000 in hard money to DeLay's re-election campaigns since 1996, and another $6,348 to ARMPAC."


http://rawstory.com/exclusives/byrne/delay_baby_shower_reliant_abramoff_406.htm
 
Finally, let's see what Tom Delay has to say about this:

http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/04/06/delay.reponse /

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- House Majority Leader Tom DeLay defended his family Wednesday, saying newspaper articles about his wife and daughter and about his trip to Russia were "seedy" efforts by the "liberal media" to humiliate him.

Oh, I see. If it's not the democrats fault, then it's the liberal media. Of course. It definitely can't be because you're a crook.

Let's not forget how his daughter, Dani Ferro, partied with the lobbyists:

http://www.offthekuff.com/mt/archives/002326.html

The weekend included a late-night party Saturday in DeLay's suite at the Rio Hotel and Casino, which featured a living room, bar and hot tub on the balcony. DeLay was not present, aides said; the event was hosted by his daughter, Dani Ferro, the campaign manager for DeLay's reelection campaign. After the party, Ferro told associates that a lobbyist poured champagne on her while she was in the hot tub.
 
Geez, and here's yet another one from today. The number of scandals is going up faster than gas prices:

DeLay's Lavish Island Getaway (trip in exchange for ignoring sweatshops)

April 6, 2005 — A Washington lobbyist under federal investigation for his lobbying activities arranged a lavish overseas trip to the island of Saipan for House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, over the New Year's holiday in 1997. DeLay, his wife and daughter, and several aides, stayed for free at a beachfront resort.

The DeLay trip to the South Pacific island, originally reported by a "20/20" investigation, was part of an effort by former aide Jack Abramoff to stop legislation aimed at cracking down on sweatshops and sex shops in the American territory, which is known as the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI).

Abramoff, who was working for the law firm Preston Gates Ellis and Rouvelas Meeds LLP at the time, was paid $l.36 million by Saipan officials and wrote in a memo obtained by ABC News that such congressional trips were "one of the most effective ways to build permanent friends on the Hill."

After touring one garment plant, DeLay praised Saipan at the New Year's Eve party attended by top factory owners. "You represent everything that is good about what we are trying to do in America," DeLay said at the time to his audience, which included Saipan officials and factory owners.

Later, according to a recording made by a human rights investigator posing as a potential customer, one of the prominent factory owners said that DeLay had promised to stop the reform laws.


http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/Investigation/story?id=647725&page=1
 
4/6/05 (BBC news)

The Republican leader in the US House of Representatives reportedly paid his wife and daughter $500,000.

The Times says payments to his wife, Christine, and his daughter, Dani DeLay Ferro, were described in the disclosure forms as "fund-raising fees," "campaign management" or "payroll," with no further information about how they earned the money.

“Mrs DeLay provides big picture, long-term strategic guidance and helps with personnel decisions," Mr DeLay's Americans for a Republican Majority committee (Armpac) said in a statement.

"Ms Ferro is a skilled and experienced professional event planner who assists Armpac in arranging and organising individual events," it added.

[font=&quot]Mrs Ferro has run a number of Mr DeLay's re-election campaigns for his House seat.

Campaign management, eh? Sounds legitimate to me. Or better yet, fundraising fees. Or just Payroll. Payroll!! God, Almighty these are trying times to live in. I'm adding DeLay to my Ignore list. Oh, wait...that's only for CAG. If he joins...aw, crap. And, of course, his little gem from a week ago after Schiavo died:

[/font][font=&quot]"We will look at an arrogant, out-of-control, unaccountable judiciary that thumbed their nose at Congress and the president." ...after that positively ridiculous three ring circus piece of legislation Congress had the nerve to pass, DeLay had the unmitigated gall to stand before reporters and say that. I look at these headlines and I wonder why I seem to be out of touch with my fellow men. I'll bet there are crowds of people cheering every word he says. [/font]
 
I'm glad the GOP is sticking up for DeLay. The longer they support him, the more chance he has of dragging the whole party down the toilet with him. Go DeLay!!!
 
It definitely makes you wonder what sort of dirt DeLay has on everyone else, for them to stick up for him this long. Its gotta be something good.
 
Scandals eh? Hmmm..... maybe larry flynt was right. Then again maybe not, but I can still dream:


[font=Arial, Helvetica][ROBERT] NOVAK: Mr. Flynt, never let it be said that we censor any of our guests here on CROSSFIRE, and you said you wanted to talk about the election. Tell me what you wanted to say. [/font]

[font=Arial, Helvetica]FLYNT: Well, during the impeachment debacle, we did an investigation which resulted in the resignation of Bob Livingston and others and we have continued this investigation and for eight months we've been looking into George W. Bush's background. And we've found out in the early 1970s he was involved in an abortion in Texas, and I just think that it's sad that the mainstream media, who's aware of this story, won't ask him that question when they were able to ask him the drug question without any proof at all, and we've got all kinds of proof on this issue. [/font]

[font=Arial, Helvetica]NOVAK: Well, you're...[/font]

[font=Arial, Helvetica]FLYNT: You know, the guy admitted he was a drunk for 20 years, and if the abortion issue is true then that puts him lower on the morality scale than Bill Clinton. [/font]

[font=Arial, Helvetica]NOVAK: Mr. Flynt, you said if it's true and you have no proof of that. I gather you are a very strong...[/font]

[font=Arial, Helvetica]FLYNT: The hell we don't have proof.[/font]

[font=Arial, Helvetica]NOVAK: Sir, I gather you're a very strong Gore supporter. Is that correct? [/font]

[font=Arial, Helvetica]FLYNT: I'll vote for the lesser of the two evils. I don't like either one of them. [/font]

[font=Arial, Helvetica][BILL] PRESS: All Right, Larry Flynt, a man who speaks his word, but we remind you they are Larry Flynt's words and not ours. Larry Flynt, thank you very, very much for joining us. [/font]

[font=Arial, Helvetica]This was followed by an online chat, in which Flynt went into greater detail:[/font]

[font=Arial, Helvetica]CNN - Mr. Flynt, I would like to know how you plan to protect yourself from a law suit by claiming to have the goods on GWBush.[/font]

[font=Arial, Helvetica]Flynt: Because we have them and the truth is an absolute defense.[/font]

[font=Arial, Helvetica]CNN; When and where are you going to publish information about George W. Bush?[/font]

[font=Arial, Helvetica]Flynt: When I said that we had the proof, I am referring to knowing who the girl was, knowing who the doctor was that pereformed the abortion, evidence from girlfriends of hers at the time, who knew about the romance and the subsequent abortion. The young lady does not want to go public, and without her willingness, we don't feel that we're on solid enough legal ground to go with the story, because should she say it never happened, then we've got a potential libel suit. But we know we have enough evidence that we believe completely. One of the things that interested us was that this abortion took place before Roe Vs. Wade in 1970, which made it a crime at the time. I'd just like the national media to ask him if abortion is okay for him and his family, but not for the rest of America. We're not looking at it as a big issue, we're looking at it as a situation of people not being told the truth. I think the American people have a right to know everything there is to know about someone running for President.
[/font]
http://archive.democrats.com/display.cfm?id=159
 
[quote name='CheapyD']As long as he doesn't get any unauthorized blowjobs....thats the important thing here.[/QUOTE]

I think that's his problem - he's not getting any, authorized or not.
 
Wow alonzo, just WOW! That's disgusting.

I've hated DeLay ever since he's tried to Gerrymander Texas to increase the # of Republicans representing the state and all this info coming out about him just makes me hate him more. One of these days I will shut down him and Rove verbally. I believe I can politically outmanuever Rove regardless of what PAD may think. I can read Rove's moves. I mean seriously Rove's not THAT hard to read.
 
DeLay Apologizes for Comments : Leader Wouldn't Say Whether He Wants Schiavo Judges Impeached

By Mike Allen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, April 14, 2005; Page A05


House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-Tex.) apologized yesterday for heated comments he made about possible retribution against federal judges for their handling of the Terri Schiavo case, but declined to say whether he favors impeaching those judges.


DeLay addressed his earlier comments during a crowded news conference at the Capitol. "I said something in an inartful way, and I shouldn't have said it that way, and I apologize for saying it that way," he said. "It was taken wrong. I didn't explain it or clarify my remarks, as I'm clarifying them here. I am sorry that I said it that way, and I shouldn't have."

"Congress has constitutionally mandated oversight responsibilities over the judiciary," he said. "We would be shirking our constitutional obligations if we did not look at these issues as they come up."

...so, he didn't recant his remarks, but regrets the way he worded them. I wonder what Constitutional mandate he's referring to (http://www.house.gov/Constitution/Constitution.html)?
 
More nuggets from DeLay:

DeLay news you might have missed

With all the hubbub over House Majority Leader Tom DeLay's uncharacteristic expression of contrition on Wednesday for remarks he made about the Terri Schiavo case, some other comments DeLay made to the press on Wednesday got less play. Which is too bad, because DeLay shared some pretty big ideas.

During an interview in his Capitol Hill office with staff from the conservative Washington Times, DeLay suggested that the time was ripe to give the U.S. government an extreme makeover: "What I find the most important is to redesign the government, now that we have the opportunity to do that."

"I started an effort to redesign the Appropriations Committee," he noted, "to make it harder to spend -- to make it easier to spend on our priorities and harder to spend on the Democrats' priorities."

But DeLay's ambitions are farther-reaching than hog-tying the Democrats on spending. He suggested that Congress, having been out to lunch for the last century or so, really needs to step up now, especially to rein in those pesky courts. "I blame Congress over the last 50 to 100 years for not standing up and taking its responsibility given to it by the Constitution. The reason the judiciary has been able to impose a separation of church and state that's nowhere in the Constitution is that Congress didn't stop them. The reason we had judicial review is because Congress didn't stop them. The reason we had a right to privacy is because Congress didn't stop them."

"We're having to change a whole culture in this -- a culture created by law schools," he went on. "People really believe that these are nine gods, and that all wisdom is vested in them." (Was he talking about the Rev. Jerry Falwell's new program for aspiring attorneys?)

DeLay also answered a couple questions about his alleged ethics violations, saying, "This stuff that's in the press is frivolous." But when Washington Times reporter Charles Hurt pressed the issue and asked if DeLay had ever "crossed the line of ethical behavior," DeLay turned a bit more demure. "Ever," he said, "is a very strong word."

So DeLay thinks separation of church & state, judicial review and a right to privacy are all bad things?!? What a complete asshat! I hope Republicans keep rallying around him so he can drag them all down.
 
Um.......is that quote from The Onion? I assume it's from the Onion. I hope it is.

[edit: reading that transcript gave me the willies, the heebie jeebies, and the creeps all at the same time. 8-[ ]
 
[quote name='ElwoodCuse']Tom DeLay is pissed off at Justice Kennedy because he (GASP) does his OWN RESEARCH on the INTERNET![/QUOTE]

DeLay's accusation that Justice Kennedy has based at least one previous decision on international law (presumably, in conflict with the U.S. Constitution) sounds like it might be a legitimate complaint, but without more details, I guess it's just an unsubstantiated claim. Entertaining as a sound byte, but that's all. Then again, I don't follow Supreme Court decisions that closely, so I just dunno. I don't see that article offering any further details on that point, either....which doesn't shock me, coming from Fox News. *shrug*

Delay's criticism of Kennedy's reliance upon research performed on the Internet strikes me as a timely one. Naturally, bias is not limited to materials found online, but can be found in any history book, news article, PR statement, etc. I'm sure a Supreme Court Justice has the presence of mind to distinguish between reliable and unreliable sources of information, on or offline. Still, one doesn't picture a high-powered lawyer presenting a printout of a webpage as Exhibit A in a multi-billion dollar lawsuit. This strikes me as a tricky accusation to handle, actually.

"DeLay also said that while he supports an independent judiciary, it is the job of the legislature to have checks and balances "so that you don't have an oligarchy of nine people on the Supreme Court separated from everybody else. All wisdom is not vested in nine people on the Supreme Court." ---now that just sounds like out-and-out, pure idiocy to me. The inherent system of checks and balances in our government is grounded in separate powers of the judicial, executive, and legislative branches, if my high school education doesn't fail me. Not "and Congress shall oversee the Judicial branch and grovel at the President's feet." DeLay just sounds like an absolute idiot to me in that quote.
 
I love it when he points out that it is judges on the left being the culprit of all the problems when there has been a republican president for 16 out of the past 24 years
 
Let's see. What's today's DeLay scandal? Oh, here we go:

Lobbyist Gave DeLay a Skybox for Donors

By SUZANNE GAMBOA
The Associated Press
Wednesday, April 20, 2005; 2:31 PM

WASHINGTON - House Majority Leader Tom DeLay treated his political donors to a bird's-eye view of a Three Tenors concert from an arena skybox leased by a lobbyist now under criminal investigation.

DeLay's political action committee did not reimburse lobbyist Jack Abramoff for the May 2000 use of the skybox, instead treating it as a type of donation that didn't have to be disclosed to election regulators at the time.

The skybox donation, valued at thousands of dollars, came three weeks before DeLay also accepted a trip to Europe - including golf with Abramoff at the world-famous St. Andrews course - for himself, his wife and aides that was underwritten by some of the lobbyist's clients.

Two months after the concert and trip, DeLay voted against gambling legislation opposed by some of Abramoff's Indian tribe clients.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A4926-2005Apr20.html

Let me guess - it's the dem's fault on this one. No, wait! It's the liberal media!!
 
DeLay Airfare Was Charged To Lobbyist's Credit Card

By R. Jeffrey Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, April 24, 2005; Page A01


The airfare to London and Scotland in 2000 for then-House Majority Whip Tom DeLay (R-Tex.) was charged to an American Express card issued to Jack Abramoff, a Washington lobbyist at the center of a federal criminal and tax probe, according to two sources who know Abramoff's credit card account number and to a copy of a travel invoice displaying that number. The invoice for DeLay's plane fare lists the name of what was then Abramoff's lobbying firm, Preston Gates & Ellis.

House ethics rules bar lawmakers from accepting travel and related expenses from registered lobbyists. DeLay, who is now House majority leader, has said that his expenses on this trip were paid by a nonprofit organization and that the financial arrangements for it were proper. He has also said he had no way of knowing that any lobbyist might have financially supported the trip, either directly or through reimbursements to the nonprofit organization.


Multiple sources, including DeLay's then-chief of staff Susan Hirschmann, have confirmed that DeLay's congressional office was in direct contact with Preston Gates about the trip itinerary before DeLay's departure, to work out details of his travel. These contacts raise questions about DeLay's statement that he had no way of knowing about the financial and logistical support provided by Abramoff and his firm.


Yesterday, DeLay's lawyer, Bobby R. Burchfield, said that DeLay's staff was aware that Preston Gates was trying to arrange meetings and hotels for the trip but that DeLay was unaware of the "logistics" of bill payments, and that DeLay "continues to understand his expenses" were properly paid by the nonprofit organization, the National Center for Public Policy Research.


*******************************
....l feel so much safer, knowing that special interest groups will continue to be well represented...I was starting to get worried for those guys. After all, it would be a dark day indeed for our proud nation if the National Center for Public Policy Research couldn't even scrounge up $2,800 a day for "educational" trips--as they had it listed--for a House majority Whip and his family...and what better place for our congressmen and their families to receive education than on the scenic golf courses at the Old Course Hotel Golf Resort & Spa in Saint Andrews?
 
Ahhh, Tom DeLay. Haven't heard much from him in awhile. Or the house GOP either. Beautiful.

But to show that corruption hasn't slowed down with Tom, here's an article from an energy company paying Tom $25k to golf with him:

AUSTIN, Texas - A Kansas energy company said it donated $25,000 so that it could attend a golf outing with U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay to try to influence pending energy legislation.

The admission from Topeka, Kan.-based Westar Energy marks the first time a company has publicly admitted to donating to DeLay's political action committee in exchange for a meeting and possible legislative help.

In court documents obtained by The Dallas Morning News, Westar officials said after they made the donation, two company executives attended a June 2002 golf outing with DeLay and two top aides at The Homestead resort in Hot Springs, Va.
 
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