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Old 12-31-2005, 02:22 AM   #125 (permalink)
host
Banned
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by Elphaba
Host predicted the outcome, and Abramoff's pending plea deal is in the works. More heads will fall, regardless of party.

http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/122105L.shtml
For those who are interested in the background of the complicated Abramoff "story", his name was first posted on a TFP politics thread on April 16, 2005:
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/search....7&pp=40&page=2

I started a thread with a more appropriate title to post my Abramoff related Indictments "fuckpoints" in. It was located at this link:
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showthread.php?t=97643

I was advised to post here, instead........
In the second report here, (posted below....) hours ago by the AP, it sez:
Quote:
<b>.......Abramoff's cooperation</b> would be a boon to an ongoing Justice Department investigation of congressional corruption, <b>possibly helping prosecutors build criminal cases against up to 20 lawmakers and their staff members.............</b>
Bush and his staff members, Karl Rove and his assistant, Susan Ralston (she was formerly Abramoff's key assistant), and already indicted Bush admin. <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/19/AR2005091901859.html">Procurement chief David H. Safavian</a>, along with former Abramoff colleague <a href="www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Patrick_Pizzella">Patrick Pizzella</a> , appointed by Bush as assistant Labor Dept. Secretary , have enough reason for concern, due to their close ties to Abramoff, for Bush to make these erroneous, televised statements on Dec. 14:
Quote:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...JUbSI&refer=us
Lobbyist Abramoff's `Equal Money' Went Mostly to Republicans

Dec. 21 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. President George W. <b>Bush calls indicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff ``an equal money dispenser'' who helped politicians of both parties.</b> Campaign donation <b>records show Republicans were a lot more equal than Democrats.</b>

Between 2001 and 2004, Abramoff gave more than $127,000 to Republican candidates and committees and nothing to Democrats, federal records show. At the same time, his Indian clients were the only ones among the top 10 tribal donors in the U.S. to donate more money to Republicans than Democrats.

<b>Bush's comment about Abramoff in a Dec. 14 Fox News interview was aimed at countering Democratic accusations that Republicans have brought a ``culture of corruption'' to Washington.</b> Even so, the numbers show that ``Abramoff's big connections were with the Republicans,'' said Larry Noble, the former top lawyer for the Federal Election Commission, who directs the Washington-based Center for Responsive Politics.

``It is somewhat unusual in that most lobbyists try to work with both Republicans and Democrats, but we're already seeing that Jack Abramoff doesn't seem to be a usual lobbyist,'' Noble said.
Bush wants us to believe that this is not the biggest scandal in many years that will result in the convictions of nearly exclusively republican elected officials, their political appointees, and their aids, that it actually will be exposed as.

Bush won't want you to know this:
Quote:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...000753_pf.html
.......Abramoff's White House Connections

In addition to Safavian, Abramoff is known to have close ties to at least one other key White House official: Susan B. Ralston, Karl Rove's omnipresent assistant and gatekeeper.

Here's Peter H. Stone writing in the National Journal last year: "As presidential adviser Karl Rove set up shop in the West Wing in 2001, he was looking for an assistant to serve as the trusted gatekeeper of his new fiefdom. Superlobbyist and Republican fundraiser Jack Abramoff was happy to lend a hand. <b>Abramoff knew just the right person for the job: his own assistant, Susan Ralston. She interviewed with Rove and got the position."</b>

Ralston told Filipinas magazine last year: "Working for Karl Rove is like being at the center of the Bush universe -- I am fortunate to be where I am, and be involved in much of what goes on at the White House.".....

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php...san_B._Ralston
Susan Bonzon Ralston, Special Assistant to the President & Assistant to the Senior Advisor Karl Rove, was Jack Abramoff's executive assistant at Preston Gates and Ellis and later at the Greenberg Traurig law and lobbying firm, where "she served as the assistant director of governmental affairs.....

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/27/politics/27aide.html
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/102705A.shtml
Ms. Ralston's portfolio expanded at the White House this year, accompanied by an elevated job title and a significant raise. In 2003, she held the position of executive assistant to the senior adviser and <b>earned $64,700, which was bumped to $67,600 in 2004. This year, as Mr. Rove took on new duties as the deputy chief of staff, Ms. Ralston was promoted to special assistant to the president and assistant to the senior adviser, earning $92,100.</b>

Now, people familiar with Ms. Ralston's work said, she functions as Mr. Rove's own chief of staff, coordinating the five groups within the West Wing that he oversees.
or this:
Quote:
http://www.philippinenews.com/news/v...67368a1a27ee84
Ralston still 'at her desk working:' White House
Cristina DC Pastor, Dec 07, 2005
SUSAN RALSTON, according to the White House, remains a deputy assistant to President George W. Bush and a deputy of top presidential adviser Karl Rove..........
Quote:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...001480_pf.html
The DeLay-Abramoff Money Trail
Nonprofit Group Linked to Lawmaker Was Funded Mostly by Clients of Lobbyist

By R. Jeffrey Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, December 31, 2005; A01

The U.S. Family Network, a public advocacy group that operated in the 1990s with close ties to <b>Rep. Tom DeLay</b> and claimed to be a nationwide grass-roots organization, was funded almost entirely by corporations linked to embattled lobbyist <b>Jack Abramoff</b>, according to tax records and former associates of the group.

During its five-year existence, the U.S. Family Network raised <b>$2.5 million</b> but kept its donor list secret. The list, obtained by The Washington Post, shows that <b>$1 million</b> of its revenue came in a single 1998 check from a now-defunct London law firm whose former partners would not identify the money's origins.

Two former associates of <b>Edwin A. Buckham</b>, the congressman's <b>[Delay's]</b>former chief of staff and the organizer of the U.S. Family Network, said Buckham told them the funds came from Russian oil and gas executives. <b>Abramoff</b> had been working closely with two such Russian energy executives on their Washington agenda, and the lobbyist and Buckham had helped organize a 1997 Moscow visit by <b>DeLay (R-Tex.).</b>

The former president of the U.S. Family Network said Buckham told him that Russians contributed $1 million to the group in 1998 specifically to influence <b>DeLay's</b> vote on legislation the International Monetary Fund needed to finance a bailout of the collapsing Russian economy.

A spokesman for <b>DeLay</b>, who is fighting in a Texas state court unrelated charges of illegal fundraising, denied that the contributions influenced the former House majority leader's political activities. The Russian energy executives who worked with <b>Abramoff</b> denied yesterday knowing anything about the million-dollar London transaction described in tax documents.

Whatever the real motive for the contribution of $1 million -- a sum not prohibited by law but extraordinary for a small, nonprofit group -- the steady stream of corporate payments detailed on the donor list makes it clear that Abramoff's long-standing alliance with <b>DeLay</b> was sealed by a much more extensive web of financial ties than previously known.

Records and interviews also illuminate the mixture of influence and illusion that surrounded the U.S. Family Network. Despite the group's avowed purpose, records show it did little to promote conservative ideas through grass-roots advocacy. The money it raised came from businesses with no demonstrated interest in the conservative "moral fitness" agenda that was the group's professed aim.

In addition to the <b>million-dollar payment</b> involving the London law firm, for example, <b>half a million dollars</b> was donated to the U.S. Family Network by the owners of textile companies in the <b>Mariana Islands</b> in the Pacific, according to the tax records. The textile owners -- with <b>Abramoff's</b> help -- solicited and received <b>DeLay's</b> public commitment to block legislation that would boost their labor costs, according to <b>Abramoff</b> associates, one of the owners and a <b>DeLay</b> speech in 1997.

A <b>quarter of a million dollars</b> was donated over two years by the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians, <b>Abramoff's</b> largest lobbying client, which counted <b>DeLay</b> as an ally in fighting legislation allowing the taxation of its gambling revenue.

The records, other documents and interviews call into question the very purpose of the U.S. Family Network, which functioned mostly by collecting funds from domestic and foreign businesses whose interests coincided with <b>DeLay's</b> activities while he was serving as House majority whip from 1995 to 2002, and as majority leader from 2002 until the end of September.

After the group was formed in 1996, its director told the Internal Revenue Service that its goal was to advocate policies favorable for "economic growth and prosperity, social improvement, moral fitness, and the general well-being of the United States." <b>DeLay</b>, in a 1999 fundraising letter, called the group "a powerful nationwide organization dedicated to restoring our government to citizen control" by mobilizing grass-roots citizen support.

But the records show that the tiny U.S. Family Network, which never had more than one full-time staff member, spent comparatively little money on public advocacy or education projects. Although established as a nonprofit organization, it paid hundreds of thousands of dollars in fees to <b>Buckham</b> and his lobbying firm, <b>Alexander Strategy Group</b>.

There is no evidence <b>DeLay</b> received a direct financial benefit, but <b>Buckham's</b> firm employed <b>DeLay's wife, Christine</b>, and paid her a salary of at least $3,200 each month for three of the years the group existed. Richard Cullen, <b>DeLay's</b> attorney, has said that the pay was compensation for lists <b>Christine DeLay</b> supplied to <b>Buckham</b> of lawmakers' favorite charities, and that it was appropriate under House rules and election law.

Some of the U.S. Family Network's revenue was used to pay for radio ads attacking vulnerable Democratic lawmakers in 1999; other funds were used to finance the cash purchase of a townhouse three blocks from <b>DeLay's</b> congressional office. <b>DeLay's</b> associates at the time called it "the Safe House."

<b>DeLay</b> made his own fundraising telephone pitches from the townhouse's second-floor master suite every few weeks, according to two former associates. Other rooms in the townhouse were used by <b>Alexander Strategy Group, Buckham's newly formed lobbying firm,</b> and Americans for a Republican Majority (ARMPAC), <b>DeLay's</b> leadership committee.

They paid modest rent to the U.S. Family Network, which occupied a single small room in the back.
'<b>Red Flags' on Tax Returns</b>

Nine months before the June 25, 1998, payment of $1 million by the London law firm James & Sarch Co., as recorded in the tax forms, <b>Buckham and DeLay</b> were the dinner guests in Moscow of Marina Nevskaya and Alexander Koulakovsky of the oil firm Naftasib, which in promotional literature counted as its principal clients the Ministry of Defense and the Ministry of Interior.

<b>Buckham</b>, a graduate of the University of Tennessee, had worked for <b>DeLay</b> since 1995, after serving in other congressional offices and then as executive director of the Republican Study Committee, a group of fiscally conservative House members.

Their other dining companions were Abramoff and Washington lawyer Julius "Jay" Kaplan, whose lobbying firms collected $440,000 in 1997 and 1998 from an obscure Bahamian firm that helped organize and indirectly pay for the <b>DeLay</b> trip, in conjunction with the Russians. In disclosure forms, the stated purpose of the lobbying was to promote the policies of the Russian government.

Kaplan and British lawyer David Sarch had worked together previously. (Sarch died a month before the <b>$1 million</b> was paid.) <b>Buckham's trip with DeLay</b> was his second to Moscow that year for meetings with Nevskaya and Koulakovsky; on the earlier one, the <b>DeLay</b> aide attracted media attention by returning through Paris aboard the Concorde, a $5,500 flight.

Former <b>Abramoff</b> associates and documents in the hands of federal prosecutors state that Nevskaya and Koulakovsky sought Abramoff's help at the time in securing various favors from the U.S. government, including congressional earmarks or federal grants for their modular-home construction firm near Moscow and the construction of a fossil-fuel plant in Israel. None appears to have been obtained by their firm.

Former <b>DeLay</b> employees say Koulakovsky and Nevskaya met with him on multiple occasions. <b>The Russians also frequently used Abramoff's skyboxes at local sports stadiums -- as did Kaplan, according to sources and a 2001 e-mail Abramoff wrote to another client.</b>

Three sources familiar with <b>Abramoff's</b> activities on their behalf say that the two Russians -- who knew the head of the Russian energy giant Gazprom and had invested heavily in that firm -- partly wanted just to be seen with a prominent American politician as a way of bolstering their credibility with the Russian government and their safety on Moscow's streets. The Russian oil and gas business at the time had a Wild West character, and its executives worried about extortion and kidnapping threats. The anxieties of Nevskaya and Koulakovsky were not hidden; like many other business people, they traveled in Moscow with guards armed with machine guns.

During the <b>DeLays'</b> visit on Aug. 5 to 11, 1997, <b>the congressman</b> met with Nevskaya and was escorted around Moscow by Koulakovsky, Naftasib's general manager. DeLay told the House clerk that the trip's sponsor was the National Center for Public Policy Research, but multiple sources told The Post that his expenses were indirectly reimbursed by the Russian-connected Bahamian company.

<b>DeLay</b> spokesman Kevin Madden said the principal reason for his Moscow trip was "to meet with religious leaders there." Nevskaya, in a letter this spring, said Naftasib's involvement in such trips was meant "to foster better understanding between our country and the United States" and denied that the firm was seeking protection through its U.S. contacts.

Nevskaya added in an e-mail yesterday that Naftasib and its officials were not representing the ministries of defense and interior or any other government agencies "in connection with meetings or other lobbying activities in Washington D.C. or Moscow."

A former <b>Abramoff</b> associate said the two executives "wanted to contribute to <b>DeLay</b>" and clearly had the resources to do it. At one point, Koulakovsky asked during a dinner in Moscow "what would happen if the <b>DeLays</b> woke up one morning" and found a luxury car in their front driveway, the former associate said. They were told the <b>DeLays</b> "would go to jail and you would go to jail."

The tax form states that the <b>$1 million</b> came by check on June 25, 1998, from "Nations Corp, James & Sarch co." The Washington Post checked with the listed executives of Texas and Florida firms that have names similar to Nations Corp, and they said they had no connection to any such payment.

James & Sarch Co. was dissolved in May 2000, but two former partners said they recalled hearing the names of the Russians at their office. Asked if the firm represented them, former partner Philip McGuirk at first said "it may ring a bell," but later he faxed a statement that he could say no more because confidentiality practices prevent him "from disclosing any information regarding the affairs of a client (or former client)."

Nevskaya said in the e-mail yesterday, however, that "neither Naftasib nor the principals you mentioned have ever been represented by a London law firm that you name as James & Sarch Co." She also said that Naftasib and its principals did not pay $1 million to the firm, and denied knowing about the transaction.

Two former Buckham associates said that he told them years ago not only that the <b>$1 million</b> donation was solicited from Russian oil and gas executives, but also that the initial plan was for the donation to be made via a delivery of cash to be picked up at a Washington area airport.

One of the former associates, a Frederick, Md., <b>pastor named Christopher Geeslin who served as the U.S. Family Network's director or president from 1998 to 2001,</b> said <b>Buckham</b> further told him in 1999 that the <b>payment was meant to influence DeLay's vote in 1998 on legislation that helped make it possible for the IMF to bail out the faltering Russian economy and the wealthy investors there.</b>

<b>"Ed told me, 'This is the way things work in Washington,' " Geeslin said. "He said the Russians wanted to give the money first in cash." Buckham, he said, orchestrated all the group's fundraising and spending and rarely informed the board about the details. Buckham and his attorney, Laura Miller, did not reply to repeated requests for comment on this article.</b>

The IMF funding legislation was a contentious issue in 1998. The Russian stock market fell steeply in April and May, and the government in Moscow announced on June 18 -- just a week before the <b>$1 million check</b> was sent by the London law firm -- that it needed $10 billion to $15 billion in new international loans.

House Republican leaders had expressed opposition through that spring to giving the IMF the money it could use for new bailouts, decrying what they described as previous destabilizing loans to other countries. The IMF and its Western funders, meanwhile, were pressing Moscow, as a condition of any loan, to increase taxes on major domestic oil companies such as Gazprom, which had earlier defaulted on billions of dollars in tax payments.

On Aug. 18, 1998, the Russian government devalued the ruble and defaulted on its treasury bills. But <b>DeLay,</b> appearing on "Fox News Sunday" on Aug. 30 of that year, criticized the IMF financing bill, calling the replenishment of its funds "unfortunate" because the IMF was wrongly insisting on a Russian tax increase. "They are trying to force Russia to raise taxes at a time when they ought to be cutting taxes in order to get a loan from the IMF. That's just outrageous," <b>DeLay</b> said.

In the end, the Russian legislature refused to raise taxes, the IMF agreed to lend the money anyway, and <b>DeLay voted on Sept. 17, 1998, for a foreign aid bill containing new funds to replenish</b> the IMF account. <b>DeLay's</b> spokesman said the lawmaker "makes decisions and sets legislative priorities based on good policy and what is best for his constituents and the country." He added: <b>"Mr. DeLay</b> has very firm beliefs, and he fights very hard for them."

Kaplan did not respond to repeated messages, and through a spokesman for lawyer Abbe Lowell, <b>Abramoff</b> declined to comment.

No legal bar exists to a <b>$1 million donation</b> by a foreign entity to a group such as the U.S. Family Network, according to Marcus Owens, a Washington lawyer who directed the IRS's office of tax-exempt organizations from 1990 to 2000 and who reviewed, at The Post's request, the tax returns filed by the U.S. Family Network.

<b>But "a million dollars is a staggering amount of money to come from a foreign source"</b> because such a donor would not be entitled to claim the tax deduction allowed for U.S. citizens, Owens said. "Giving large donations to an organization whose purposes are as ambiguous as these . . . is extraordinary. I haven't seen that before. It suggests something else is going on.

<b>"There are any number of red flags on these returns."
Hailing Indian Tribe's Hiring of Lobbyists</b>

<b>Buckham and Tony Rudy were the first DeLay staff members</b> to visit the Choctaw Reservation near Meridian, Miss., where the tribe built a 500-room hotel and a 90,000-square-foot gambling casino. Their trip from March 25 to 27, 1997, cost the Choctaws $3,000, according to statements filed with the House clerk.

<b>DeLay, his wife and Susan Hirschman -- Buckham's successor in 1998 as chief of staff -- were the next to go.</b> Their trip from July 31 to Aug. 2, 1998, was described on House disclosure forms as a "site review and reservation tour for charitable event," and the forms said it cost the Choctaws $6,935.

<b>Buckham</b>, who was then a lobbyist, arranged <b>DeLay's</b> trip, which included a visit to the tribe's golf course to assess it as a possible location for the lawmaker's annual charity tournament, according to a tribal source. <b>Abramoff</b> told the tribe he could not accompany <b>DeLay</b> because of a prior commitment, the source said.

One day after the <b>DeLays</b> departed for Washington, the U.S. Family Network registered <b>an initial $150,000 payment</b> made by the Choctaws, according to its tax return. <b>The tribe made additional payments to the group totaling $100,000 on "various" dates the following year, the returns state.</b> The Choctaws separately <b>paid Abramoff $4.5 million for his lobbying work</b> on their behalf in 1998 and 1999. <b>Abramoff and his wife contributed $22,000 to DeLay's political campaigns</b> from 1997 to 2000, according to public records.

A former <b>Abramoff</b> associate who is aware of the payments, and who spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect his clients, said the tribe made contributions to entities associated with <b>DeLay because DeLay</b> was crucial to the tribe's continuing fight against legislation to allow the taxation of Indians' gambling revenue.

An attorney for the tribe, Bryant Rogers, said the funds were meant not only to "get the message out" about the adverse tax law proposals but also to finance a campaign by <b>Buckham's</b> group within "the conservative base" against legislation to strip tribes of their control over Indian adoptions. "This was a group connected to the right-wing Christian movement," Rogers said. "This is <b>Ed Buckham's connection."</b>

In March 1999, <b>after the tribe had paid a substantial sum</b> directly to the U.S. Family Network, <b>Buckham expressed his general gratitude to Abramoff in an e-mail.</b> "I really appreciate you going to bat for us. Remember it is the first bit of money that is always the hardest, but means the most," <b>Buckham</b> said, according to a copy. He added: "Pray for God's wisdom. I really believe this is supposed to be what we are doing to save our team."

During this period, a fundraising letter on the U.S. Family Network stationery was sent to residents of Alabama, announcing a petition drive to promote a cause of interest to <b>Abramoff's</b> Indian gambling clients in Mississippi and Louisiana, including the Choctaw casino that drew many customers from Alabama: the blocking of a rival casino proposed by the Poarch Creek Indians on their land in Alabama.

"The American family is under attack from all sides: crime, drugs, pornography, and one of the least talked about but equally as destructive -- gambling," said the group's letter, which <b>was signed by then-Rep. Bob Riley (R), now the Alabama governor.</b> "We need your help today . . . to prevent the Poarch Creek Indians from building casinos in Alabama."

Asked about the letter, Rogers said "none of us have seen" it and "the tribe's contributions have nothing to do with it." A <b>spokesman for Riley</b> said that he could not recall the circumstances behind the letter, but that he has long opposed any expansion of gambling in Alabama.

<b>DeLay</b>, meanwhile, saluted Choctaw chief Philip Martin in the Congressional Record on Jan. 3, 2001, citing "all he has done to further the cause of freedom." <b>DeLay</b> also attached to his remarks an editorial that hailed the tribe's gambling income and its "hiring [of] quality lobbyists."

Throughout this period, the U.S. Family Network was <b>paying a monthly fee of at least $10,000 to Buckham and Alexander Strategy Group</b> for general "consulting," according to a former Buckham associate and a copy of the contract. While <b>DeLay's wife</b> drew a monthly salary from the lobbying firm, she did not work at its offices in the townhouse on Capitol Hill, according to former <b>Buckham</b> associates.

Neither the House nor the Federal Election Commission bars the payment of corporate funds to spouses through consulting firms or political action committees, <b>but the spouses must perform real work for reasonable wages.</b>

"Anytime you [as a congressman] hire your child or spouse, it raises questions as to whether this is a throwback to the time when people used campaigns and government jobs to enrich their families," said Larry Noble, executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonpartisan watchdog group, and a former general counsel of the FEC.
Quote:
http://www.ohio.com/mld/beaconjournal/13519000.htm
Posted on Sat, Dec. 31, 2005
Lobbyist, prosecutors said close to deal
TONI LOCY
Associated Press

WASHINGTON - Federal prosecutors and lawyers for Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff are putting the finishing touches on a plea deal that could be announced as early as Tuesday, according to people familiar with the negotiations.

The plea agreement would secure the lobbyist's testimony against several members of Congress who received favors from him or his clients.

Abramoff and a former partner were indicted in Miami in August on charges of conspiracy and fraud for allegedly lying about their assets to help secure financing to purchase a fleet of gambling boats.

For the past two weeks, pressure has been intensifying on Abramoff to strike a deal with prosecutors since his former business partner, Adam Kidan, pleaded guilty to fraud and conspiracy in connection with the 2000 SunCruz deal.

<b>Abramoff's cooperation would be a boon to an ongoing Justice Department investigation of congressional corruption, possibly helping prosecutors build criminal cases against up to 20 lawmakers and their staff members.</b>

Requesting anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the talks, people said the lawyers spoke by phone with U.S. District Judge Paul C. Huck, giving him an update on the plea negotiations. Huck scheduled another status conference for 3:30 p.m. Tuesday.

The deal could be completed before then, the people said. Abramoff could sign the plea agreement and exchange it with prosecutors via fax over the weekend, they said.

Details of where Abramoff will enter his plea are still being worked out. Abramoff's lawyers have indicated that they want the plea to be made in U.S. District Court in Washington, one of the people said.

If that happens, Abramoff would plead guilty to charges contained in what is known as a criminal information - a filing made by a federal prosecutor with a defendant's permission that bypasses action by a grand jury.

The lawyers could then apprise Huck about the plea and its effect on the case in Miami.

Abramoff and Kidan were indicted for allegedly concocting a fake $23 million wire transfer to make it appear they were putting their own money into the SunCruz deal. Two lenders agreed to provide $60 million in financing for the SunCruz purchase based on that false wire transfer, according to prosecutors.

<b>For months, prosecutors in Washington have focused on whether Abramoff defrauded his Indian tribe clients of millions of dollars and used improper influence on members of Congress.

In a five-year span ending in early 2004, Indian tribes represented by the lobbyist contributed millions of dollars in casino income to congressional campaigns, often routing the money through political action committees for conservative members of Congress who opposed gambling.

Abramoff also provided trips, skybox fundraisers, golf fees, frequent meals, entertainment and jobs for lawmakers' relatives and aides.</b>

Kidan and Abramoff bought SunCruz from Konstantinos "Gus" Boulis, who was slain in 2001 in a gangland-style hit in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Investigators say Boulis and Kidan were fighting for control of SunCruz; Kidan has denied any involvement in Boulis' death.

Three men were arrested in September on murder charges in Boulis' killing and are awaiting trial.

<b>Michael Scanlon, another former Abramoff associate, pleaded guilty in November in a separate case in Washington.</b>

Scanlon said he helped Abramoff and Kidan buy SunCruz by persuading Rep. Bob Ney, R-Ohio, to insert comments into the Congressional Record that were "calculated to pressure the then-owner to sell on terms favorable" to Abramoff and Kidan.
Michael Scanlon turned $19 million in lobbying commissions over to the government, that he had received from Indian tribes during the period that he and Abramoff collected $82 million from the tribes in lobbying fees.
<b>Michael Scanlon has agreed to testify for prosecutors in exchange for a maximum 60 month prison sentence and a $250,000 fine. Scanlon was formerly Tom Delay's press secretary.</b>
The Washington Post has graduated to openly reporting circumstances that will bring down Tom Delay and possibly some folks in the white house, too, along with possibly 19 other elected republicans in congress, <b>if Jack Abramoff does cooperate with prosecutors as a result of his reported plea deal.</b>

We aren't done yet.....read on!
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