-Caveat Lector- "Bill Clinton's brother-in-law Hugh Rodham ...spoke to lawyers in the counsel's office about Nora Lum and her husband, Eugene Kung Ho Lum, who had also been convicted of tax fraud." FAILED DYNAMIC ENERGY STILL A FOCUS OF US CONGRESSIONAL FUND-RAISING PROBE Platts Oilgram News May 1, 1998; BYLINE: James Norman Alleged political money-laundering through the oil and gas business is a potentially explosive land mine buried in the morass of investigations swamping the Clinton Administration. Republican Congressional probers now seem determined to pursue allegations of bribery, hush-money payments and foreign influence-buying through a tiny, failed Oklahoma gas-gathering company caught in the scandals: Dynamic Energy Resources. That resolve showed up Apr 28 when GOP House Speaker Newt Gingrich accused the Clinton Administration of a concerted cover-up and vowed to obtain immunity for four key witnesses to testify before Rep. Dan Burton's House Government Reform and Oversight Committee. Democrats on that committee, led by Henry Waxman, blocked the needed two-thirds immunity vote last week. But Gingrich said he may get it from a more heavily Republican panel. Among the four witnesses is Larry Wong, who Gingrich said Apr 28 could have "relevant information regarding conduit contributions" from Dynamic, controlled by Democrat fundraisers Gene and Nora Lum. Wong was a director of Dynamic and close friend of the Lums. Wong is said to be intimately familiar with activities of the Lums, who pleaded guilty last May to funneling about $50,000 through "straw donors" to the 1994 Senate campaign of Edward Kennedy and unsuccessful House campaign of their ex-partner in Dynamic, Stuart Price. The Lums were sentenced in September to 10 months of community confinement and home detention, with $30,000 fines, and are supposedly cooperating with an ongoing Justice Dept probe. But their plea agreement lets Justice use their information to pursue new charges against them, raising doubts about their cooperation. They have demanded immunity to testify before Congress. Dynamic has been a focus of Burton's investigation over its Nov 9, 1993, purchase of private Tulsa-based Gage Corp and its Creek Systems gas gathering system. That was one day before a public trial was to start on Gage's claim it had suffered from unfair rulings by the Oklahoma Corporation Commission. The claim was quickly dropped. Gage's state claim, and a $40-mil federal civil suit, had been bolstered by the October 1992 revelation that OCC commissioners had collected bribes from lobbyist Bill Anderson. Anderson, former OCC general counsel, had represented such big-name utility clients as Gage's chief nemesis, Oklahoma Natural Gas, the main operating arm of Oneok Inc and the state's biggest gas distributor. Anderson had also represented Southwestern Bell and Arkla Gas, a unit of Arkla Inc, which from 1985 until 1992 was headed as CEO by Thomas (Mac) McLarty. Arkla's successor, NorAm Energy, was bought last fall by Houston Industries. McLarty, now in his early 50's, is a kindergarten friend of President Clinton and became Clinton's chief of staff in 1992. He remains a special counsel and special envoy to the Americas pending his resignation June 30, announced Apr 24, to return to a family business. The Gage trial threatened to reveal possible links between Anderson and McLarty and their alleged meeting one day before a 1991 wiretapped conversation in which Anderson and a law partner conspired to thwart an FBI investigation. Anderson was indicted for obstruction of justice in 1993 and convicted in 1995 along with former OCC commissioner Robert Hopkins on bribery charges, based partly on conversations taped by fellow commissioner Robert Anthony, who agreed to be wired in a four-year FBI sting operation. There is no indication McLarty's departure from government now is linked to the Dynamic probe. Indeed, the Dynamic matter is probably one of the least of the simmering scandals surrounding McLarty's 18-month stint as Clinton's chief of staff in 1993 and 1994. A Jan 20, 1997, story by Business Week, like Platt's part of The McGraw-Hill Cos, noted McLarty's appointment as Special Envoy came after Senate Democrats warned the White House McLarty could not be confirmed for the higher posts he sought, Commerce Secretary or Ambassador to Mexico. McLarty's lawyer at that time denied his Arkla activities were any hindrance to Senate confirmation. In a Sep 5, 1997, deposition to Burton's investigators, McLarty repeatedly denied knowing or meeting Gene or Nora Lum, though they were listed as attending a fund-raising breakfast McLarty attended in Seattle Nov 15, 1993. The breakfast was sponsored by APAC, the Asian Pacific Advisory Council set up in California and run by the Lums to organize fund-raising events mainly for the Democratic National Committee. Among those McLarty did recall meeting at the breakfast was controversial Democratic money-raiser John Huang, who later was given a sensitive post and high-level security clearance at the Commerce Dept despite concern there over his lack of experience. Huang has close connections to the Riady family and was an executive of their Indonesian Lippo Group banking empire. A Senate report last year identified the Riadys as closely linked to the Chinese government. Huang and Wong are among 53 House and Senate witnesses who have pled the Fifth Amendment. Burton, enraged by what he and Gingrich claim is White House-orchestrated obstructionism, is pursuing not only technical campaign finance violations but much broader patterns of influence-peddling. "We are investigating a possible massive scheme of funneling millions of dollars in foreign money into the US electoral system," Burton has said. "We are investigating allegations of gross misuse of our national security structure." Attorney for the Lums when their newly formed Dynamic bought Gage in 1993 was John Tisdale, the Little Rock, Arkansas, law partner of former Clinton attorney and still close advisor Bruce Lindsey. At the deal closing, Gage co-owner Ronald Miller told interviewers for a public television show last year that Gage's office received numerous faxes and phone calls from the White House to Tisdale. The Dynamic-Gage deal has raised a myriad of questions about possible political money-laundering and the possible foisting of payoff costs onto unwitting utility customers, according to Oklahoma investigators. The questions start with the price and structure of the deal. Dynamic, which had no experience in the oil and gas business, agreed to pay $10-mil for Gage, which was all but insolvent after years of legal wrangling over Oklahoma Natural Gas's alleged refusal to live up to a gas purchase contract. But unknown to Gage, ONG had granted Dynamic an even more lucrative gas sales pact to deliver up to 25,000 Mcf/d each winter at very rich prices. The contract, which runs to 2003, calls for ONG to pay monthly the highest of three formulas: spot plus $0.40/Mcf, a minimum price of $2.78/Mcf, or ONG's weighted average cost of gas. Such deals are said to be rare, and highly lucrative in gas-rich Oklahoma. The contract is worth between $40-mil and $65-mil of profit over 10 years compared to spot market prices, according to a study last year by an aide to OCC commissioner Anthony. To fund Dynamic's $10-mil purchase price, the Lums immediately sold rights to half that ONG contract to Associated Natural Gas for $7.5-mil. Five months later, Dynamic sold the other half contract for $11.25-mil to Enogex, the gas production and transportation arm of Oklahoma Gas & Electric. That gave Dynamic and the Lums a quick windfall of more than $9-mil for fronting a no-money-down transaction that resulted in wiping out an annoying and potentially politically embarrassing legal problem. Where did that money go? One of the more explosive allegations in the Dynamic case, according to court documents, is that some of it effectively went to then Commerce Secretary Ron Brown, who had just come under Independent Counsel investigation for corruption. Former Ron Brown associate Nolanda Hill, in a television interview last year, said Brown, who died in April 1996, received the payments through his son Michael. Ron Brown's lawyer has claimed the payments were to repay college loans. Michael Brown had been named a director at Dynamic despite having no energy experience, and took the job after consulting with McLarty. Michael Brown was paid $7,500/mo in consulting fees, $800/mo in expenses, a $60,000 country club membership, and 5% of the cash-laden company, then worth $500,000. It also opened a Washington office to accommodate him. Last August Michael Brown agreed to plead guilty to a misdemeanor, with no prison sentence, for illegally contributing $4,000 over the limit to Edward Kennedy's 1994 Senate campaign. The rest of Dynamic's money was quickly dissipated when Gene and Nora Lum each took out $2.5-mil for themselves for administrative costs and consulting fees, just before the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 1995. The company, now only a shell with some royalty interests, remains in bankruptcy amid continuing controversy over the Lums' fees. But the oil and gas issue is far from dead. On Apr 6, ONG gas customers Michael McAdams (a former Gage vice-president) and James Walker filed a petition with the OCC to invalidate the ONG Dynamic contracts as unreasonable. An investigation is now under way. ONG claims the issue has already been settled by the OCC's routine approval of its purchased-gas costs, but an OCC official said the prudency of those contracts has remained open for review. *********** Ron Miller, former co-owner of Gage, died suddenly last Nov 12 from respiratory failure due to unknown causes a week after entering Baptist Hospital in Oklahoma City. The death of Miller, 58, has been ruled natural causes and an initial investigation has been closed. An attorney for Miller says that before he died, Miller turned over "boxes" of audio tapes and documents to one of the Independent Counsels probing the Clinton Administration, as well as cooperating with federal grand juries, FBI and Treasury investigators. *********** ================================================================= Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT FROM THE DESK OF: *Michael Spitzer* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends ================================================================= <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A> DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! 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