Article relates to post 51425, House Ethics Panel in Gridlock.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7169454/site/newsweek/

Money: So Where Did It Go?
Newsweek

March 21 issue - The FBI is trying to trace what happened to $2.5
million in payments to a conservative Washington think tank that were
routed to accounts controlled by two lobbyists with close ties to
House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, NEWSWEEK has learned. The payments to
the National Center for Public Policy Research were meant for a PR
campaign promoting Indian gaming, center officials said. But internal
e-mails obtained by NEWSWEEK show the lobbyists, Jack Abramoff and
Michael Scanlon, DeLay's former press secretary, never documented any
work performed or explained what they did with the money despite
repeated requests. "We're disappointed and frustrated," said Amy
Ridenour, the center's president. The group's records have been
subpoenaed by a federal grand jury. One focus of the FBI probe, legal
sources say, is whether the payments, as well as tens of millions of
dollars in other fees collected by the two lobbyists from Indian
tribes, were used for political contributions or to pay for trips and
gifts to members of Congress.

The widening probe in D.C. may prove more troubling for DeLay than the
separate investigation into his fund-raising in Texas. DeLay has had a
longstanding relationship with the center; the group, for which he has
signed a fund-raising letter, paid for two of his overseas
trips—including a $70,000 excursion in 2000 during which he and
Abramoff (a member of the center's board) played golf in Scotland. The
Washington Post reported last week the trip was mostly paid for by two
$25,000 checks from two Abramoff lobbying clients that were sent to
the center the day the trip began. In 2002, the center received a $1
million contribution from one of those Abramoff clients, the
Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians. The funds were intended to
finance "educational" efforts promoting the idea that casinos like the
one operated by the Choctaws helped Native Americans, Ridenour said.
At Abramoff's urging, the center allotted $500,000 to a
public-relations firm owned by Scanlon, and an additional $450,000 was
paid to a foundation controlled by Abramoff. The next year, the center
received its largest donation, $1.5 million, from another Abramoff
client, an Internet gambling group in Gibraltar. This time, Abramoff
suggested most of the grant, $1.28 million, be given to a firm called
"KayGold LLC." Unbeknownst to Ridenour, KayGold was owned by Abramoff.

Ridenour said she and the center's lawyers became concerned in 2003
about the absence of any work product and began pressing Abramoff for
documentation. By March 2004, worried about a possible audit, she sent
an e-mail saying it would be "extremely helpful" if he could supply
any polls or even "leftover printed materials" in order to "reassure
anyone, such as the IRS, who might wonder if the effort really took
place." But, she said, nothing was ever turned over; Abramoff later
resigned from the center's board. The group is now cooperating with
the Feds and may sue Abramoff. Asked about the payments, Abramoff's
lawyer, Abbe Lowell, said, "No comment." Scanlon's lawyer said
suggestions the work was not completed "are totally inaccurate," but
declined to elaborate. DeLay, whose spokesman said the congressman
knew nothing of the payments, is distancing himself from his former
golfing partner. "I go about my job," he told reporters. "Jack
Abramoff has his own problems. Any other questions?"

—Michael Isikoff 





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