An auditor for the Federal Election Commission is attempting to have
his bosses seek a formal investigation into the collection by the
Obama for President campaign of more than $200 million in potentially
illegal political donations, including millions of dollars of illegal,
foreign donations, and has sought a request for assistance from the
Department of Justice or Federal Bureau of Investigation. But the
analyst's requests have largely been ignored. "I can't get anyone to
move. I believe we are looking at a hijacking of our political system
that makes the Clinton and Gore fundraising scandals pale in
comparison. And no one here wants to touch it."

One reasons cited by his superiors, says the analyst, is that
involvement by the Justice Department or FBI would be indicative of a
criminal investigation, something the FEC would prefer not take place
a month before the presidential election. Such actions, though, have
been used to scuttle Republican campaigns in the past, the most famous
being the Weinberger case in the days leading up to the 1992 re-
election bid of President George H.W. Bush.

The analyst, who declines to be identified for fear of retribution,
says that on four different occasions in the past three months, he
sought to open formal investigations into the Obama campaign's
fundraising techniques, but those investigations have been
discouraged. "Without formal approval, I can't get the resources I
need, manpower, that kind of thing. This is a huge undertaking." And
the analyst says that he believes that campaign finance violations
have occurred.

The Obama campaign has already had to deal with several FEC complaints
about fraudulent donors and illegal foreign contributions, and the FEC
says it has no record that those complaints have been resolved or
closed. As well, the Obama campaign has been cagey at times about the
means by which it has made its historic fundraising hauls, which now
total almost $500 million for the election cycle. The Hillary Clinton
campaign raised questions about the huge amount of e-retail sales the
Obama campaign was making for such things as t-shirts and other
campaign paraphernalia, and how such sales were being tracked and used
for fundraising purposes. While the profits of those items counted
against the $2,300 personal donation limit, there have always been
lingering questions about the e-retail system.

"The question has always been, if you buy a $25 t-shirt and you go
back to that purchaser eight or nine times with email appeals for $200
or $500 donations, and you have people donating like that all the
time, at what point does the campaign bother to check if the FEC limit
has been exceeded?" says a former Clinton campaign fundraiser. "There
are enough of us from the 1992 and 1996 and 2000 races around to know
that many of these kinds of violations never get caught until after
the election has been won or lost. In this case, there is no way the
Obama campaign will be held accountable before Election Day, unless
someone raises holy hell."

The FEC analyst says that Obama's filings indicate he has received
large, bundled sums of donations from overseas, sometimes exceeding a
quarter millions dollars. "It's suspicious, but it's the small
donations made by credit card that need to be examined. We've raised
red flags on many of these and the Obama campaign just ignores us.
After this election, after we've sifted through everything -- if we're
allowed to sift through everything -- I am confident that we are
looking at perhaps the largest fine every leveled against a national
campaign entity."
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