[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

DHS nabbed 1,500 illegal aliens in MA—

The Day After: Trump 'Not Interested' In Talking As Musk Continues To Make Case Against BBB

Biden Judge Issues Absurd Ruling Against Trump and Gives the Boulder Terrorist a Win

Alan Dershowitz Pushing for Trump to Pardon Ghislaine Maxwell

Signs Of The Tremendous Economic Suffering That Is Quickly Spreading All Around Us

Joe Biden Used Autopen to Sign All Pardons During His Final Weeks In Office

BREAKING NEWS: Kilmar Abrego Garcia Coming Back To U.S. For Criminal Prosecution, Report Says

he BEST GEN X & Millennials Memes | Ep 79 - Nostalgia 60s 70s 80s #akornzstash

Paul Joseph Watson They Did Something Horrific

Romantic walk under Eiffel Tower in conquered Paris

srael's Attorney General orders draft for 50,000 Haredim amid Knesset turmoil

Elon Musk If America goes broke, nothing else matters

US disabilities from BLS broke out to a new high in May adding 739k.

"Discrimination in the name of 'diversity' is not only fundamental unjust, but it also violates federal law"

Target Replaces Pride Displays With Stars and Stripes, Left Melts Down [WATCH]

Look at what they are giving Covid Patients in other Countries Whole packs of holistic medicine Vitamins and Ivermectin

SHOCKING Gaza Aid Thefts Involve Netanyahu Himself!

Congress Is Functionally Illiterate

Police Adviser Cancelled for Daring to Claim Women Commit Just as Much Domestic Violence as Men

Mediaite and The Daily Beast FORCED to RETRACT False Claims

Caitlin Clark Is HATED By All The BLACK (LESBIAN) WBNA Players.

School board tells teachers 'family' is a white supremacist term

Illegal Migrant Accused of Crushing Co-Workers Head with Heavy Machinery at Florida Construction Site

DACA Recipient Sent to U.S. Prison for Buying Guns for Mexican Cartels

Israel Threatens Aid Flotilla Will Not Be Allowed to Dock in Gaza

Poll: Americans, Europeans Have Negative View of Israel

Israeli strike on al-Ahli Baptist Hospital in Gaza City kills journalists

Paul Joseph Watson: Spot The Difference

Netanyahu's Rule In Peril As Ultra-Orthodox Move To Dissolve Knesset Over Conscription Of Haredim

DOJ moves to pull federal election funding from Wisconsin for failing to comply with integrity laws


Pious Perverts
See other Pious Perverts Articles

Title: Lawmaker Linked to Two Bribery Scandals
Source: The Guardian
URL Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-6762401,00.html
Published: Jul 6, 2007
Author: ERICA WERNER
Post Date: 2007-07-06 16:03:51 by Eoghan
Ping List: *Abramoff Tribes*     Subscribe to *Abramoff Tribes*
Keywords: None
Views: 128
Comments: 1

Rep. John Doolittle's associations with some notorious scoundrels have him uniquely tied to both congressional bribery scandals that have sent other Republican lawmakers to jail.

Justice Department investigators are focusing on the California Republican's dealings with jailed lobbyist Jack Abramoff, including $5,000 monthly checks from Abramoff to Doolittle's wife.

Then there's $37 million in federal funds Doolittle secured for a defense contractor accused of bribing now imprisoned ex-Rep. Randy ``Duke'' Cunningham. Brent Wilkes, a benefactor of both Cunningham and Doolittle, is awaiting trial in San Diego on charges of fraud, conspiracy and money laundering.

There's no indication prosecutors are investigating Doolittle in connection with Wilkes or Cunningham, and the nine-term lawmaker may be guilty of nothing more than a poor choice of friends. But his favors for and from Abramoff leave him the only sitting member of Congress still under investigation in a scandal that netted a dozen convictions, including a guilty plea from now imprisoned former Rep. Bob Ney of Ohio.

``I'm the only one of the congressmen mentioned that hasn't retired or left and therefore the focus seems to be on me,'' Doolittle, 56, said recently on a talk radio show in Sacramento. ``If you really want to get a congressman, I'm the one that's left.''

In April the FBI raided the Doolittles' Oakton, Va., house with a search warrant for Julie Doolittle's home bookkeeping and fundraising business, which had done work for Abramoff. The congressman denied wrongdoing and blamed his woes on Justice Department leaks and politics. But he was forced to relinquish his seat on the powerful Appropriations Committee, where Cunningham was once one of his colleagues and where both did favors for Wilkes.

After The Associated Press reported last week that his former chief of staff had complied with a document subpoena and another former aide planned to talk voluntarily to prosecutors, Doolittle said he welcomed a widening of the probe.

``To have this dragged out for over three years is ridiculous. They've had three years to get to the bottom of this. At least they've started,'' he said.

``I've always believed that the truth vindicates us,'' Doolittle said. ``I am glad they are going to delve more into it.''

Abramoff is cooperating with the government's continuing investigation after admitting to taking millions of dollars from Indian tribe clients he derided as ``morons'' and ``troglodytes.''

This was the man who charmed Doolittle as ``funny, engaging, creative ... a hard-charging conservative Republican'' when the two met after Republicans retook the House majority in 1994.

Doolittle himself had arrived on Capitol Hill as a brash young conservative several years before, joining the ``Gang of Seven'' freshman Republicans who broke open a House banking scandal. He ran for a second term in 1992 on the slogan ``Taking on Congress,'' and complained that ``the system ... has lulled people into unethical conduct.''

Even some one-time allies wonder now if that's the effect it's had on him.

``Unfortunately, with him being in elected office for so long, he's bound to have gotten away from his district and what started out as his core principles,'' said Glenn Buberl, Doolittle's legislative director during his first years in Washington.

After narrowly winning re-election last November in one of California's most conservative districts, Doolittle started paying more attention to folks back home and holding town hall meetings more frequently.

Doolittle says he doesn't recall Abramoff ever asking him to do anything, but he involved himself repeatedly in issues that helped Abramoff's clients and had nothing to do with his Northern California district. Kevin Ring, a former Doolittle aide who later became Abramoff's lobbying associate, often was the intermediary.

Doolittle interceded with the Interior Department on behalf of Indian tribes Abramoff represented, helped Abramoff get a lobbying contract to represent the Northern Mariana Islands by endorsing a friendly commonwealth politician, then opposed Democratic moves to impose wage and labor laws there.

Meanwhile Doolittle accepted $14,000 in campaign donations from Abramoff and tens of thousands more from his clients. While other politicians rushed to get rid of Abramoff's money once the lobbyist came under suspicion, Doolittle never did, arguing he'd done nothing wrong in taking it.

Julie Doolittle also benefited. Although Ring discussed finding work for her in a 2000 e-mail to Abramoff, the Doolittles say she never expected to sign up Abramoff as a client.

John Doolittle has said his wife approached the lobbyist five years ago because his was the first name on an alphabetical list she'd drawn up of people she could network with. Instead of suggesting possible clients, Abramoff offered her work himself, Doolittle said.

Abramoff's lobbying firm paid Julie Doolittle a near-monthly retainer beginning in September 2002, mostly to work on a fundraiser. The event was canceled in March 2003, but the payments, usually $5,000 a month, continued through February 2004 and ultimately totaled $66,690.

Doolittle's aides have said her work wasn't limited to the fundraiser and there was more bookkeeping and some work for a restaurant Abramoff owned.

Julie Doolittle also did much of her husband's campaign fundraising before he canceled the arrangement at the beginning of this year amid criticism. He paid her 15 percent of every donation she brought in, instead of the industry practice of paying fundraisers a flat fee. Federal records show that she was paid more than $100,000 raising money for his 2006 re-election campaign. Subscribe to *Abramoff Tribes*

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Eoghan (#0)

district of criminals bump

Join the Ron Paul Revolution

Lod  posted on  2007-07-06   16:51:42 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]