The Bush-DeLay-Indian Casinos Campaign Money Laundering Operation
(Wampum ‘til they’re dead)
by Laurence A. Toenjes
OpEdNews.com
Congressman Tom DeLay , a.k.a. “The Hammer”, has been at the center of two investigations recently by the House Ethics Committee. In each case, and within the span of approximately one week, a letter of reprimand was sent to Mr. DeLay. These actions resulted from unanimous decisions by the 10 member committee, which is made up of equal numbers of Republicans and Democrats. In addition, three close associates of DeLay were recently indicted in Texas for activities related to improper use of corporate funds in state elections and in laundering corporate money for use by Republican candidates for the Texas House of Representatives. To top it off, two of Mr. DeLay’s closest personal and political associates, Jack Abramoff and Mike Scanlon, are at the center of a federal investigation into the possible improper acquisition of some $66 million from several Indian tribes that operate gambling casinos. This investigation was undertaken at the behest of Senator John McCain.
The purpose of this paper is to connect the above dots, revealing a pattern of associations and payments that begins with Congressman Tom DeLay and ends up on the very doorstep of President Bush’s re-election campaign.
The largest single flow of monies into the DeLay nexus is from the set of six Indian tribes who “hired” Jack Abramoff and Mike Scanlon to help promote the tribes’ interests. Talk about letting the fox in the hen house! So far the tally of funds that they managed to extract from the tribes is at $66 million and counting. This is the amount estimated by the Senate Indian Affairs Committee to have been paid to Scanlon alone. Much of this was kicked back to Abramoff, who also received millions directly from the tribes as well.
Only relatively modest amounts of those monies have thus far been traced to Tom DeLay and his PACs, or to major Bush supporters. However, there is enough evidence to draw monetary links among some of these major political players. (see diagram below)
Jack Abramoff received at least $21 million in tribal monies during the period April, 2001 to October, 2003, paid to him by Scanlon from the $66 million he had received from the tribes. Abramoff is a major Bush supporter, listed on the website of Texans for Political Justice (TPJ) as a Bush Pioneer in 2004. The Pioneers are scouts responsible for bringing in at least $100,000 to the Bush war chest.
Ralph Reed, now a lobbyist and director of President Bush’s re-election campaign in the Southeastern U.S. , was earlier the executive director of the Christian Coalition. Mr. Reed, at one time a staunch opponent of gambling, has reportedly received $4.2 million of the Indian casino money, albeit laundered by Abramoff and Scanlon so that he can continue to maintain that “we have never represented or worked for a casino company”.
Reed is listed on the TPJ website as a Bush Ranger, which puts him in the $200,000-plus category.
Governor Haley Barbour of Mississippi was a lobbyist for the Alliance for Quality Nursing Home Care in 2002 when the Alliance contributed $100,000 to Texans for a Republican Majority (TRMPAC). TRMPAC was established by DeLay to raise money to help elect a Republican majority to the Texas House of Representatives. This effort was supremely successful, and was part of DeLay’s audacious plan to redraw Texas ’ Congressional districts with the ultimate goal of electing an additional 6 or 7 Republicans to Congress in the fall, 2004 elections.
Those elections have not yet occurred, but already the Travis County District Attorney, Ronnie Earle, has indicted 3 of DeLay’s closest associates who worked for TRMPAC. They assisted in soliciting corporate contributions and distributing them to Republican candidates for the House. The use of corporate funds in political campaigns in Texas elections is illegal, except for payment of mundane overhead costs, such as utilities. In addition to the 3 individuals, 8 corporations were also indicted, including The Alliance for Quality Nursing Home Care. Their lobbyist at the time, Haley Barbour, was an aspiring Bush Pioneer in the 2000 election cycle, although according to TPJ he missed reaching the $100,000 goal.
Mike Scanlon at one time was a staff member and spokesperson for Tom DeLay, playing a key role in DeLay’s earlier successful drive to impeach President Bill Clinton. In October, 2002, Scanlon sent $500,000 to then-candidate for Governor of Alabama, Bob Riley. These funds apparently flowed through the Republican Governors Association and the Republican National State Elections Committee, increasing to $600,000 by the time Riley received them. Riley won a narrow victory and became Alabama ’s Governor.
Why was Mike Scanlon so interested in the successful candidacy of Bob Riley in Alabama ? In addition to the fact that Scanlon was an ex-press aide to Riley, it seems that Riley’s opponent in the race, the incumbent Don Siegelman, was intent on opening up Alabama to casino gambling. Since the Alabama border is only about an hour by car from the Mississippi Choctaw tribe’s casino, this possibility posed a threat to the Choctaws’ casino revenues, from which Scanlon was benefiting. Hence a victory for Riley was a victory for Abramoff, Scanlon, and the Mississippi Choctaw Indians.
There is evidence that the Mississippi Choctaw Indian Tribe contributed $6,000 directly to DeLay’s TRMPAC, at the suggestion of Abramoff. Another $18,000 went from the Saginaw Chippewa Tribe of Michigan to DeLay’s ARMPAC. A tribal official from another Indian tribe has asserted that Tom DeLay helped shake loose $3 million from the Bureau of Indian Affairs to pay for a school for the Saginaw Chippewa Tribe, presumably as a favor to his long-time supporter and accomplice, Abramoff.
Governor Haley Barbour is also reported to have received $35,000 from the Mississippi Choctaw Tribe in 2003.
Final result: Indian casino money has helped to elect two governors, and is contributing to the attempted re-election of President George W. Bush.
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http://www.opednews.com/toenjes_101504_Bush_DeLay.htm