E-mails released by a Senate committee on Thursday paint a broader
picture of Jack Abramoff's tribal lobbying effort amid the questionable
use of conservative nonprofit organizations.
The scandal erupted in response to high fees charged
to the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians, the Saginaw
Chippewa Tribe of Michigan and the Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana.
The Senate Indian Affairs Committee investigation revealed
that the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians from California,
the Tigua Tribe of Texas and Sandia Pueblo in New Mexico
were also affected.
Unredacted and new e-mails released by the Democrats on the
Senate Finance Committee show the Abramoff affair extended to more tribes.
The Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, the Hopi Tribe of Arizona,
the Kickapoo Tribe of Texas, the Meskwaki Tribe of Iowa and the
Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe of Massachusetts were courted
by the now-convicted lobbyist as he tried to use nonprofits
to further their interests, the report said.
According to the investigation, which had been authorized by
committee chairman Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa),
"some officers of these organizations
were generally available to carry out Mr. Abramoff's requests for
help with his clients in exchange for cash payments."
Not everyone bought into the effort. Of the newly named tribes,
only the Meskwakis gave money to the Council of Republicans
for Environmental Advocacy, which was run by a close associate
of former Interior Secretary Gale Norton.
According to the report, Abramoff used CREA to
lobby former deputy secretary J. Steven Griles on issues affecting
tribal clients.
CREA and its executive director, Italia Federici, were enriched
by about $500,000 thanks to donations from the tribes.
More money could have come in had Abramoff been successful
in persuading the Cherokee Nation and other tribes to give to CREA.
"The chief of the Cherokees is meeting with Steve Griles tomorrow
afternoon," Abramoff told Federici on September 24, 2002.
"This is the one I have talked to about
representation and giving to CREA."
Abramoff wanted Griles to "mention both your name and mine"
during the meeting in an attempt to show their alleged influence.
"He can just say �we have mutual friends� or something if
that is possible. It would really help Thanks so much!!!"
the e-mail stated.
Just a couple of months later, Cherokee Nation Enterprises
signed up as a client of Abramoff and his firm to lobby on "appropriations"
and "sovereignty." A spokesperson for Cherokee Nation told The
Native American Times this past January that Abramoff solicited the tribe
but that the tribe never hired him.
Along with the Cherokees, Abramoff tried to get the Hopi
Tribe on board with CREA. In the fall of 2001, Federici arranged a
private dinner at a home in Washington, D.C. The guest
list included Norton, Griles and Neal McCaleb, the former
head of the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
In an e-mail, Abramoff wondered which tribes --
besides the Choctaws, the Saginaw Chippewas and the Coushattas -- to invite.
"Do you think Hoppi wants to join?" he wrote on August 7, 2001.
"The hopi aren�t good republicans, but I will check it out," responded
Kevin Ring, a fellow lobbyist.
"Whether they are good Republicans or not, they need clout
with the Interior Dept, I would imagine," said Abramoff.
Many of the e-mails included in the Finance report were
released by the Indian Affairs Committee.
But the Indian Affairs staff redacted some of the names of
the tribes.
For example, Indian Affairs blacked out the phrase "Chief of
the Coushatta" in one of Abramoff's e-mails. The Finance
Committee report doesn't contain the redaction.
Indian Affairs also blacked out the word "Cherokee" in
the "chief of the Cherokee" e-mail that was released
by the Finance Committee yesterday. It's not clear
why such a redaction was made.
The Finance report is the third to be released by a Congressional committee.
The House Government Reform Committee focused on White House contacts
in a report released late last month.
In January, Abramoff pleaded guilty to a conspiracy to defraud tribes
and bribe a member of Congress. Three of his associates have
pleaded guilty and so has Rep. Bob Ney (R-Ohio), who was in court
today to admit to being the recipient of
some of the bribes.
The other nonprofits examined in the Finance report were
Americans for Tax Reform, Citizens Against Government Waste,
the National Center for Public Policy Research and Toward Tradition.
Senate Finance Committee Democratic Report:
Text Only |
Response to Democratic Staff |
Investigation
of Jack Abramoff�s Use of Tax-Exempt Organizations (October 12, 2006) Note: 18.3MB file may be slow to load.
Senate Finance Committee Materials:
Council of Republicans for Environmental Advocacy |
Americans for Tax Reform |
National Center for Public Policy Research |
Citizens Against Government Waste |
Toward Tradition |
News Article Clippings
House Government Reform Committee Documents:
Report
| Billing
Records Spreadsheet | Attachment
1 | Attachment
2 | Press
Release
Senate Indian Affairs Committee Abramoff Report:
�GIMME
FIVE�� INVESTIGATION OF TRIBAL LOBBYING MATTERS (June 2006)
Exhibits:
Pre-2001 |
2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | Undated | Finance
Relevant Links:
Council of Republicans for Environmental Advocacy - http://www.crea-online.org/crea
Nonprofits part of Abramoff's tribal lobbying scheme
Friday, October 13, 2006
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