AP: DeLay used lobbyist’s concert skybox
House leader's PAC didn't reimburse for use of arena seating
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WASHINGTON - House Majority Leader Tom DeLay treated his political donors to a bird’s-eye view of a Three Tenors concert from an arena skybox leased by a lobbyist now under criminal investigation.
DeLay’s political action committee did not reimburse lobbyist Jack Abramoff for the May 2000 use of the skybox, instead treating it as a type of donation that didn’t have to be disclosed to election regulators at the time.
The skybox donation, valued at thousands of dollars, came three weeks before DeLay also accepted a trip to Europe — including golf with Abramoff at the world-famous St. Andrews course — for himself, his wife and aides that was underwritten by some of the lobbyist’s clients.
Two months after the concert and trip, DeLay voted against gambling legislation opposed by some of Abramoff’s Indian tribe clients.
House ethics rules require lawmakers to avoid the appearance of any conflict of interest.
Ethics expert calls for ‘closer scrutiny’
“I would say it deserves closer scrutiny by the ethics committee,” said Kathleen Clark, a former congressional lawyer and now a government ethics expert at Washington University in St. Louis.
DeLay was admonished last summer by the ethics committee for creating an appearance of a conflict involving different donors and legislation involving energy.
His defenders say the House leader did nothing wrong in the skybox case. Federal law at the time didn’t require DeLay’s committee to disclose or reimburse for the skybox gift, they note — though the law was changed to require such disclosure a few months later.
“Portraying a lack of reimbursement as news is like saying a driver of a car did not hit his brakes while driving through a green light — there is nothing newsworthy about it, let alone improper,” said Don McGahn, one of DeLay’s lawyers.
House Speaker Dennis Hastert came to a different conclusion in recent days, reimbursing Abramoff for a political event two years after the fact. One of Hastert’s political committees had used a restaurant partly owned by the lobbyist, and the Hastert committee decided recently to reimburse for the use.
Grand jury monitors work with tribes
Abramoff’s relationships with DeLay and other lawmakers are under scrutiny as a federal grand jury investigates the lobbyist’s work on behalf of Indian tribes and as new information surfaces about his dealings with members of Congress.
A spokesman for Abramoff said any problems with disclosure belong with the lawmakers. “Whether these contributions were properly reported was the responsibility of the campaigns, not the tribes or Mr. Abramoff,” said Andrew Blum.
Dan Allen, a DeLay spokesman, said the May 7, 2000, skybox event rewarded donors to the state arm of the DeLay’s Americans for a Republican Majority political committee with a special view of a performance in Washington by the Three Tenors — opera stars José Carreras, Plácido Domingo, and Luciano Pavarotti.
Allen said DeLay’s office couldn’t find records of who attended the event five years ago. He said Wednesday that DeLay attended.
He said that his boss shouldn’t be held responsible for Abramoff’s decision to underwrite the gifts or charge them to clients with business before Congress.
“How Jack Abramoff paid for or billed his clients is not something we had knowledge of or responsibility for,” Allen said.
However, Larry Noble, former chief lawyer for the Federal Elections Commission, said of DeLay: “He knows who Abramoff’s clients are. You don’t have someone who is such a big player in Washington and has power like Tom DeLay and doesn’t know where the money is coming from.”
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