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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: lawdog who wrote (55603)10/31/2000 11:24:38 PM
From: DMaA  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Um, tax reform's a pipe dream? I can still dream.

Accounting firms are top givers to both parties. What does that tell you.



To: lawdog who wrote (55603)10/31/2000 11:40:48 PM
From: alan w  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
September 14 -- "I know [you] will give $100K when the president vetoes tort reform, but we really need it now." The New York Times reports in today's editions that Justice Department campaign finance investigators have launched a preliminary probe into documents that have surfaced from the Clinton/Gore 1996 fundraising operation, including a "call sheet" prepared for Vice President Gore regarding Beaumont, Texas lawyer Walter Umphrey, a major Democratic benefactor who shared in Texas's $3.3 billion tobacco contingency fee and is well known to readers of this space. The sheet describes Umphrey as "closely following tort reform" and suggests asking him for $100,000 to finance Democratic Party TV commercials. The White House claims that Gore did not make the call, but two weeks later a staffer for -Democratic National Committee chairman Donald Fowler prepared a call sheet reading as follows: "Sorry you missed the vice president. I know [sic] will give $100K whn [sic] the president vetos [sic] tort reform, but we really need it now. Please send ASAP if possible." DNC officials propose that the "missed" might have referred to the two men not connecting at an in-person event; Fowler disclaims any memory of talking with Umphrey about campaign donations and says he would never have used the language on the call sheet. According to the Times, "Trevor Potter, a former chairman of the Federal Election Commission, called the call sheet's language 'extraordinarily ill-advised,' saying prosecutors would probably be investigating whether the solicitation violated either a bribery statute or a law prohibiting 'illegal gratuities,' a 'gift' given after an elected official takes a public action."

The Washington Post reports that Umphrey says he doesn't recall "any of that" and otherwise declines comment, while Payne was talking to the Times only through her lawyer. And attorney Michael Tigar, who represents Umphrey and the rest of the Big Five Texas tobacco lawyers, issued this small gem of legalistically worded denial: "Tying campaign contributions to legislative or executive action has never been illegal in the United States unless there is proof that the public official extorts the money by threatening to give or withhold action based on the contributions," he said; moreover, his clients, including Mr. Umphrey, "have repeatedly been asked in many forums whether they have ever given money to a candidate or officials as a quid-pro-quo for official action, and they have repeatedly said under oath that they have never done so." The Times account adds considerable background on the epic pace of Clinton/Gore fundraising among Texas plaintiff's lawyers of late, including a little-reported fundraiser thrown for Hillary Rodham Clinton's Senate campaign by Big Five stalwart John Eddie Williams of Houston. (Don Van Natta Jr. with Richard A. Oppel Jr., "Memo Linking Political Donation and Veto Spurs Federal Inquiry", New York Times, Sept. 14 (reg); Susan Schmidt, "1995 Documents Appear To Link Lawyer's Contribution To Veto", Washington Post, Sept. 14; more on Umphrey and the Big Five: Sept. 1, May 22; more on trial lawyers' political clout). More breaking coverage (via

alan w



To: lawdog who wrote (55603)11/1/2000 7:39:28 AM
From: kvkkc1  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
It tells us who influences the IRS. They'd all be out of business with a flat tax.knc