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Politics : Bill Clinton Scandal - SANITY CHECK -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Les H who wrote (7666)10/7/1998 7:32:00 PM
From: lazarre  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 67261
 
And the Winner of the : WHY AM I NOT SURPRISED AWARD GOES TO

<<<Committee accepts Judicial Watch report
Filegate, Chinagate, IRS-gate
and Trustgate now a part of record >>>>

Read on:

<<<Foundation Gave $550,000
To Anti-Clinton Group

By David Segal
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 10, 1998; Page A06

Richard Mellon Scaife, the Pittsburgh
billionaire whose foundations have bankrolled
an array of anti-Clinton activities, gave one of
his largest grants last year to Judicial Watch,
the conservative group suing the Clinton
administration in 18 separate matters, newly
released records show.

Scaife gave Judicial Watch $550,000,
according to documents disclosed by the
Carthage Foundation, one of four
philanthropies underwritten by Scaife. That
sum is nearly nine times as large as the
$60,000 in outside contributions Judicial
Watch said it received in 1996.

"It's a minority of our support and we're very
proud to receive it," Judicial Watch founder
and president Larry Klayman said yesterday
before refusing further comment. In a recent interview, Klayman would
not confirm the Scaife grant and deflected financing questions by saying,
"Basta! . . . that means 'stop it' in Italian."

Scaife's foundations last year gave away a total of $25 million to
conservative groups as well as academic institutions such as Boston
University and Carnegie Mellon University. The scion of the Mellon
banking family, Scaife has become a major financial resource for those
eager to probe Clinton administration controversies, from the Monica S.
Lewinsky case to the death of White House deputy counsel Vincent W.
Foster.

Independent counsel Kenneth W. Starr had once planned to accept a
Scaife foundation-financed deanship at Pepperdine University, leading
Clinton allies to criticize the prosecutor's conservative movement ties.

The recipient of the largest single Scaife grant last year -- for $1.5 million
-- was the the Free Congress Research and Education Foundation Inc., a
think tank run by conservative activist Paul Weyrich. Free Congress is
part owner of America's Voice, a TV network formerly known as
National Empowerment Television.

The American Spectator magazine took in nearly $1 million last year from
two Scaife foundations -- Carthage and the Sarah Scaife Foundation. Part
of that money paid for the so-called "Arkansas Project," an investigation
of alleged Clinton skulduggery in his home state. The project was
criticized by several Spectator staffers and has given rise to an
investigation into whether some Scaife money improperly went to pay a
key Starr witness.

But the financial relationship between the magazine and Scaife's
foundations is over. "Let's just say that the Spectator had Scaife
foundation money in the past [but] they decided to quit contributing this
year," said publisher Terry Eastland.

The Landmark Legal Foundation, a Herndon group that has pounded
Pentagon officials for allegedly leaking data from Linda R. Tripp's
personnel file, took in $525,000 from Scaife. "We have a hard and fast
rule here," said Landmark president Mark Levin. "We don't accept money
laundered through Indian tribes or Buddhist nuns."

The award to Judicial Watch is in some ways the most notable of the
Scaife grants, representing a huge financial boon for a group that barely
registered on Washington's radar screen until recently. In 1996, the
group's largest benefactor was Klayman himself, a formerly obscure
international trade attorney; he kicked in about $110,000 of his own
money and took in just $60,000 in outside contributions.

Scaife foundation officials did not return calls about why they decided to
start giving to Judicial Watch.

Klayman first gained notice when he took
a deposition from Democratic fund-raiser
John Huang in 1996, just as the
controversy about Democratic campaign
financing was breaking. By last year,
Klayman was becoming a regular on TV
chat shows such as "Rivera Live" as he
subpoenaed a parade of Clinton allies for
depositions in various lawsuits. Klayman
has turned up such disclosures as a
Pentagon official's admission that he
authorized the Tripp information leak. But
Judicial Watch's advertising also has
featured far-fetched theories, including that
the late Commerce Secretary Ron Brown might have been shot in the
head by top White House officials. >>>