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<http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/jess04.html>

Jackson's protests benefit his family, friends

February 4, 2001
BY CHUCK NEUBAUER AND ABDON M. PALLASCH
STAFF REPORTERS


The Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr. knows when corporations are at
their most generous: when they are seeking federal approval for a
merger.

Faced with objections and protest threats from Jackson, American
multinationals have pledged millions of dollars to Jackson's
charities and multimillion-dollar deals for his designated
minority businesses.

... BEGIN SIDEBAR .....

MERGERS AND CONTRIBUTIONS

As telecommunications giants prepared to go before the Federal
Communications Commission in 1998 to seek approval for their
megamergers, Jackson threatened to protest and speak out against
the mergers unless those companies promised that minority
customers and minority business owners shared in the profits from
the mergers. Jackson negotiated with the companies and extracted
donations to his charities and multimillion dollar contracts for
minority-owned businesses, including contracts with companies
that have ties to Jackson family members. Then Jackson endorsed
the mergers and they were approved.

SBC/AMERITECH

1998

* May 14: Jackson urges Pres. Clinton to block the merger.

* Dec. 7: "We are at the table with the merger giants," Jackson
says, warning that he will oppose mergers if the companies do not
pledge diversify.

* Dec. 14: Jackson tells the FCC, "Initially, their proposed
merger plan red lines residential customers" in favor of business
customers. 1999: SBC and Ameritech give $500,000 to Jackson's
CEF.

* Jan. 15: SBC pledges to hire a minority firm to manage its
pension fund.

* March 29: "The merger is in the public interest," Jackson says
in an Ameritech news release touting his endorsement of the
merger.

* April 5: Ameritech announces it will sell its cellular business
to a new partnership of GTE and Jackson colleague Chester
Davenport.

* Oct. 6: The FCC approves the merger.


2000/2001

* Feb 5-16, 2000: Jackson's son Jonathan, representing
Davenport's company, accompanies Jackson on a trip to Africa,
PUSH documents show. GTE/BELL ATLANTIC


1998

* Dec. 7: Jackson says he wants guarantees from GTE and Bell that
minority customers and businesses will profit from the merger.

* Dec. 14: "The Bell Atlantic/GTE plan must include a stronger
commitment to to internet and technology training targeted to the
minority community," Jackson tells the FCC. 1999: Bell Atlantic
and GTE give $1 million to Jackson's CEF.

* Jan. 15: Bell Atlantic pledges to hire a minority firm to
manage its pension fund.

* April 5: GTE agrees to pay vast majority of the $3.3 billion
purchase price for Ameritech's cellular business, but to give
Jackson colleage Chester Davenport a 7 percent stake in the new
venture for $60 million. The new venture will be chaired by
Davenport, but Davenport will have "No operational
responsibility. none."

* May 17: Jackson endorses the Bell Atlantic/GTE merger.

* July 17: The FCC endorses the merger. The new company is called
Verizon.  AT&T/TCI


1998

* Dec. 7: Jackson says ATT&T and TCI must include minority
business in their merger deal for his support.

* Dec. 14: TCI has a "questionable employment record and a poor
level of public service," Jackson tells the FCC.

* 1999: AT&T pledges $425,000 to Jackson's CEF.

* Jan. 15: AT&T Chairman Michael Armstrong tells Jackson's Wall
Street conference that his company will hire a minority business
to handle a major bond offering.

* Feb 25: FCC approves merger.

* March 22: AT&T chooses Blaylock & Partners, L.P., a minority
firm with close ties to Jackson, to co-manage an $8 billion bond
offering. The deal is worth an estimated $750,000 to the firm.
Jan. 2001: AT&T executives address Jackson's Wall Street
conference. CBS/VIACOM


1999: Viacom pledges $680,000 to Jackson's CEF. Viacom's UPN
donates $50,000.

* Sept. 20: Jackson blasts CBS's proposed purchase of Viacom,
saying it would concentrate ownership in too few hands. It would
also violate the federal rule against one company owning two
networks -- CBS and the African-American-oriented UPN.

* Sept. 22: Jackson brings friends Chester Davenport and Percy
Sutton to a meeting with CBS Chairman Mel Karmazin urging him to
sell UPN to a minority owner such as Davenport or Sutton. Jackson
was a founding shareholder in Sutton's Inner City Broadcasting
and his wife still may be a shareholder.

* Sept. 30: Jackson brings Davenport and Sutton to a meeting with
FCC Chairman William Kennard to lobby him not to approve the
merger unless Viacom sells UPN to a minoity owner such as
Davenport or Sutton. Kennard has championed Jackson's arguments
about demanding steps toward diversity by companies trying to
merge. 2000

* Feb. 5-16: Jackson visits Africa on a telecommunications trade
mission. He brings Sutton and his son Jonathan Jackson, who is
representing Davenport.

* May 3: The FCC approves CBS' purchase of Viacom, contingent on
Viacom selling off UPN within a year.

... END SIDEBAR ...

Some of those deals go to companies with business ties to
Jackson's own family, including his son Jonathan, who serves as
unpaid president of Jackson's Citizenship Education Fund--the
charity that encourages businesses to cut minority businessmen
and women in on deals.

After first opposing the SBC/Ameritech merger, Jackson helped
persuade Ameritech to sell a portion of its cellular business to
Jackson colleague Chester Davenport. After Ameritech gave
Davenport the contract, Jackson switched his position and blessed
the merger. Then Jackson's son Jonathan, a consultant,
represented Davenport's company, Georgetown Partners, in a
Jackson trade mission to Africa last year. But a Jackson
spokesman said the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition mistakenly identified
Jonathan as a representative of Georgetown.

Jackson's Wall Street and La Salle Street projects--an outgrowth
of PUSH's Citizenship Education Fund--aim to open doors for
minority business owners who have not traditionally been invited
to compete for big money contracts from Fortune 500 companies.

Jackson's finances and those of his $15 million-a-year national
network of charities have come under scrutiny since revelations
two weeks ago that Jackson's Citizenship Education Fund has paid
$35,000 or more to a former staffer who bore Jackson an
out-of-wedlock child. Rainbow/PUSH officials have offered
differing accounts of what the money was for.

Jackson is lobbying CBS and Viacom to sell Viacom's UPN network
to Davenport or to another minority businessman such as Jackson's
close friend Percy Sutton. Jackson brought both men and a
Hispanic businessman to a meeting with CBS chairman Mel Karmazin.

Jackson and his wife were original investors in Sutton's Inner
City Broadcasting. The shares, under his wife Jacqueline's name,
were worth $250,000 to $1 million in 1988. She still owned them
as recently as a year ago, but the Jackson family declined any
comment on this.

Jackson also threatened protests against GTE and Bell Atlantic
before their merger, and against AT&T and TCI before their
merger. He likewise changed his tune after they agreed to his
demands by giving contracts to minority business owners--at least
some of whom Jackson introduced to the corporate chiefs. They
also donated to Jackson's nonprofit groups.

It's an evolution of the technique Jackson has used successfully
for decades to get minority-owned businesses their slice of the
American pie.

Doug Whitley, Ameritech's former president of Illinois
operations, praised Jackson's Wall Street and La Salle Street
projects for coaxing his company and others to make concessions
to minority businesses.

"Part of the theme of the Wall Street and La Salle Street
projects is to make the big corporations, which are primarily
controlled by white guys, aware of the need to reach out to
minority partners," he said. "I think companies need to be
reminded and that's a role Jesse Jackson plays. I don't think any
company wants to be extorted and I think there's a difference
between being reminded and being extorted."

Businessmen less enamored of Jackson's new strategy complain it
serves mainly to make rich African-Americans richer and that
Jackson leans on minority businesses that hope to benefit from
the program to donate heavily, according to published reports.

Since Jackson started the Wall Street Project in 1997 as an
outgrowth of his Citizenship Education Fund, he has been pulling
in $15 million or more a year in donations to his nonprofit
groups, according to the most recent public figures available.
And the dollar values of the contracts have grown astronomically.

The deal to sell Ameritech's cellular business to Davenport and
GTE was worth $3.3 billion. Davenport put up $60 million for a 7
percent share of the new company co-owned with GTE. Despite his
smaller share, Davenport was named "chairman," though a spokesman
said he would have "no operational responsibility. None."

Davenport, who had known Jackson about 10 years, had no
experience in telecommunications. He formerly owned a company
called Envirotest, which tested auto emissions for state
governments. Jackson weighed in on Envirotest's behalf with some
elected officials, including former Connecticut Gov. Lowell
Weicker, according to news accounts. Davenport sold the company
in 1998, helping to boost his net worth to close to $100 million.

Verizon (formerly GTE) representatives denied a New York Times
story saying that GTE executives resented having to cut Davenport
in on the deal.

"Rainbow/PUSH introduced us to Chester Davenport," Verizon
spokeswoman Bobbi Hennessey said. "But it's ultimately our
decision who we involve in our business."

As CBS sought Federal Communications Commission permission to
purchase Viacom, Jackson made loud noises about the snag the deal
was headed for because federal law prohibits one company from
owning two networks, and Viacom's UPN is considered a network.

The rules also prohibit one company from serving more than 35
percent of the U.S. population. CBS and UPN would reach about 41
percent of the nation.

Jackson's prescription for relief was simple: CBS should sell
UPN--which aims much of its programming at African-American
viewers--to a minority owner.

Jackson met with CBS' Karmazin to make his pitch and he brought
along Davenport, Sutton and Spanish Broadcasting Systems Vice
President Joe Garcia as examples of minority businessmen who
could buy UPN. A week later, Jackson made the same pitch to
then-FCC Chairman William Kennard.

Kennard has spoken at Jackson's Wall Street conferences and has
backed Jackson's arguments that the FCC should consider the
impact on minority customers and businesses in deciding whether
to approve mergers.

Kennard's critics have said that the former chairman, who left
office in January, helped Jackson's strategy of holding
companies' feet to the fire.

A year ago, Jackson led a delegation of African-American
businessmen, including Sutton and Jackson's son Jonathan, on a
trip to three African countries to promote telecommunications
partnerships.

Rainbow/PUSH passed out brochures introducing Jackson's friend
Sutton as an owner of radio stations interested in starting
cellular telephone businesses in Africa. The brochures introduced
Jonathan Jackson as the representative of Davenport's company,
Georgetown Partners.

Asked what his relationship to Georgetown Partners was, Jonathan
would say only, "Look it up."

A receptionist at Georgetown offered to take a message for
Jonathan, though Davenport later said Jackson did not work for
him.

A Jackson family spokesman said late Friday that Jackson does not
work for Georgetown and the PUSH brochure with Jonathan Jackson's
photo introducing him as Georgetown's representative on the trip
and listing the vital stats for Jackson and Georgetown must have
been in error.

Sutton, a former Manhattan borough president, is a longtime
friend of the Jackson family.

Sutton's Inner City Broadcasting owns radio stations in New York
City and around the country, and he was finance chairman of
Jackson's 1988 run for president. At that time, Jackson said his
wife's shares in Inner City Broadcasting were worth more than
$250,000. Sutton said the shares were worth $1 million.

Jackson has not disclosed his holdings since. As recently as
1996, the Suttons told the Associated Press that Mrs. Jackson
owned the stock, and other stock owners said last week she still
owns stock. The Rev. Jackson and Sutton declined to answer
questions about how much the Jacksons stand to gain if Inner City
lands UPN or if the company, as expected, goes public soon.

Inner City benefitted after Jackson raised questions about the
merger of Clear Channel Communications and AMFM Inc. Jackson said
minorities should have a chance to buy the radio stations in
major cities that would become available if the merger went
through. Sutton's Inner City bought nine of those stations.

***

Jackson sons quiet on hiring

BY TIM NOVAK AND CHUCK NEUBAUER STAFF REPORTERS


For decades, the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr. has threatened
companies with boycotts for failing to have minority employees,
but Jackson's sons refuse to say how many minority employees work
at their Chicago beer distributorship.

It's one of many questions Jackson's sons Yusef and Jonathan
refuse to answer about the lucrative deal they got from
Anheuser-Busch Inc. in 1998. The deal came 16 years after their
father boycotted the world's largest brewer because only three of
its 900 distributorships were owned by minorities.

Neither Anheuser-Busch nor the Jacksons would say how many of the
distributorships are owned by minorities today.

The Jackson brothers own River North Sales & Service, which
annually distributes between $30 million and $40 million worth of
Budweiser and other products between Lake Michigan and Harlem
Avenue, Irving Park and Roosevelt Roads. No bar or restaurant in
that area can buy Anheuser-Busch products from anyone but the
Jacksons. This includes hotels, nightclubs and Wrigley Field.

The Jacksons reportedly have as many as 100 drivers and sales
representatives, but they refuse to say how many are minorities.

"River North Sales and Services is . . . a private business,"
according to a statement from Yusef Jackson, the company's
president. "All of our actions in acquiring and operating this
business have been ethical and proper. As for your questions,
much of the information involved is either proprietary or
personal. Our choice is to keep it private."

Yusef Jackson said in a later statement that his "management team
has developed an inclusive workplace environment which reflects
the ethnically diverse area we serve."

Under laws dating back to Prohibition, most states, including
Illinois, generally forbid alcohol manufacturers from selling
directly to consumers. The manufacturers must sell their products
to distributors, who then sell it to bars, restaurants and
stores. Anheuser-Busch, like many brewers, has enormous control
over who can distribute its products.

When Anheuser-Busch sold the River North distributorship to
Jackson's sons, they had no experience selling beer or running a
mid-size company.

Yusef, River North's president, was 28 and working at Mayer Brown
& Platt, a major Chicago law firm. Jonathan, River North's vice
president, was 32 with a master's degree in business from
Northwestern University. He had worked as a consultant and
developer.

Jonathan Jackson also is president of the Citizenship Education
Fund, the group his father uses to encourage corporations, such
as AT&T, to do business with minorities. Yusef Jackson is a board
member and attorney for the group.

Yusef owns 67 percent of River North and Jonathan owns 23
percent. The remaining 10 percent is owned by Donald Niestrom Jr.
He and his father were longtime Anheuser-Busch employees who
worked at the River North distributorship before the Jacksons
bought it. Niestrom Jr. is now River North's vice president of
operations, according to state records.

Chicago is a major focus for Anheuser-Busch. The company sells 47
percent of the nation's beer, dominating most markets, but in
Chicago, the company runs second to Miller Brewing Co.
Anheuser-Busch's goal is to become the dominant brand in Chicago,
and the Jacksons will play a key role if that is to happen.

An Anheuser-Busch distributorship is a gold mine, industry
experts say. It gives the owner a monopoly to sell the brewery's
products in a specific area.

Anheuser-Busch has 700 distributorships nationwide. Several are
owned by Busch family relatives, including Anheuser-Busch
Chairman August Busch III's daughter and son-in-law, his half
brother Peter Busch and cousins, according to reports the company
filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Others
are owned by the children of Anheuser-Busch directors.

"Most distributorships are family owned and have been for
generations," according to a distributor who asked to remain
anonymous so he could keep selling Anheuser-Busch products.
"Because they're family-held businesses, they don't turn over
that frequently."

The Jacksons bought the distributorship in late 1998 from
Anheuser-Busch. Neither the Jacksons nor Anheuser-Busch officials
would discuss details of the Jackson brothers' purchase.

"We negotiated a straightforward deal and paid a competitive
price for the company along with its property," Yusef Jackson
said in a written statement.

Anheuser-Busch, according to the Jacksons, calls the Jackson
brothers and Niestrom "exactly the kind of people we look for to
be wholesalers representing our company in the community. . . .
They have the added advantage of being in the age demographic we
describe as `contemporary adults,' the key beer-purchasing
segment. . . . This is a very strong management team."

Anheuser-Busch said in a statement to the Chicago Sun-Times that
it has "several minority owners" of distributorships, but it
refused to say how many.

"The wholesalerships are independently owned and operated and
don't change hands frequently. When they do, we work to recruit
qualified minority owners."

Anheuser-Busch created a $5 million program to help minorities
buy distributorships in September 1982 amid Jackson's threats
that Operation PUSH would boycott the company. The brewer had
three distributorships owned by minorities at that time.

A black-owned paper in St. Louis, where Anheuser-Busch is based,
reported that Jackson had demanded $500 each from black
businessmen to support the boycott. Jackson sued the paper, but
he dropped the suit after a judge ruled that the newspaper could
inspect Operation PUSH's financial records.

Jackson went ahead with the boycott in October 1982, proclaiming,
"This Bud's a dud." A year later, Anheuser-Busch added another $5
million to the minority financing program, one of several moves
that Jackson endorsed.

Yusef Jackson said in his statement that he, his brother and
Niestrom bought the River North distributorship without any
financial help from Anheuser-Busch.

Yusef Jackson refused to divulge the price his company paid for
River North, but public records show his company got a $6.7
million loan from NationsBank to pay Anheuser-Busch for the
assets, equipment and the distributorship's building and
warehouse on Goose Island.

Anheuser-Busch, however, had spent $10.5 million, including $2.6
million from the City of Chicago, seven years earlier to buy the
land and build the 79,000 square-foot-building.


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             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:
                     *Michael Spitzer*  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
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