-Caveat Lector-

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/09/21/politics/21DONA.html?ex=1033
272000&en=a4cc8b3e954462c5&ei=5006&partner=ALTAVISTA1

September 21, 2002

Democrats Are Fined $243,000 for Fund-Raising Violations
By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr.

WASHINGTON, Sept. 20 � The Democratic National Committee
has agreed to pay civil fines and turn over to the Treasury a total of
$243,000 to settle accusations that it took more than $1 million in
illegal foreign contributions in 1995 and 1996, according to Federal
Election Commission records released today.

The documents also state that the election commission's general
counsel found in 1999 that there was "reason to believe" that the
People's Republic of China "knowingly and willfully" violated federal
election law. But the heavily redacted documents also state that the
commission voted unanimously to "take no action at this time" on
the general counsel's recommendation.

The documents detail efforts by the Democratic Party and the
Clinton-Gore campaign to build their war chest with help from
wealthy Asian donors before the 1996 election. In all, the election
commission disclosed $719,500 in fines today.

The largest fine, $120,000, was paid by the International Buddhist
Progress Society, which operates the Hsi Lai Temple in California,
the site of an April 1996 luncheon attended by Vice President Al
Gore. The national committee paid a $115,000 fine and agreed to
turn over to the Treasury $128,000 it had received in illegal
contributions. The Clinton/Gore '96 Primary Committee paid a
$2,000 fine, the records also show.

John Huang and Yah Lin Trie, two Democratic fund-raisers who
pleaded guilty to violating federal laws, agreed to pay fines
respectively of $95,000 and $7,000.

The commission also found "probable cause" to believe that Hogan
& Hartson, a Washington law firm, violated election laws in the
handling of $50,000 in donations that a client of the firm made to the
national committee in summer 1996. Two officials at the firm who
were involved in the handling of the donations have agreed to pay a
total of $67,500.

Representatives of the national committee and for former President
Bill Clinton declined to comment. Officials at Hogan & Hartson did
not reply to a phone message.

After the fund-raising scandal broke in late 1996, the Democratic
Party returned $3 million in questionable or improper contributions,
much of it from money donated or solicited by Mr. Huang or Mr.
Trie.

Kent Cooper, a former election commission official who is now at
PoliticalMoneyLine.com, which tracks money in politics, said some
fines disclosed today appear surprisingly low. The election
commission, he said, limited the fines assessed to some people
based on their claims that they could not afford to pay more. "Some
people will look at this and say the F.E.C. should have fined them
more," Mr. Cooper said.

He noted, for example, that the election commission waived fines
against a company called Global Resource Management based on
the assertions by the company's president about its "present
financial circumstances," the documents show.

The election commission found that the company, which was
formed in Ohio in 1996 to resolve a "construction-related contractual
matter" in Saudi Arabia, decided to make a $100,000 contribution to
a national committee fund-raiser in New York on Aug. 18, 1996. The
event was also billed as a 50th birthday celebration for Mr. Clinton.

The company's officers made the contribution in order to meet with
Ray Mabus, the former Mississippi governor and ambassador to
Saudi Arabia, who helped plan the event, the election commission
found.

But the money used to make the contribution was provided by Sheik
Mohammed Oboud Al-Amoudi, a Saudi citizen, who wired $150,000
to the company. The company used this money for the donation
"even though its officers had been informed that foreign national
contributions are illegal," the election commission found.

Mr. Cooper said the documents provided further evidence of the
tactics Democratic operatives used to raise money before the 1996
elections.

"Here, we're dealing with wire transfers and shuffling money to
accounts," he said. "What is going on here is warning bells are
going off all over the place."

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A professional politician is a professionally dishonorable man. In
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indistinguishable from a streetwalker.  ~~H. L. Mencken

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