WASHINGTON
(AP) -- Jack Abramoff can't say he wasn't warned.
When the
now-notorious lobbyist was a rising star as Republicans expanded their power in
Washington, a concerned senior partner in his firm warned against his
win-at-all-costs approach to business. "At the rate you're going,"
the boss said, "you're either going to be dead, disgraced or in jail in
five years."
Abramoff
writes in his autobiography, out Monday, that the line rang in his ears for the
next decade, including the 3 1/2 years he spent in a federal penitentiary
paying for his bribery of public officials and other crimes before his release
last year.
The
52-year-old's name has become a synonym for Washington corruption. The
influence-peddling schemes he masterminded ultimately resulted in conviction of
20 people and changed federal lobbying laws.
But
Abramoff says the reforms aren't tough enough to keep special-interest power in
check and, from his insider perspective, he lays out what more needs to be
done.
He writes
in "Capitol Punishment: The Hard Truth About Washington Corruption from
America's Most Notorious Lobbyist" that there still are plenty of corrupt
lobbying practices that are perfectly legal.
Abramoff is
now out of the lobbying business, but the father of five has returned to the
home he shares with his wife in the Washington suburb of Silver Spring, Md.,
and is promoting the book, including an interview airing Sunday on CBS'
"60 Minutes." Authorities have said in court filings they are looking
into using the book proceeds to help repay a $23 million restitution order to
his victims.
Abramoff
became a lobbyist in 1994 after the Republican takeover of Congress, when firms
were eager to hire help with conservative credentials. Abramoff was the former
two-term chairman of the College Republican National Committee and executive
director of President Ronald Reagan's grassroots lobbying organization,
Citizens for America, and rode the Republican bandwagon of power in the House.
He was
especially close to House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas. He writes that
the two bonded over their adherence to religion; Abramoff is an orthodox Jew,
DeLay a born-again Christian. Abramoff got his clients to donate generously to
DeLay, helping build the No. 2 House Republican's power and giving himself an
ally in a high office.
He built
relationships with other congressional offices by collecting campaign cash for
those who helped his clients. He charged high fees, but they were his ultimate
undoing. He often charged $150,000 a month instead of an industry standard
closer to $10,000 a month. It's a practice he defends in his book because of
the results he says he delivered.
The
Washington Post in 2004 began a Pulitzer Prize-winning series investigating the
tens of millions of dollars that American Indian tribal clients were paying
Abramoff and his business partner, former DeLay spokesman Michael Scanlon, who
provided grassroots organizing services.
It
eventually was revealed that the two men were secretly kicking back profits to
one another worth more than $20 million, and the Justice Department pursued
felony charges.
Both
pleaded guilty and agreed to cooperate with an investigation that would lead to
the conviction of other lobbyists on Abramoff's team, congressional figures
including Ohio Republican Rep. Bob Ney and officials in the Bush
administration.
Many of the
lobbyists were convicted for winning favors for their clients after taking
public officials out for meals at fancy restaurants and giving them tickets to
sporting events and concerts. He ran his own restaurant on Pennsylvania Ave.
between the Capitol and the White House that became a hangout for Ney and other
Hill figures. Abramoff had skyboxes at all the Washington area venues and says
the firm acted like Ticketmaster to Capitol Hill. The reform law passed in
response makes it illegal for lobbyists to give those gifts.
But
Abramoff dismisses the reforms as toothless. He says there are more effective
ways to get powerbrokers to do a client's bidding, particularly political
contributions that he says should be banned from lobbyists or anyone receiving
federal contracts or otherwise benefiting from public funds.
"As a
lobbyist, I thought it only natural and right that my clients should reward
those members who saved them such substantial sums with generous contributions.
This quid pro quo became one of the hallmarks of our lobbying efforts,"
Abramoff writes.
"What
I did not consider then, and never considered until I was sitting in prison,
was that contributions from parties with an interest in legislation are really
nothing but bribes. Sure, it's legal for the most part. Sure, everyone in
Washington does it. Sure, it's the way the system works. It's one of
Washington's dirty little secrets - but it's bribery just the same."
Abramoff
says term limits would prevent lawmakers from getting too close to special
interests. He also says lawmakers and their staff should be banned for life
from working for any organization that lobbies.
The
movement of congressional figures to lobbying is pervasive in Washington. The
Internet site LegiStorm tracks those who move from the Hill to K Street, where
many lobbying firms have offices, and says there have been 493 already this
year.
Abramoff
said he would often get access inside congressional offices by suggesting to
key staffers that they come work for him when they were finished with their
congressional careers.
"Assuming
the staffer had any interest in leaving Capitol Hill for K Street - and almost
90 percent of them do - I would own him and, consequentially, the entire
office," Abramoff writes. "No rules had been broken, at least not
yet. No one even knew what was happening, but suddenly, every move that staffer
made, he made with his future at my firm in mind. His paycheck may have been
signed by the Congress, but he was already working for me."
The
exposure of the Abramoff scandal became the subject of congressional hearings
where Abramoff repeatedly invoked his Fifth Amendment Constitutional protection
against incriminating himself and did not respond to questions. He writes in
the book that most of the senators who were vilifying him were hypocrites who
had taken thousands from his clients and firms.
"I
stared stone-faced at (former Colorado Republican Sen. Benjamin Nighthorse)
Campbell as he hurled invectives at me," Abramoff writes. "I wondered
how he'd react if I reminded him about the $25,000 in campaign checks I
delivered to him during our breakfast meeting at posh Capitol Hill eatery La
Colline the morning of April 23, 2002. I'll never forget that breakfast. After
I handed him the envelope full of campaign contributions, he let me know that
my clients would be treated well by his Indian Affairs Committee."
Former
North Dakota Democratic Sen. "Byron Dorgan railed against the `cesspool of
greed' surrounding my practice," Abramoff writes. "I guess it wasn't
a cesspool when he had his hand out to take over $75,000 in campaign
contributions from our team and clients."
Dorgan said
in response that he's never met Abramoff or received a campaign contribution
from him.
"It's
not surprising he writes a book that criticizes those of us who led the
investigation that sent him to prison," Dorgan wrote in an email to the
AP. "The record of our investigation exposed his corrupt behavior. He
bilked Indian tribes out of tens of millions of dollars and he should be
forever ashamed.
Campbell
did not respond to a request for comment.

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