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Joe LIEberman tied to mob money


Guest Harry Hope

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Guest Harry Hope

People familiar with the campaign matters say, the names of Lieberman,

the three Republicans and about a dozen other Connecticut and New York

politicians have turned up on what the FBI loosely refers to as a

"ledger" that agents seized from Galante's office while investigating

mob influence in the trash industry.

 

.............................................................................................

 

Over the past six weeks, Galante's political charity has eclipsed his

other giving, as well as his legal problems - notably, a 93-count,

federal racketeering indictment accusing him of conspiring with New

York gangsters to monopolize the trash hauling market in western

Connecticut and upstate New York.

 

 

From The Hartford Courant, 10/28/07:

http://www.courant.com/news/custom/topnews/hc-lieberman1028.artoct28,0,5750220.story

 

Galante Donors Gave To Senator

 

Lieberman Received $14,000 In 2003

 

By EDMUND H. MAHONY | And JON LENDER Courant Staff Writers

 

Contributions from associates and friends of now-indicted garbage

executive James Galante to the 2004 presidential campaign of U.S. Sen.

Joseph Lieberman have sparked the interest of federal investigators.

 

Lieberman's bid for the White House took in at least $14,000 from

Galante, his associates and their relatives in the fall of 2003,

according to a Courant review of campaign records.

 

The contributions to Lieberman, a longtime Democrat who became an

independent in 2006, are similar to allegedly bundled contributions to

three Republican officeholders that earlier this month led to state

charges against Galante, who is also facing a 2006 federal

racketeering indictment.

 

What's more, people familiar with the campaign matters say, the names

of Lieberman, the three Republicans and about a dozen other

Connecticut and New York politicians have turned up on what the FBI

loosely refers to as a "ledger" that agents seized from Galante's

office while investigating mob influence in the trash industry.

 

The so-called ledger, a subject of interest to a legislative committee

investigating state Sen. Louis DeLuca, R-Woodbury, summarizes

information provided to Galante by his lobbyists on fundraising goals

set by a number of candidates, the people familiar with the documents

said.

 

A Lieberman spokesman said no one knew of any irregularities or

improprieties at the time of the contributions.

 

Galante was charged Oct. 13 with violating state campaign finance

laws, based on a series of suspect $1,000 contributions in 2002 and

2003 to political action committees controlled by DeLuca, state Sen.

David Cappiello, R-Danbury, and Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton.

 

Galante is accused of trying to disguise up to $38,000 in personal

contributions to the three Republican candidates' political action

committees.

 

"Bundling" of contributions - that is, gathering together the checks

of several associates and giving them to a candidate all at once - is

not illegal in itself.

 

It becomes illegal when someone uses bundling to exceed a legal

contribution limit by passing money through third parties, who each

write checks within the legal limit.

 

That is what authorities claim Galante did for the Republican

politicians.

 

He is accused of contributing as much as $15,000 to DeLuca's PAC,

$15,000 to Cappiello's and $8,000 to Boughton's.

 

The arrest warrant in Galante's case said he passed the money to the

three officials in increments of $1,000 - the maximum donation allowed

by state law for a PAC - through employees of his various trash

businesses, their family members or their friends.

 

Now it turns out that several of those same employees, friends and

relatives gave a total of $10,000 to Lieberman's campaign on Nov. 25

and 26, 2003, a Courant examination of federal campaign finance

records shows.

 

The donors, from Connecticut and New York, included one of Galante's

lobbyists and the lobbyist's sister - as well as two former Galante

employees recently sentenced to federal prison for participating in a

racketeering conspiracy that Galante is accused of orchestrating

through his garbage companies.

 

In addition to the $10,000 on those two days in November 2003,

Lieberman's campaign received $2,000 from Galante himself on Sept. 30,

2003, and two more donations totaling $2,000 from Galante lobbyist

Joseph Walkovich of Danbury on Sept. 30 and Nov. 14 of that year.

 

Many Donors

 

In spite of the federal interest in the Lieberman donations, no

charges have been filed against Galante in connection with

contributions to the U.S. senator's campaign for the 2004 Democratic

presidential nomination.

 

Lieberman's office has been contacted by the FBI and the U.S.

attorney's office about "the circumstances of the donations made to

Joe Lieberman for President" by Galante associates, Lieberman's press

secretary, Rob Sawicki, confirmed last week.

 

Sawicki said that "no one involved with Joe Lieberman for President

had any idea that there was any impropriety involved in the donations

made through Mr. Galante."

 

"There were several people raising money for Joe Lieberman for

President, and it is not uncommon for fundraisers to bundle donations

from friends and family," Sawicki said.

 

"Those donations would never have been accepted had the campaign been

aware of any wrongdoing in the bundling of those donations. If federal

investigators determine that any laws were broken in connection with

these donations, Senator Lieberman will donate the money to a

charity."

 

Cappiello responded similarly earlier this year when his PAC gave

$15,000 to charity after it was revealed the 2002 contributions were

suspect.

 

Cappiello, DeLuca and Boughton have not themselves been targeted by

authorities, and all three said what Lieberman is saying now - that

they thought the contributions were legitimate and had no idea Galante

could have been manipulating the finances.

 

Galante, who is awaiting trial on a federal indictment accusing him of

illegal price-fixing in the garbage industry, said through a spokesman

that he will not discuss the campaign money.

 

He has pleaded not guilty to all charges and is expected to be tried

in about a year. All the suspect donations were made before the June

2006 indictment.

 

The Ledger

 

Lieberman's name along with about a dozen political figures appears on

the so-called Galante "ledger" - which was discovered in an office

credenza when FBI agents raided his trash headquarters in Danbury in

July 2005.

 

The document has proved intriguing to the legislative committee

examining the relationship between Galante and DeLuca.

 

The lawmakers first learned of the ledger when the U.S. attorney's

office granted them permission to review a heavily redacted report of

an FBI interview of DeLuca.

 

By the time agents found DeLuca's name on the so-called ledger, they

had collected wiretap and other information indicating that DeLuca had

accepted Galante's offer to have someone "pay a visit" to a man DeLuca

believed was physically abusing his granddaughter.

 

The visit never took place, but DeLuca was nonetheless charged with

conspiracy to commit threatening.

 

He was convicted in June.

 

But so far, committee members, who are charged with recommending

whether DeLuca should be expelled from the Senate, have been unable to

satisfy their curiosity.

 

When he appeared before the committee two weeks ago, DeLuca testified,

"As I told the FBI, I don't know what the ledger is."

 

Later, he told committee members he didn't know if the number "25,000"

next to his name referred to $25,000, or whether Galante ever gave him

that much money.

 

"I don't recall him contributing that much," DeLuca said. "But he

could have."

 

Intrigued, but frustrated by the redactions, the committee asked the

U.S. attorney's office for additional information, in particular, the

significance of the "25,000."

 

The U.S. attorney's office has not said how it will respond.

 

DeLuca opposes the release of additional information.

 

"It's uncertain as to what that is a reference to, the `25,000,'"

state Sen. Andrea Stillman, D-Waterford, mused during a meeting.

 

"Of course, there isn't a dollar sign. It doesn't say chickens. It

doesn't say anything. It just says the number."

 

Others familiar with the so-called ledger have over recent weeks

questioned whether the word "ledger" is even an appropriate

characterization.

 

They said the document is, more accurately, a succession of pages torn

from a pad similar to the sort a business executive such as Galante

might have by his office telephone.

 

They said the pages contain various jotted notes, apparently written

over time, sometimes in pencil and at other times in a variety of

inks.

 

Notes about business matters are interspersed with the names of the

political figures.

 

Aligned against the names of the political figures are sums ranging

from 2,500 to 100,000.

 

Along with Lieberman, the names include candidates for local office in

eastern New York.

 

The FBI and U.S. attorney's office refuse to discuss the ledger.

 

But people familiar with the document said the political names and

corresponding figures represent fundraising goals that Galante was

told various political figures were trying to achieve in 2002 and

2003.

 

The same people said Galante employed at least two lobbyists - Patrick

Sullivan and Walkovich - who advised him on, among other things,

political contributions.

 

Galante, who owns a network of trash businesses with annual sales

approaching $100 million, is a well-known charitable benefactor in

Western Connecticut, having given millions to, among other things,

veterans' causes and school athletic programs in his hometown of New

Fairfield.

 

Over the past six weeks, Galante's political charity has eclipsed his

other giving, as well as his legal problems - notably, a 93-count,

federal racketeering indictment accusing him of conspiring with New

York gangsters to monopolize the trash hauling market in western

Connecticut and upstate New York.

 

When legislators began collecting evidence in consideration of

punishing DeLuca, the racketeering case turned into something of a

political potboiler.

 

Lieberman Donations

 

A small number of 2003 donations to Lieberman, who at the time was

running for president in the 2004 election, follow the same pattern.

 

Federal records show that $10,000 in donations for Lieberman's

presidential campaign came in on Nov. 25 and 26, 2003, from donors -

or their associates or relatives - who made at least one of the 38 PAC

contributions mentioned in the affidavit that state investigators

filed to justify Galante's Oct. 13 arrest.

 

Those 2003 donations to Lieberman included:

 

$2,000 on Nov. 26 from Mary Walkovich of Danbury.

 

She is the sister of Galante's local lobbyist, Joseph Walkovich.

 

Joseph Walkovich had written one of 15 checks for $1,000 that the

investigative affidavit says were received Oct. 10, 2002, by

Cappiello's PAC, the 24th District Republican Committee.

 

Joseph Walkovich also made donations of $500 and $1,500 to Lieberman

on Sept. 30 and Nov. 14, 2003, records show.

 

$1,000 each on Nov. 25 from Ciro and Kim Viento of Mahopac, N.Y., each

of whom gave $1,000 in 2002 to DeLuca's PAC, called 32 GOP.

 

Ciro Viento has worked for years as the operations manager for

Galante's garbage companies, and was sentenced in August to 2

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Guest Harry Hope

People familiar with the campaign matters say, the names of Lieberman,

the three Republicans and about a dozen other Connecticut and New York

politicians have turned up on what the FBI loosely refers to as a

"ledger" that agents seized from Galante's office while investigating

mob influence in the trash industry.

 

.............................................................................................

 

Over the past six weeks, Galante's political charity has eclipsed his

other giving, as well as his legal problems - notably, a 93-count,

federal racketeering indictment accusing him of conspiring with New

York gangsters to monopolize the trash hauling market in western

Connecticut and upstate New York.

 

 

From The Hartford Courant, 10/28/07:

http://www.courant.com/news/custom/topnews/hc-lieberman1028.artoct28,0,5750220.story

 

Galante Donors Gave To Senator

 

Lieberman Received $14,000 In 2003

 

By EDMUND H. MAHONY | And JON LENDER Courant Staff Writers

 

Contributions from associates and friends of now-indicted garbage

executive James Galante to the 2004 presidential campaign of U.S. Sen.

Joseph Lieberman have sparked the interest of federal investigators.

 

Lieberman's bid for the White House took in at least $14,000 from

Galante, his associates and their relatives in the fall of 2003,

according to a Courant review of campaign records.

 

The contributions to Lieberman, a longtime Democrat who became an

independent in 2006, are similar to allegedly bundled contributions to

three Republican officeholders that earlier this month led to state

charges against Galante, who is also facing a 2006 federal

racketeering indictment.

 

What's more, people familiar with the campaign matters say, the names

of Lieberman, the three Republicans and about a dozen other

Connecticut and New York politicians have turned up on what the FBI

loosely refers to as a "ledger" that agents seized from Galante's

office while investigating mob influence in the trash industry.

 

The so-called ledger, a subject of interest to a legislative committee

investigating state Sen. Louis DeLuca, R-Woodbury, summarizes

information provided to Galante by his lobbyists on fundraising goals

set by a number of candidates, the people familiar with the documents

said.

 

A Lieberman spokesman said no one knew of any irregularities or

improprieties at the time of the contributions.

 

Galante was charged Oct. 13 with violating state campaign finance

laws, based on a series of suspect $1,000 contributions in 2002 and

2003 to political action committees controlled by DeLuca, state Sen.

David Cappiello, R-Danbury, and Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton.

 

Galante is accused of trying to disguise up to $38,000 in personal

contributions to the three Republican candidates' political action

committees.

 

"Bundling" of contributions - that is, gathering together the checks

of several associates and giving them to a candidate all at once - is

not illegal in itself.

 

It becomes illegal when someone uses bundling to exceed a legal

contribution limit by passing money through third parties, who each

write checks within the legal limit.

 

That is what authorities claim Galante did for the Republican

politicians.

 

He is accused of contributing as much as $15,000 to DeLuca's PAC,

$15,000 to Cappiello's and $8,000 to Boughton's.

 

The arrest warrant in Galante's case said he passed the money to the

three officials in increments of $1,000 - the maximum donation allowed

by state law for a PAC - through employees of his various trash

businesses, their family members or their friends.

 

Now it turns out that several of those same employees, friends and

relatives gave a total of $10,000 to Lieberman's campaign on Nov. 25

and 26, 2003, a Courant examination of federal campaign finance

records shows.

 

The donors, from Connecticut and New York, included one of Galante's

lobbyists and the lobbyist's sister - as well as two former Galante

employees recently sentenced to federal prison for participating in a

racketeering conspiracy that Galante is accused of orchestrating

through his garbage companies.

 

In addition to the $10,000 on those two days in November 2003,

Lieberman's campaign received $2,000 from Galante himself on Sept. 30,

2003, and two more donations totaling $2,000 from Galante lobbyist

Joseph Walkovich of Danbury on Sept. 30 and Nov. 14 of that year.

 

Many Donors

 

In spite of the federal interest in the Lieberman donations, no

charges have been filed against Galante in connection with

contributions to the U.S. senator's campaign for the 2004 Democratic

presidential nomination.

 

Lieberman's office has been contacted by the FBI and the U.S.

attorney's office about "the circumstances of the donations made to

Joe Lieberman for President" by Galante associates, Lieberman's press

secretary, Rob Sawicki, confirmed last week.

 

Sawicki said that "no one involved with Joe Lieberman for President

had any idea that there was any impropriety involved in the donations

made through Mr. Galante."

 

"There were several people raising money for Joe Lieberman for

President, and it is not uncommon for fundraisers to bundle donations

from friends and family," Sawicki said.

 

"Those donations would never have been accepted had the campaign been

aware of any wrongdoing in the bundling of those donations. If federal

investigators determine that any laws were broken in connection with

these donations, Senator Lieberman will donate the money to a

charity."

 

Cappiello responded similarly earlier this year when his PAC gave

$15,000 to charity after it was revealed the 2002 contributions were

suspect.

 

Cappiello, DeLuca and Boughton have not themselves been targeted by

authorities, and all three said what Lieberman is saying now - that

they thought the contributions were legitimate and had no idea Galante

could have been manipulating the finances.

 

Galante, who is awaiting trial on a federal indictment accusing him of

illegal price-fixing in the garbage industry, said through a spokesman

that he will not discuss the campaign money.

 

He has pleaded not guilty to all charges and is expected to be tried

in about a year. All the suspect donations were made before the June

2006 indictment.

 

The Ledger

 

Lieberman's name along with about a dozen political figures appears on

the so-called Galante "ledger" - which was discovered in an office

credenza when FBI agents raided his trash headquarters in Danbury in

July 2005.

 

The document has proved intriguing to the legislative committee

examining the relationship between Galante and DeLuca.

 

The lawmakers first learned of the ledger when the U.S. attorney's

office granted them permission to review a heavily redacted report of

an FBI interview of DeLuca.

 

By the time agents found DeLuca's name on the so-called ledger, they

had collected wiretap and other information indicating that DeLuca had

accepted Galante's offer to have someone "pay a visit" to a man DeLuca

believed was physically abusing his granddaughter.

 

The visit never took place, but DeLuca was nonetheless charged with

conspiracy to commit threatening.

 

He was convicted in June.

 

But so far, committee members, who are charged with recommending

whether DeLuca should be expelled from the Senate, have been unable to

satisfy their curiosity.

 

When he appeared before the committee two weeks ago, DeLuca testified,

"As I told the FBI, I don't know what the ledger is."

 

Later, he told committee members he didn't know if the number "25,000"

next to his name referred to $25,000, or whether Galante ever gave him

that much money.

 

"I don't recall him contributing that much," DeLuca said. "But he

could have."

 

Intrigued, but frustrated by the redactions, the committee asked the

U.S. attorney's office for additional information, in particular, the

significance of the "25,000."

 

The U.S. attorney's office has not said how it will respond.

 

DeLuca opposes the release of additional information.

 

"It's uncertain as to what that is a reference to, the `25,000,'"

state Sen. Andrea Stillman, D-Waterford, mused during a meeting.

 

"Of course, there isn't a dollar sign. It doesn't say chickens. It

doesn't say anything. It just says the number."

 

Others familiar with the so-called ledger have over recent weeks

questioned whether the word "ledger" is even an appropriate

characterization.

 

They said the document is, more accurately, a succession of pages torn

from a pad similar to the sort a business executive such as Galante

might have by his office telephone.

 

They said the pages contain various jotted notes, apparently written

over time, sometimes in pencil and at other times in a variety of

inks.

 

Notes about business matters are interspersed with the names of the

political figures.

 

Aligned against the names of the political figures are sums ranging

from 2,500 to 100,000.

 

Along with Lieberman, the names include candidates for local office in

eastern New York.

 

The FBI and U.S. attorney's office refuse to discuss the ledger.

 

But people familiar with the document said the political names and

corresponding figures represent fundraising goals that Galante was

told various political figures were trying to achieve in 2002 and

2003.

 

The same people said Galante employed at least two lobbyists - Patrick

Sullivan and Walkovich - who advised him on, among other things,

political contributions.

 

Galante, who owns a network of trash businesses with annual sales

approaching $100 million, is a well-known charitable benefactor in

Western Connecticut, having given millions to, among other things,

veterans' causes and school athletic programs in his hometown of New

Fairfield.

 

Over the past six weeks, Galante's political charity has eclipsed his

other giving, as well as his legal problems - notably, a 93-count,

federal racketeering indictment accusing him of conspiring with New

York gangsters to monopolize the trash hauling market in western

Connecticut and upstate New York.

 

When legislators began collecting evidence in consideration of

punishing DeLuca, the racketeering case turned into something of a

political potboiler.

 

Lieberman Donations

 

A small number of 2003 donations to Lieberman, who at the time was

running for president in the 2004 election, follow the same pattern.

 

Federal records show that $10,000 in donations for Lieberman's

presidential campaign came in on Nov. 25 and 26, 2003, from donors -

or their associates or relatives - who made at least one of the 38 PAC

contributions mentioned in the affidavit that state investigators

filed to justify Galante's Oct. 13 arrest.

 

Those 2003 donations to Lieberman included:

 

$2,000 on Nov. 26 from Mary Walkovich of Danbury.

 

She is the sister of Galante's local lobbyist, Joseph Walkovich.

 

Joseph Walkovich had written one of 15 checks for $1,000 that the

investigative affidavit says were received Oct. 10, 2002, by

Cappiello's PAC, the 24th District Republican Committee.

 

Joseph Walkovich also made donations of $500 and $1,500 to Lieberman

on Sept. 30 and Nov. 14, 2003, records show.

 

$1,000 each on Nov. 25 from Ciro and Kim Viento of Mahopac, N.Y., each

of whom gave $1,000 in 2002 to DeLuca's PAC, called 32 GOP.

 

Ciro Viento has worked for years as the operations manager for

Galante's garbage companies, and was sentenced in August to 2

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Guest Mitchell Holman

Harry Hope <rivrvu@ix.netcom.com> wrote in

news:o43ai3tq5roo45atvlb91sahv36qj0m9cs@4ax.com:

>

> People familiar with the campaign matters say, the names of Lieberman,

> the three Republicans and about a dozen other Connecticut and New York

> politicians have turned up on what the FBI loosely refers to as a

> "ledger" that agents seized from Galante's office while investigating

> mob influence in the trash industry.

>

 

 

The Democrats threw Lieberman out of the party.

 

When are the Repugs going to do likewise with convicted

criminal Larry Craig and admitted whoremonger David Vitter?

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Guest Mitchell Holman

Harry Hope <rivrvu@ix.netcom.com> wrote in

news:o43ai3tq5roo45atvlb91sahv36qj0m9cs@4ax.com:

>

> People familiar with the campaign matters say, the names of Lieberman,

> the three Republicans and about a dozen other Connecticut and New York

> politicians have turned up on what the FBI loosely refers to as a

> "ledger" that agents seized from Galante's office while investigating

> mob influence in the trash industry.

>

 

 

The Democrats threw Lieberman out of the party.

 

When are the Repugs going to do likewise with convicted

criminal Larry Craig and admitted whoremonger David Vitter?

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