Jump to content

The Clinton Crime Family, Most Corrupt in USA History


Guest HarryDope

Recommended Posts

Guest HarryDope

Heavily Fined Group Tied To Hillary

 

Officials of a defunct pro-Democratic group that was hit with a near-record

campaign-finance fine last month hold strong ties to Sen. Hillary Rodham

Clinton's presidential campaign, documents show.

 

At least four persons who worked for the America Coming Together (ACT)

fundraising group, which the Federal Election Commission recently fined

$775,000, work directly for the Clinton campaign or hold top positions with

consulting firms hired by it.

 

In addition, the group's former president, longtime Clinton aide Harold

Ickes, has been identified as a volunteer adviser to the Clinton campaign.

In FEC filings, the campaign listed a debt to Mr. Ickes of more than $2,000

for travel-related costs.

 

Funded with millions of dollars from billionaire George Soros, America

Coming Together (ACT) misused about $70 million in "soft money," uncapped

donations that aren't supposed to be used to urge election or defeat of a

candidate, the FEC determined, saying that some of the money was spent on

direct-mail and telemarketing efforts aimed against President Bush and

Republicans in key battleground states in 2004.

 

Laurence Gold, ACT's attorney, said the FEC's fine marked "the conclusion of

three years of politically motivated charges by the Republican Party and

ill-conceived allegations by self-styled campaign 'reform' groups."

 

It"s not clear how much control the former ACT officials have had in the

day-to-day fundraising activities of the Clinton campaign, which found

itself the focal point of controversy surrounding jailed fundraiser Norman

Hsu in recent weeks.

 

The Clinton campaign did not return phone or e-mail messages this week.

 

 

A fundraiser for Mrs. Clinton and other Democrats, Hsu remains in jail

without bond on charges he bilked investors in a multimillion-dollar Ponzi

scheme. Mrs. Clinton's campaign has said she is returning money from donors

linked to Hsu.

 

ACT veterans involved in the Clinton campaign include JoDee Winterhoff,

former political director for ACT, who has been running Mrs. Clinton's

political operations in Iowa, and Minyon Moore, a onetime ACT official, who

works as state and local director for the Dewey Square Group, according to

that group's Web site, http://www.deweysquare.com.

 

The Clinton campaign has hired the Dewey Square Group to provide consulting

services, FEC disclosure reports show. Miss Moore also has been identified

as a senior adviser for the Clinton campaign in a spate of recent accounts

in such outlets as National Public Radio, the New York Times and USA Today.

 

In addition, Mo Elleithee, a Clinton campaign spokesman, had been a

spokesman for ACT.

 

ACT's onetime chief executive, Steven Rosenthal, now runs a consulting firm

called Organizing Group Inc., which is listed as a vendor to whom the

Clinton campaign owes more than $100,000, according to a recent Clinton

campaign financial-disclosure report.

 

Mr. Rosenthal said his firm has not raised any funds for the Clinton

campaign. He said his company provides telemarketing and related services to

numerous clients, the Clinton campaign being just one.

 

The FEC's fine of ACT was the third largest in the commission's history. The

settlement, announced Aug. 29, included a provision that the FEC found no

evidence of any willful campaign violations by ACT, but regulators

nonetheless said they had reason to think that the group broke

campaign-finance laws by using prohibited contributions and misreporting

expenses. ACT, formed in 2003, suspended operations in 2005 and is preparing

to shut down.

 

The FEC has acted recently against independent groups on both sides of the

political divide over their actions during the 2004 elections. Most of the

violations center on improper use of "soft money."

 

Under the settlement, ACT admitted no wrongdoing and FEC papers say the

group said it "acted in reliance on the advice of legal counsel and under

the good-faith belief that ACT had complied with the requirements."

 

FEC officials said they settled the case, in part, to avoid the time and

cost of litigation.

 

In his e-mail, Mr. Gold also said of the fine, "this resolution should not

distract from ACT's remarkable accomplishments. Founded in July 2003, it

swiftly struck such a chord that it was able to undertake the single largest

general public voter mobilization campaign in American history independently

of any political party or candidate campaign."

 

Source: Washington Times

 

 

--

Corrupt Members Of Congress: Republicans Kick Them Out. Democrats Re-elect

Them

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 1
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Popular Days

Guest Amanda Williams

"HarryDope" <HarryAssHope@aol.com> allegedly said in

news:46fbae3a$0$4976$4c368faf@roadrunner.com:

> Heavily Fined Group Tied To Hillary

>

>

 

YAWN

 

>

> Source: Washington Times

>

>

 

rotfl... the "moonie" Times ...

 

 

--

AW - Head "Democrats for Larry" Campaign

 

<small but dangerous>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


×
×
  • Create New...