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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Business Booming for Lobbyists Under Investigation for Cozy Ties to California Rep

By Kevin Bogardus, The Hill. Posted August 29, 2007.


To get to Jerry Lewis, the GOP's ranking member on the House Appropriations Committee, you have to go through his former aide on K Street.
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A lobby firm connected to a federal investigation has seen business boom this year for its clients, many of whose projects are in a powerful House appropriator's district.

The House Appropriations Committee's ranking member, Rep. Jerry Lewis (R-Calif.), has sponsored or co-sponsored $55 million worth of earmarks in this year's defense spending bill -- close to half of the funds won by the California Republican in the legislation -- for clients represented by one firm.

A former appropriations aide to Lewis, Letitia White, and former Rep. Bill Lowery (R-Calif.), who is friendly with Lewis, work at the company, Innovative Federal Strategies (IFS).

A Lewis spokesman, Jim Specht, wrote in an e-mail that all the congressman's projects have merit. Long before any lobbyist represented several of the companies awarded with earmarks this year, the lawmaker had worked with them, according to Specht.

"Who represents them has no bearing on the value of the projects," Specht said. "The companies you are talking about have hundreds of jobs in his district."

"When Rep. Lewis meets with any lobbyist, including [IFS], he always meets with the client as well," Specht added.

Formerly known as Copeland Lowery Jacquez Denton & White, IFS reportedly fell under the government's watch for its ties to Lewis. Federal authorities subpoenaed some of its clients' internal files in 2006. The firm split under the weight of the government's investigation, losing two of its name Democratic partners as well as clients.

IFS appears to have found a niche in representing interests in Lewis's district, but its clients have secured earmarks from other lawmakers as well. IFS focuses on lobbying appropriations bills, according to its disclosure forms.

"IFS's consulting work on Capitol Hill is no different than the work done by thousands of lawyers and lobbyists in Washington on a daily basis," a spokesman for the firm, Patrick Dorton, said. "Many of the programs we work on are supported by multiple members."

Earmarks, specific projects advocated by members and mostly included in spending legislation, have multiplied over the years. It's not unusual for lawmakers to try to win as much funds as possible for their districts to help their constituents back home.

Yet some argue Lewis's relationship with IFS and its lobbyists is too close.

"Despite all the scrutiny, she is still the gatekeeper to Rep. Jerry Lewis," said Steve Ellis, vice president for Taxpayers for Common Sense (TCS), a budget watchdog group, said of White. "He can still be the rainmaker for his favorite lobbyist and his favorite firm."

Lobby groups facing similar probes by the federal government have buckled under the glare of investigation. Once a major Republican firm, Alexander Strategy Group went out of business after being tied to jailed lobbyist Jack Abramoff.

Members likewise have faced questions from watchdog groups and federal investigators over the earmarking process. Rep. Alan Mollohan (D-W.Va.) had three of his earmarks removed from the agriculture appropriations bill that were falling under heavy scrutiny.

In an analysis of lobbying disclosure forms, letters filed by Lewis declaring no financial interest in his earmarks and data compiled by TCS, the Hill found that 19 of the 39 earmarks in the defense appropriations bill requested by Lewis -- worth $112 million overall in disclosed amounts -- were directed to IFS clients. Several of the companies also employ lobbyists outside of IFS.


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CREEPy GOP corporations, creeping DOJ investigators
Posted by: eddie torres on Aug 30, 2007 1:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
San Diego-based General Atomics owns subsidiaries that do two things:

1) designs nuclear power plants and runs the experimental DIII-D tokamak fusion reactor
2) builds the Predator UAV (and its successor, the Reaper) for the US military and the DHS.

In order to maintain a presence in the political sphere that can be translated into lucrative federal contracts, the company needs lucrative federal contacts: California GOP Representatives Jerry Lewis, Duncan Hunter, and Randy 'Duke' Cunningham.

Cunningham took the fall for accepting millions in bribes from San Diego defense contractor Brent Wilkes; Wilkes' company has yet to be indicted for paying the bribes.

But Lewis made sure democracy was still open for business: "in the months after Cunningham pleaded guilty, Lewis resisted an independent investigation of Cunningham's activities on the Appropriations Committee. He said he did an informal review of Cunningham's earmarks over several years and was satisfied that they were all legitimate."

Jerry Lewis said in a statement last year, "Mr. Cunningham... betrayed his oath of office, his constituents, and his fellow members of Congress. I have never been as angry toward anyone in my entire career. Mr. Cunningham was never a close friend." (same article)

None of this inspired Lewis to return the $17,000 in campaign contributions his campaign received from the same contractor that brought down Cunningham: Brent Wilkes.

Nor did it jog Lewis' memory of the fact that Lewis, Cunningham, and Hunter held a joint fundraiser in San Diego in October 2004.

At the headquarters of General Atomics.

Here's the stickiest point: the snail-paced investigation into Lewis is being conducted by the DOJ office in Los Angeles, where US Attorney Carol Lam was dismissed last December for "performance reasons".

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