From The Associated Press, 1/29/06:
http://www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/duluthsuperior/news/politics/13743288.htm
White House official warned Abramoff
PETE YOST Associated Press
WASHINGTON -
The Bush administration's former chief procurement official tipped off
lobbyist Jack Abramoff that the government was about to suspend the
federal contracts of an Abramoff client, newly filed court papers say.
David Safavian provided "sensitive and confidential information" about
four subsidiaries of Tyco International to Abramoff regarding internal
deliberations at the General Services Administration, say the court
papers filed Friday in a criminal case against Safavian.
Abramoff has pleaded guilty to conspiracy, tax evasion and mail fraud
in a burgeoning bribery probe centered on Capitol Hill but also
involving the Interior Department.
The White House is refusing to release photographs of President Bush
and Abramoff or to reveal what contact Abramoff had with White House
aides.
Acting on the information that Abramoff provided the company in
November 2003, Tyco lawyer Timothy Flanigan, a former assistant
attorney general in the Bush administration, contacted the general
counsel to the GSA and asked for an opportunity to address the
suspension.
The company revealed Flanigan's role in a statement.
In October, Flanigan withdrew his nomination to be Bush's deputy
attorney general.
His confirmation was delayed due to questions about his dealings with
Abramoff when Abramoff was a Tyco lobbyist.
The government had planned to suspend Tyco because of alleged criminal
conduct by former Tyco executives.
After advising Abramoff about the internal deliberations at GSA,
Safavian suggested to Abramoff what arguments Tyco should make when it
appealed the suspension decision, the court papers in Safavian's
federal court case say.
Once tipped off by Abramoff, Tyco hired an outside law firm and
successfully petitioned the government to lift the suspension and
allow Tyco to continue to perform on government contracts.
The law firm outlined "the many steps that Tyco had taken, including
to bring on a new board of directors, a new CEO and new corporate
senior management," Tyco said in its statement.
Safavian faces trial on charges that he lied and obstructed
investigations into whether he aided Abramoff in efforts to acquire
GSA-controlled property around the nation's capital.
The government said in its court filing Friday that it intends to
present the information regarding Tyco at Safavian's upcoming trial.
Safavian has pleaded innocent and his lawyers have moved for dismissal
of all charges.
Safavian is accused of concealing from federal investigators that
Abramoff was seeking to do business with the GSA when Safavian joined
the lobbyist on a golf trip to Scotland in 2002.
At the time, Safavian was GSA's chief of staff.
He became the Bush administration's chief procurement official in
November 2004.
In its statement, Tyco said that the information from Abramoff had
come in unsolicited, that the corporation did not use Abramoff's
services to respond to GSA, and that the company did not contact
Safavian directly.
The company said its outside counsel, George Terwilliger, was assured
by Justice Department prosecutors that neither the company nor anyone
at the company, including Flanigan, is accused, is suspected or is
being investigated for any wrongdoing.
In May 2003, Abramoff, then employed by the Washington firm Greenberg
Traurig, solicited Tyco for lobbying on a tax issue.
Prosecutors say Abramoff recommended that Tyco hire both him and a
public relations and campaign consulting firm called GrassRoots
Interactive, but hid from Tyco that GrassRoots Interactive was his
business.
In May and June 2003, Tyco paid GrassRoots Interactive, directly and
through Greenberg Traurig's bank account, about $1.8 million, of which
about $1.6 million went to Abramoff and entities he controlled,
prosecutors say.
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Kinda messy, ain't it.
Harry
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