http://consortiumnews.com/2005/010706a.html
Hauling in the Abramoff Crowd
By Richard Fricker
January 7, 2006
Most of the buzz around the Jack Abramoff case has been which members
of Congress might get fingered by the Republican lobbyist in a
Washington bribery scandal.
But Abramoff and his associates also must worry about demands for
their testimony in a gangland-style murder of a business rival in
Florida.
Brian Cavanaugh, a prosecutor in Ft. Lauderdale, said late Friday that
his office is making arrangements to interview Abramoff and two of his
associates, Michael Scanlon and Adam Kidan, as potential witnesses in
the 2001 murder of Konstantinos "Gus" Boulis, who had sold the SunCruz
casino line to Abramoff and Kidan.
Boulis was slain while sitting in his car on Feb. 6, 2001, amid a feud
with the Abramoff-Kidan group.
On Sept. 27, 2005, Fort Lauderdale police charged three men, including
reputed Gambino crime family bookkeeper Anthony Moscatiello, with
Boulis’s murder.
As part of the murder probe, police are investigating payments that
SunCruz made to Moscatiello, his daughter and Anthony Ferrari, another
defendant in the Boulis murder case.
Moscatiello and Ferrari allegedly collaborated with a third man, James
Fiorillo, in the slaying.
Abramoff and Kidan recently have pleaded guilty to fraud charges from
the SunCruz purchase, which led to a bitter falling-out with Boulis.
But lawyers for Abramoff and Kidan have said their clients know
nothing about the murder.
Plea Deals
While the prosecutors in the Boulis case were not involved in the plea
bargaining that led to Abramoff’s guilty pleas in Washington and Miami
this past week, Cavanaugh’s office does stand to benefit because the
plea deals require cooperation with prosecutors on all cases.
Cavanaugh said Abramoff -- as well as Kidan and Scanlon, who also have
entered guilty pleas on fraud charges -- will be questioned in the
next couple of weeks about what they might know regarding Boulis’s
murder.
As for how useful that information will be, Cavanaugh said, "It
depends on whether we believe them or not. All these guys come with
baggage."
Prosecutors alleged that in arranging the SunCruz deal, Abramoff and
Kidan made a phony $23 million wire transfer as a fake down payment.
In pursuing the casino deal, the Abramoff-Kidan group got help, too,
from then-House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, and Rep. Robert W.
Ney, R-Ohio.
Abramoff impressed one lender by putting him together with DeLay in
Abramoff’s skybox at FedEx Field during a football game between the
Washington Redskins and the Dallas Cowboys.
Ney placed comments in the Congressional Record criticizing Boulis and
later praising the new Abramoff-Kidan SunCruz ownership team.
[Washington Post, Sept. 28, 2005]
After the SunCruz sale, when tensions boiled over, Boulis and Kidan
got into a fistfight. Kidan claimed that Boulis threatened his life.
Two months later, however, Boulis was the one who was shot to death
when a car pulled up next to him and a gunman opened fire.
Police have been investigating financial ties between the
Abramoff-Kidan group and accused killers Moscatiello and Ferrari.
In a 2001 civil case, Kidan testified that he had paid $145,000 to
Moscatiello and his daughter, Jennifer, for catering and other
services, although court records show no evidence that quantities of
food or drink were provided.
SunCruz also paid Ferrari’s company, Moon Over Miami, $95,000 for
surveillance services.
Kidan told the Miami Herald that the payments had no connection to the
Boulis murder.
"If I’m going to pay to have Gus killed, am I going to be writing
checks to the killers?" Kidan asked.
"I don’t think so. Why would I leave a paper trail?"
Kidan also said he was ignorant of Moscatiello’s past.
In 1983, Moscatiello was indicted on heroin-trafficking charges along
with Gene Gotti, brother of Gambino crime boss John Gotti.
Though Gene Gotti and others were convicted, the charges against
Moscatiello -- identified by federal authorities as a former Gambino
bookkeeper -- were dropped.
Abramoff’s influence reached into George W. Bush’s White House, too,
where chief procurement officer David H. Safavian resigned in
September 2005 and then was arrested on charges of lying to
authorities and obstructing a criminal investigation into Abramoff’s
lobbying activities.
Rep. Ney and former Christian Coalition leader Ralph Reed were among
influential Republicans who joined Safavian and Abramoff on an
infamous golf trip to Scotland in 2002.
Safavian is a former lobbying partner of anti-tax activist Grover
Norquist, another pillar of right-wing politics in Washington and
another longtime Abramoff friend. [Washington Post, Sept. 20, 2005]
Abramoff also has boasted of his influence with Bush’s top political
adviser Karl Rove.
______________________________________________________________
Rove had better watch his ***** or Godfather Abramoff's family's gonna
arrange for him to sleep wid de fishes.
Harry
.
|