| INVESTIGATION OF ILLEGAL OR IMPROPER ACTIVITIES IN CONNECTION WITH 1996 FEDERAL ELECTION CAMPAIGNS FINAL REPORT
of the COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS SENATE Rept. 105-167 - 105th Congress 2d Session - March 10, 1998 |
John Huang's Illegal Fundraising at the DNC
This chapter covers a number of events that occurred during
John Huang's tenure at the DNC. It does not attempt to paint a
comprehensive picture of Huang's activities at the DNC; rather,
it illustrates some important points. First, as discussed
previously, DNC Finance officials were concerned enough about
Huang's potential to raise funds illegally that they insisted
that he receive a personal training session from DNC General
Counsel Joe Sandler. Although Richard Sullivan declares that he
was informed that such training occurred, Sandler claims that
no one ever asked him to provide such training, nor did he do
so. These contradictory accounts are typical of the confusion
and lack of responsibility or accountability in the DNC's fund-
raising operation.
Second, the concerns about Huang were not just theoretical,
but arose in reality as early as his first fund-raising event
in February 1996. At that time, DNC Treasurer Scott Pastrick
was concerned about foreign nationals at the event, and asked
Sandler to review checks from it. Subsequently, the DNC
returned two checks from the event in March 1996. These
returns--which stood out on the DNC's Federal Election
Commission report for the relevant time period--should have put
DNC officials on notice that their early concerns about Huang
had materialized quickly. Not only did the DNC ignore this
warning sign, but DNC officials also did not volunteer any
information about these early returns in this investigation. It
was not until a few days before the opening of the Committee's
hearings in July 1997--and months after the Committee had
served the DNC with its subpoena--that the Committee received
documentary evidence of the return of funds that Huang had
raised in February 1996. Until July 1997, none of the DNC
officials who had been deposed--such as Richard Sullivan,
Marvin Rosen, or Joe Sandler--had mentioned anything about
these returns.
Third, Huang's solicitation and collection of a $250,000
contribution from Cheong Am America in April 1996 should have
provided even more warning signs for DNC officials. It was
clear to anyone who cared enough to look that this contribution
was illegal. Nevertheless, DNC officials were so obsessed with
raising money that, at a minimum, they failed to ask obvious
questions about the source of the money collected. The story of
the Cheong Am contribution shows the unprofessional manner in
which Huang operated. It also demonstrates the shameless
selling of the President--as the DNC arranged a five minute
photo-op in exchange for a quarter million dollar contribution.
Fourth, DNC officials were uncomfortable with the guest
list for a July 30, 1996 event organized by Huang. The guest
list consisted of a small group of foreign nationals and the
President. Nevertheless, DNC officials allowed the event to go
forward. Only afterwards did they make the decision not to
allow Huang to organize any more fund-raising events attended
by the President.
Fifth, Huang attempted to launder political contributions
to the DNC. In August 1996, a time when there was significant
pressure on Huang to perform, Huang approached a Washington
area businessman and asked to use his organization to launder
contributions, the source of which was not disclosed. Although
Huang was rebuffed, and the deal was never consummated, the
incident demonstrates how far Huang would go to raise money for
the DNC.
Finally, even at the conclusion of this investigation,
there is still little known about what Huang did on a day-to-
day basis. The Committee deposed numerous people at the DNC,
including Huang's supervisors, co-workers, and office-mates.
These individuals claimed to have little or no interaction with
Huang, and in any event, shed little light on what he did every
day. Huang did not have an assistant or a secretary, nor did he
leave many documents at the DNC.1 As discussed,
Huang himself refused to speak to the Committee. Accordingly,
it is still not possible for the Committee to paint a
comprehensive picture of Huang's activities at the DNC.
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\1\ Sam Newman, a DNC fund-raiser who shared an office with Huang
for a few months, testified that Huang sat at a desk, but did not use
any of the drawers, or any other space in the office, to maintain files
or documents. Newman stated that Huang recorded all his notes and
meetings in a bound writing tablet, which he carried with him.
According to Newman, when Huang left the office each day, he left
behind no notes, files, or any possessions whatsoever. Deposition of
Samuel Newman, July 17, 1997, pp. 111-122.
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Contradictory Testimony on Whether Sandler Trained Huang
As described previously, DNC Finance Director Richard
Sullivan, among others, was concerned enough about John Huang
to insist on an individual training session between Huang and
DNC General Counsel Joseph Sandler. Sullivan also testified
that he was informed by both Huang and Sandler that such a
session took place soon after Huang began work at the DNC.
Nevertheless, Sandler insisted that such a session never
occurred.
According to Sullivan, immediately after Sullivan and Rosen
had interviewed Huang for the first time in November 1995,
Rosen asked Sandler to come to Rosen's office.2
Sullivan and Rosen informed Sandler that, pending Don Fowler's
approval, it looked like Huang would be coming to the DNC. They
explained to Sandler that they had told Huang that the first
thing they wanted him to do was to have an extensive training
session with Sandler, so that Huang would learn the rules
governing fund-raising.3 Sullivan explained, ``We
asked Joe [Sandler] to make sure that happened and expressed
our desire for that. Joe said certainly.'' 4
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\2\ Deposition of Richard Sullivan, June 5, 1997, p. 24.
\3\ Id. at pp. 24-25.
\4\ Id. at p. 25.
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A few days after Huang started at the DNC, Sullivan went to
Sandler's office and inquired whether Sandler had, in fact, sat
down with Huang and discussed fund-raising rules. According to
Sullivan, Sandler answered yes, and indicated that he had spent
an hour or two with Huang.5 Sullivan testified: ``He
[Sandler] said that he had had an extensive session with John;
that he felt comfortable with his knowledge of the rules; with
the way he described his future conduct and was comfortable
with his general knowledge of fund-raising rules and
regulations.'' 6 Asked whether Sandler provided any
more detail about his session with Huang, Sullivan responded,
``I believe that he [Sandler] mentioned that he had obviously
emphasized to him that the thing that you had to be careful
about was, the foreign subsidiary rule and just making sure
that you were not taking contributions from non-U.S. citizens
or green card holders.'' 7
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\5\ Id. at p. 27.
\6\ Id. at p. 26.
\7\ Id. at pp. 26-27.
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Sullivan heard about this training session from Huang as
well as from Sandler. Within a week after Huang started working
at the DNC in December 1995, Sullivan asked Huang if he had
already sat down with Sandler, whether Huang felt comfortable
with the rules as they related to foreign subsidiaries and non-
U.S. citizens, and whether Huang was comfortable in taking any
questionable contributions to the counsel's office for
review.\8\ Sullivan testified that Huang responded ``[v]ery
positively. He said, absolutely I had a great session. We got
along well. I feel very comfortable. I mean, John was not a man
of great words, but--I feel comfortable and I see no problem
with working closely with Joe to answer any questions that may
arise.'' \9\
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\8\ Id. at pp. 27-28.
\9\ Id. at p. 28.
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The uncommon nature of the individual training session
further enhanced Sullivan's memory about this issue. After
explaining that Huang was the only ``student'' in the training
session with Sandler, Sullivan remarked that it was ``very
uncommon'' for a fund-raiser to have a private training session
with the general counsel.\10\ Sullivan testified, ``I don't
remember anyone else ever having a private session with the
general counsel.\11\ Rosen also confirmed Huang's private
session with Sandler. Rosen testified, ``I knew that early on,
Mr. Huang had met with Mr. Sandler about the rules of getting
money from foreign owned corporations in the United States or
resident aliens or whatever.'' \12\
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\10\ Id. at p. 29.
\11\ Id.
\12\ Deposition of Marvin Rosen, May 19, 1997, p. 268.
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Sullivan testified that in the ensuing months, both Sandler
and Huang confirmed that they were following up on their
initial session. Sullivan testified that on ``random times'' in
the ``first couple months of [Huang's] employment,'' he asked
Sandler if Huang was vetting his checks with him, and Sandler
responded ``yes.'' \13\ Sullivan also stated that during that
same time period, he asked Huang on numerous occasions if he
was working with Sandler to vet all checks that were of
questionable legality. Huang responded affirmatively.\14\
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\13\ Deposition of Richard Sullivan, June 5, 1997, p. 37.
\14\ Id. at p. 33. The issue of vetting at the DNC is fully
discussed in another chapter of this report. See the section of this
report on the DNC's dismantling of its vetting procedures.
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Sandler told the Committee a completely different story.
During his deposition, Sandler was asked in seriatim whether
Richard Sullivan, Marvin Rosen, Don Fowler, or ``anyone else in
the world'' asked him to give Huang specialized or
individualized training at the time that Huang came to the DNC.
Sandler responded, ``no'' to each query.\15\ Sandler then
testified that regardless of whether anyone asked him to give
such training, he did not, in fact, conduct any specialized
training for Huang in the beginning of December 1995.\16\
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\15\ Deposition of Joseph E. Sandler, August 21, 1997, pp. 13-14.
\16\ Id. at pp. 14-15.
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When confronted with Sullivan's conflicting testimony,
Sandler's only explanation was that in February 1996 he met
with Huang and reviewed checks collected in connection with
Huang's first event, an Asian-American fund-raiser at the Hay-
Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C.\17\ Sandler explained that he
may have had a conversation with Sullivan following this
meeting with Huang. Sandler testified that he ``probably would
have referred to my feeling that Mr. Huang . . . seemed to
understand the rules applicable to fund-raising for the DNC, in
particular, in connection with issues of citizenship and
legality on contributions from U.S. subsidiaries of foreign
corporations or foreign-owned corporations.'' \18\ This
explanation, however, cannot resolve the discrepancy between
Sullivan and Sandler's accounts, as this February 1996 meeting
occurred nearly three months after Sullivan alleged that the
individual training session took place.
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\17\ Id. at p. 15.
\18\ Id. at p. 17.
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Not only is there a dispute about whether Huang received
any private training from Sandler, but the DNC general
counsel's office cannot even confirm that Huang received any
group training about fund-raising regulations and guidelines.
Neil Reiff, DNC deputy general counsel and the person who
organized group training for Finance Division employees,
testified, ``I can't recall ever being involved in a training
session with Mr. Huang. I couldn't even tell you whether he
attended one of our training sessions. I cannot tell you right
here I know that he ever participated in any training that I
was involved in.'' \19\ Sandler pointed to a copy of DNC fund-
raising guidelines found in Huang's files, but otherwise could
not confirm any training of Huang. He testified that he was not
aware of any particular training that Huang received.\20\
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\19\ Deposition of Neil Paul Reiff, June 20, 1997, pp. 111-112.
\20\ Deposition of Joseph E. Sandler, May 30, 1997, p. 129.
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Concerns about Huang Materialize: DNC Returns Checks from His First
Event
As mentioned above, Huang's first event was an Asian-
American fund-raiser at the Hay-Adams Hotel in Washington, D.C.
on February 19, 1996. The event raised a significant amount of
money (over $700,000, though budgeted for $500,000) and was
considered a success. Nevertheless, the event also raised early
warning signs which should have put DNC officials on notice
that their initial concerns about Huang were not misplaced.
First, a top DNC official not only noticed, but also expressed
concern about, this event's potential for producing illegal
contributions from foreign nationals to the DNC. Second, two
checks raised in connection with the event were returned a
month later, apparently because the checks were from foreign
sources and thus violated campaign laws.
Following this February event, DNC Treasurer Scott Pastrick
approached Sandler and requested that Sandler meet with Huang
to review checks from the event. Asked why Pastrick recommended
this meeting, Sandler testified, ``I think that he had some
concern to make about the foreign national--potential foreign
national issues in this group because it had not been well
known to the DNC.'' \21\ In his deposition, Pastrick never
mentioned anything about this conversation with Sandler or
about any concerns that he had about Huang. Asked if he
participated in or overheard any conversations regarding
concerns about Huang, Pastrick pointed to an ``odd'' comment by
Rosen in mid to late October 1996 that Huang's activities were
being checked by the DNC General Counsel's office.\22\
Otherwise, Pastrick testified, he had no other such
conversations.\23\
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\21\ Id. at p. 101.
\22\ Deposition of Robert Scott Pastrick, May 7, 1997, pp. 97-98.
\23\ Id. at p. 98.
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As for the actual meeting, Sandler explained that he sat
down with Huang for about 45 minutes and systematically
discussed the checks that Huang had brought with him. Sandler
stated that Huang had ``firsthand knowledge'' of the donors,
and so Sandler felt that there was no need to do any additional
review of the particular checks.\24\ Sandler said that he
relied on Huang's explanation about the citizenship status of
individuals or the ownership of a corporation.\25\ According to
Sandler, there was no request at that time for him to go over
general fund-raising gudelines with Huang, nor did he do
so.\26\ Sandler admitted that he took some notes of his meeting
with Huang, but stated that he had looked for the notes and
could not find them.\27\
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\24\ Deposition of Joseph E. Sandler, May 30, 1997, pp. 102-103.
\25\ Id. at p. 103.
\26\ Deposition of Joseph E. Sandler, August 21, 1997, p. 19.
\27\ Deposition of Joseph E. Sandler, May 30, 1997, pp. 133-134.
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Sandler testified that ``he could not recall any other
occasion where he [Huang] came to me with a group of checks.''
\28\ Sandler's testimony differs from the testimony of his
deputy, Neil Reiff, who explained that he passed by Sandler's
office ``on a couple of occasions'' in the spring of 1996, and
saw Huang meeting with Sandler.\29\ While Reiff did not
participate in these meetings, he understood them to be for the
purpose of reviewing specific contributions, ``because I saw
John with checks in his hands when I walked by Joe's office.
You could see him holding checks.'' \30\
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\28\ Id. at p. 127.
\29\ Reiff deposition, p. 113.
\30\ Id. at p. 114.
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In fact, the DNC soon returned checks that Huang raised
from the Hay-Adams event. A few days before the start of the
Committee's public hearings in July 1997, the Committee
received documents showing that some of the Huang-solicited
contributions had been returned as early as March 1996. The
documents received reflected that, in connection with the Hay-
Adams event, Huang had collected two separate $12,500 checks
made payable to the Democratic National Committee. Both checks
were dated February 26, 1996, and were written on an account at
General Bank in California. According to DNC check tracking
forms, which appear to have been filled out by Huang, one
contribution is attributed to Shu-Lan Liu and one is
attributable to Yun-Liang Ren. The address and telephone number
is the same for both: 410 S. San Gabriel Blvd. Suite 10, San
Gabriel, CA 91776 and (818) 821-5338.\31\
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\31\ DNC check tracking forms for Shu-Lan Liu for $12,500 and Yun-
Liang Ren for $12,500 (Ex. 1).
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About one month later, on March 26, someone at the DNC
filled out two expenditure request forms to have the DNC issue
checks refunding these contributions.\32\ While it is unclear
who actually filled out the forms, they indicate that the two
separate $12,500 expenditures were requested by Huang. On the
line for ``purpose of expenditure,'' the same description is
written for both--``Contribution Refund (see attached).'' \33\
It is unclear, however, what may have been attached to these
requests. Photocopies of the checks and check tracking forms
are numbered consecutively, but there also may have been a
written internal note or other document explaining why the
contributions were to be refunded.\34\ Nothing of the sort was
produced to the Committee. On the expenditure request for Ren,
there is a handwritten notation ``Neil'' which likely refers to
DNC deputy general counsel Neil Reiff. It is unknown who made
that notation, and, because the documents had not been produced
before Reiff's deposition, he was not asked about the forms.
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\32\ DNC Expenditure Request Forms, March 26, 1996 (Ex. 2).
\33\ Id.
\34\ Id.
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The Committee also obtained the relevant DNC report to the
Federal Election Commission. On the Itemized Disbursements
Schedule B page of the report, which was for the first quarter
of 1996, the DNC listed both of these returned
contributions.\35\ ``Contribution refund'' is listed as
``purpose of disbursement.'' However, there is no further
explanation. The DNC also listed seven other contribution
refunds on the Schedule. These two $12,500 refunds clearly
stand out from the seven other entries. One of the seven was
for $2,000 and the remaining were all for under $500.\36\
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\35\ FEC Schedule B (Ex. 3).
\36\ Id.
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The Committee learned that Ren and Liu are a married
couple, and that they run an international trading group based
in China. According to a family member in California, both Ren
and Liu are currently living in China. Attempts to reach them
by telephone in California and China were unsuccessful.
Until July 1997, the Committee was under the impression
that the first check raised by Huang and returned by the DNC
was the Cheong Am contribution, which was solicited in April
1996 and returned in September 1996. In its public statements,
the DNC had never made reference to any Huang-solicited
contributions that were returned earlier. Moreover, in all the
interviews and depositions conducted by the Committee until the
Committee's receipt of the documents--and these depositions
included almost all of the major DNC officials--no witness had
made any reference whatsoever to any Huang-solicited
contributions that were returned before the widely reported
return of the Cheong Am contribution.
During the first two sessions of Sandler's deposition in
May 1997, for instance, he described the meeting that he had
with Huang after Huang's first event. In his testimony, Sandler
explained that Huang had firsthand knowledge of the donors, and
Sandler did not ask Huang to return any of the checks that they
discussed. During those sessions of his deposition, Sandler did
not identify any contributions from the event that the DNC
returned before the Debevoise & Plimpton review of all DNC
contributions in the fall of 1996.\37\
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\37\ Debevoise & Plimpton was the principal outside law firm
retained by the DNC to defend it in this investigation.
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The Committee deposed Reiff on June 20, 1997, before the
Committee had received the Ren and Liu documents, so Reiff was
not asked directly about them; however, Reiff was asked
numerous questions about his interaction with Huang, and all of
his answers suggested that he had no involvement in the Ren and
Liu contributions. Reiff testified, ``Other than passing him
[Huang] in the hall politely, I had pretty much no interaction
with Mr. Huang direct [sic],'' and ``[o]ther than the social
interaction, I never provided any legal advice to Mr. Huang.''
\38\ Reiff also stated that he never participated in any
meetings with Huang, nor could he recall ever being involved in
a training session with Huang.\39\ Moreover, Reiff acknowledged
in his deposition that he had primary responsibility for the
final preparation of FEC reports.\40\ The fact that these two
contributions stand out on the FEC report and that Reiff's name
(``Neil'') is listed on the documents leave the Committee to
wonder what Rieff may have known about these returned
contributions.
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\38\ Reiff deposition, p. 111.
\39\ Id.
\40\ Id. at p. 12.
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During the third session of his deposition, which took
place on August 21, 1997, and thus after the Committee received
the documents, Sandler was confronted with the Ren and Liu
returned contributions. After acknowledging that he had
reviewed these particular documents in preparation for this
session of his deposition, Sandler testified, ``I don't know
much about the circumstances surrounding these, but it is
apparent that from the face of the documents that they were
checks that Mr. Huang attributed to the Hay-Adams event; that
they were initially deposited, but then within a month, maybe
three weeks, Mr. Huang requested that the checks be refunded.''
\41\
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\41\ Deposition of Joseph E. Sandler, August 21, 1997, p. 23.
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Asked whether the Ren and Liu checks were among the checks
that Sandler reviewed after the Hay-Adams event, Sandler
responded, ``I don't specifically recall. It's possible, but I
don't specifically recall. It's very possible that it was.''
\42\ Sandler also said that he did not remember whether Huang
had consulted with him in March 1996 about the Ren and Liu
contributions.\43\
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\42\ Id. at p. 24.
\43\ Id.
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While no one at the DNC admitted to having contemporaneous
knowledge of these returned contributions, the fact remains
that these Huang-solicited contributions were returned by the
DNC in March 1996, only a few months after Huang had arrived at
the DNC, and within a month of Huang's first fund-raising
event. Nevertheless, DNC officials did not institute any closer
monitoring of Huang's fund-raising, allowing him to continue to
raise money unabated until the fall of 1996. Because of the
intense pressure emanating from the White House to raise money,
the DNC ignored these early indications and failed to screen
subsequent Huang-solicited contributions until it was too late.
In fact, within weeks of the return of these contributions,
Huang solicited another illegal contribution--$250,000 from
Korean citizen John K.H. Lee, a topic that will be discussed
next.
Additionally, these Ren and Liu contributions tie into
another aspect of the Committee's investigation--the
coordination between the DNC and various nonprofit groups.\44\
The Committee subpoenaed bank records for Ren and Liu, which
show that on May 13, 1996, they jointly wrote a $25,000 check
to a non-profit group, Vote '96.\45\ It seems more than just
coincidental that the check is not only for $25,000, which is
the total of the two returned contributions, but it is dated
May 13, which is the date of Huang's second major fund-raiser--
an event at the Sheraton Carlton Hotel.
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\44\ See the section of this report on misuse of nonprofit
organizations.
\45\ Check to Vote '96 from Shu-Lan Liu and Yun-Liang Ren, May 13,
1996 (Ex. 4).
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The Return of the Cheong Am Contribution
On April 8, 1996, Huang collected for the DNC a $250,000
contribution from John K.H. Lee, a South Korean businessman.
The contribution technically came from Lee's newly incorporated
U.S. company, Cheong Am America, Inc. The intermediary between
Huang and Lee was Michael Mitoma, an international business
consultant and, at the time of the contribution, the mayor of
Carson, California.
After the Los Angeles Times inquired about the legality of
the Cheong Am contribution in September 1996, the DNC
acknowledged that it was illegal, and returned it. The return
of this contribution led to additional press attention, and is
generally noted as the beginning of the 1996 campaign finance
scandal that triggered the Committee's investigation.
The DNC has pointed to the return of this contribution as
an example of how it swiftly reacted to any indicia of illegal
contributions. At the time of the return, a DNC spokesperson
also explained the illegal contribution by commenting, ``Our
fund-raiser understood that the company had been in existence
in the U.S. for some time, and was led to believe that the
company's principals, including its chairman, were U.S.
citizens or permanent residents.'' \46\
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\46\ Alan C. Miller, ``Democrats Return Illegal Contribution,'' Los
Angeles Times, September 21, 1996, p. A16.
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The actual facts reveal a much different story. It was
obvious to anyone who cared to look that Cheong Am America,
Inc. was a newly-formed U.S. company with no current
operations. It was also obvious that the company's chairman,
John K.H. Lee, was a Korean citizen. Nevertheless, the
acceptance of this contribution, and the way the DNC both
solicited and vetted it, reveals the DNC's standard operating
procedure. In their zeal to raise money, DNC officials at best
neglected to ask the obvious questions, and at worst
deliberately looked the other way. Furthermore, the Cheong Am
contribution provides a good overview of the selling of the
President, as John Huang and his colleagues at the DNC
shamelessly arranged a photo-op with the President in exchange
for a $250,000 contribution from a foreign national.
This contribution had its genesis in the desire of an
elected official to provide economic development for his
community. In March 1996, Michael Mitoma heard from a friend
about a South Korean businessman who was thinking about opening
an electronics factory in California. As the mayor of Carson,
California, a small city located adjacent to Los Angeles,
Mitoma saw an opportunity to bring much needed jobs to his
city. Mitoma traveled to South Korea and met with the Korean
businessman, John K.H. Lee. According to Mitoma, Lee
``constantly talked about meeting the President, asked if I
knew the President personally, and if I could assist in
arranging a meeting between he and President Clinton.'' \47\
Mitoma needed an interpreter to speak to Lee, as Mitoma did not
speak Korean and Lee did not speak English.
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\47\ Testimony of Michael Mitoma, September 5, 1997, p. 126.
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Mitoma realized that successfully arranging a meeting with
President Clinton would enhance the chances of convincing Lee
to locate a factory in Carson. Accordingly, upon his return to
the U.S., Mitoma tried the direct approach. He called the White
House three times, but never received a return call.\48\ Faced
with this lack of response, Mitoma began to explore other
avenues. Mitoma explained, ``One of the suggestions was why
don't you talk to the DNC because there's a series of fund-
raisers that are being held, and that might be a way to meet
the President. So I did call the DNC to see about that
possibility.'' \49\ Mitoma was referred to Huang.
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\48\ Id. at pp. 126-127.
\49\ Id. at p. 127.
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Mitoma explained to Huang that he had a South Korean
businessman who was interested in meeting the President. Huang
responded by listing a ``menu'' of events, from large dinners
of several hundred people at $5,000 per person to ``exclusive''
dinners at ``$50,000 a plate.'' \50\ When Mitoma relayed this
information to Lee, Lee stated that he wanted to buy all the
seats, even at $50,000 each, so that he could have a one-on-one
dinner with the President.\51\ Huang rejected this proposal,
telling Mitoma that others would need to attend the dinner.\52\
At that time, Huang also explained that he was working on
setting up a small dinner and that there were five seats
remaining. After checking with Lee, Mitoma confirmed to Huang
that Lee would pay $250,000 for the five seats.\53\ Eventually,
Huang informed Mitoma that the date of the dinner would be
April 8, 1996.
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\50\ Id. at p. 128.
\51\ Id. at p. 129.
\52\ Id.
\53\ Id. at pp. 129-130.
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In early April, Huang asked for, and Mitoma sent him,
information on the five attendees.\54\ Besides Lee and Mitoma,
the other three attendees were Won Ham, Lucy Ham and Young
Chull Chung. Lucy Ham was the friend who had put Mitoma in
touch with Lee. She and her husband, Won, were both U.S.
citizens living in Los Angeles. Chung was Lee's partner and
lived in South Korea. Mitoma explained that he was concerned at
that time because he had received no written materials for this
event, and had also not been informed about the time, place, or
dress code.\55\ Since Lee was flying from Korea to Washington,
D.C. for the sole purpose of meeting the President, Mitoma
wanted to make sure that the event was actually going to
happen.\56\ Even without the final details or confirmation,
Lee, Chung, the Hams, and Mitoma all met in Washington, D.C. on
April 7, 1996. Mitoma finally succeeded in contacting Huang
during the morning of April 8, 1996, which was the same day as
the planned dinner. After telling Mitoma to be at the Sheraton
Carlton Hotel at 6:00 p.m., Huang began ``hedging on the
dinner'' and suggested that instead of dinner, Lee may just
have a private meeting with the President.\57\ In any event,
Mitoma, Lee, and the others arrived at the Sheraton Carlton at
about 5:45 p.m. There was no one there to greet them, nor were
there any signs announcing the event. Lee's group waited in the
lobby for over an hour, unclear about what was happening,
before Huang arrived to greet them.\58\ After some brief
pleasantries, Huang collected the $250,000 check and said that
he would return. About 15 minutes later, Huang brought over
Fowler, Sullivan, and Peter Knight to meet Lee.\59\ Lucy Ham
translated, as Lee spoke no English.
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\54\ Faxes to John Huang from Michael Mitoma, April 3, 1996 (Ex.
5).
\55\ Mitoma testimony, p. 132.
\56\ See Fax to John Huang from Mike Mitoma, April 4, 1996 (Ex. 6).
\57\ Mitoma testimony, p. 134.
\58\ Id. at p. 137.
\59\ Id. at p. 138.
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After another 15 minute wait, Lee's group was ushered into
a smaller room, and then, all of a sudden, the President
appeared.\60\ Mitoma testified, ``[The President] was being
briefed by John Huang and several other people. And then he
came over to our group and we chatted briefly with the
President. You know, I explained to him the same thing, you
know, that Chairman Lee is going to establish a factory . . .
in Carson.'' \61\ A photographer then took a series of
pictures.\62\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ Id. at p. 139.
\61\ Id.
\62\ Id. at p. 140.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After the President moved along, Huang told Mitoma that
they had just had their private meeting with the President and
that there would be no dinner. As Mitoma explained, he was able
to convince Lee that ``it was not such a great idea to eat
American food and sit with a bunch of stuffy people for 45
minutes in a conversation that he would not understand.'' \63\
Mitoma, Lee, and the others left the hotel and went out for
dinner by themselves.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While Lee seemed content with his brief conversation and
picture with the President, Mitoma was deeply disappointed by
the way that he had been treated. He described the experience
to the Committee as ``the most unprofessional thing I've ever
seen,'' and added that he felt that Huang had been
``unscrupulous'' and had strung him along simply to get Lee's
$250,000 check.\64\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ Interview of Michael Mitoma, September 4, 1997.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A review of relevant documents confirms Mitoma's view of
the haphazard nature of the Lee event. On April 8, the day of
the scheduled dinner, Huang faxed Sullivan two pages of
handwritten notes about Lee, Cheong Am, and the other
participants.\65\ Sullivan then wrote a memo from himself and
Huang to Doug Sosnik and Karen Hancox at the White House.
Sullivan wrote, ``Mayor Michael Mitoma, Mayor of Carson,
California, and the following would like to meet with POTUS
this evening before our first dinner.'' After identifying the
others and explaining that the purpose of the meeting was to
discuss the possibility of Cheong Am establishing a factory in
Carson, Sullivan concluded, ``Mayor Mitoma has requested five
minutes.'' \66\ In addition to demonstrating that the DNC was
aware that Cheong Am was merely considering establishing a
factory in the U.S., Sullivan's memorandum also shows that as
of the day of the ``dinner,'' the DNC had not even cleared any
meeting with the White House. Moreover, there is no mention of
an exclusive dinner with the President--there is just a request
for ``five minutes.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ Fax from John Huang to Richard Sullivan, April 8, 1996 (Ex.
7).
\66\ Memorandum to Doug Sosnik and Karen Hancox from Richard
Sullivan and John Huang, April 8, 1996 (Ex. 8).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is also clear that the DNC simply tried to fit the Lee
meeting into a evening already crowded by two fund-raising
dinners. According to Fowler's schedule for April 8, 1996,
there were two scheduled dinners at the Sheraton Carlton that
night--an earlier Presidential dinner for Gala co-chairs and
vice chairs, and a later Presidential dinner with a smaller
group of contributors.\67\ The schedule allotted a ten minute
travel break, from 7:40 to 7:50 p.m., between the two
dinners.\68\ While Sullivan's memo asked for a meeting before
the first dinner, it appears that Mitoma and Lee were shoe-
horned into this ten minute period between the two dinners.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ April 8, 1996 schedule of Donald L. Fowler, p. 3 (Ex. 9).
\68\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Cheong Am contribution also demonstrates that Huang and
others at the DNC never raised any questions about the
contribution's foreign origin. Mitoma had explained to Huang
that Lee was a Korean businessman who was considering starting
a business in Carson. Mitoma explained further that his efforts
to arrange for a meeting between Lee and the President were
directly connected to his larger endeavor to secure Lee's
investment in Carson. Mitoma told the Committee that he was
certain that Huang understood that Lee was both a foreign
national and had not yet begun to conduct business in the
United States.\69\ Moreover, the information that Mitoma sent
to Huang on April 4, 1996, also should have cast doubt on the
legality of the contribution. While the information on Won and
Lucy Ham specifically indicates that they are American
citizens, Lee's resume gives a Korean address and makes no
mention of citizenship or U.S. immigration status.\70\ Huang,
however, raised no questions at the time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\69\ Mitoma interview, September 4, 1997.
\70\ Ex. 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Huang's knowledge of Lees citizenship, and therefore his
inability to contribute legally to the DNC, is further
demonstrated by Huang's record keeping on the contribution. In
filling out the DNC's check tracking form for the $250,000
contribution, Huang does not include any reference to Lee,
despite the fact that Lee was clearly the principal of Cheong
Am, and signed the check to the DNC.\71\ Instead, Huang listed
Won Ham--someone he knew was an American citizen--as the
contributor.\72\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ Copy of check and check tracking form for donation by Cheong
Am America to DNC, April 8, 1996, (Ex. 10).
\72\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Besides these indications, a simple check of the California
incorporation records would have shown that Cheong Am was
incorporated at the end of February 1996.\73\ Thus, even
without the bank records showing that the Cheong Am America
bank account was funded by a transfer of $1.3 million from
Korea on March 26, 1996,\74\ it was obvious that Cheong Am
America had not been in operation long enough to generate the
U.S. income needed to make a U.S. political contribution.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\73\ State of California Certificate of Incorporation for Cheong Am
America, February 28, 1996 (Ex. 11).
\74\ Assorted bank records of Cheong Am America. (Ex. 12). Bank
records reflect the following money trail: On March 26, 1996, Cho Hung
Bank in Seoul, South Korea wired $1.3 million to the California Cho
Hung Bank. On April 4 & 5, it appears that the $1.3 million was
deposited into a newly opened Cheong Am America, Inc. account at
California Cho Hung Bank. On April 5, $300,000 (minus a $3 service fee)
was wired into a new Cheong Am America, Inc. account at Hanmi Bank in
Los Angeles. The $250,000 contribution to the DNC, as well as other
related checks such as payment for the group's stay at the Four Seasons
and for photos, came from this account.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A few days after the April 8 event, Huang showed the
$250,000 Cheong Am check to Sullivan. Sullivan was surprised,
since he had been expecting personal contributions from the
Hams, who were American citizens, and not a corporate
check.\75\ Sullivan testified: ``I remember looking at it with
him [Huang] and saying, are you okay with this and have you
vetted this with Sandler and he responded, yes.'' \76\ In the
fall of 1996, after the news accounts of the Cheong Am
contribution broke, Sullivan called Huang again and asked him
the same question. According to Sullivan, Huang reiterated that
he had vetted the check with Sandler immediately after
receiving it in April 1996.\77\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\75\ Deposition of Richard Sullivan, June 5, 1997, p. 52.
\76\ Id.
\77\ Id. at p. 53.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sullivan testified that he did not speak to Sandler about
the Cheong Am check in April 1996. It was not until November
1996 that Sullivan and Sandler discussed it. At that time,
Sullivan asked Sandler if he had vetted the Cheong Am check,
and Sandler responded no. Moreover, in something that Sullivan
``found odd,'' Sandler told Sullivan that he was not even aware
of the Cheong Am check.\78\ When Sullivan asked Sandler whether
he had seen the check on the FEC report, Sandler, in Sullivan's
words, ``just shorted it off. He [Sandler] said, you know, I
just don't recall ever knowing about Cheong Am . . . John never
brought it to my attention and I was never aware of Cheong Am
America, Inc.'' \79\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\78\ Id. at p. 54.
\79\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Asked whether he believed Sandler or Huang was telling the
truth, Sullivan was reluctant to accuse either one of lying.
``I'd rather not have to answer that question directly. . . .''
\80\ Without being direct, however, Sullivan did made it clear
which person he believed. He stated, ``I guess I want to think
about why John would lie at the time, given the concerns that
had been expressed earlier in the year. Let me state that. I
can't think of--I am also perplexed by why John would have lied
at the time. Let me also state that, I am perplexed why Joe
would not acknowledge the existence of this contribution, given
the fact that it was reported on the Federal Election Committee
report.'' \81\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\80\ Id. at p. 58-59.
\81\ Id. at p. 55.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
July 1996--Even More Warning Signals
As with all DNC fund-raisers, there was constant pressure
on Huang to raise additional money. On July 4, 1996, Fowler
wrote a handwritten note to Huang, stating, ``John, We're
making progress, but we have to do better. Thank you for your
good work. Best Wishes, Don.'' \82\ In his deposition, Fowler
stated that he could not recall why he wrote this note to
Huang, and that the phrase ``we're making progress but we have
to do better'' was ``just a general admonition.'' \83\ Fowler
also maintained that it was not unusual for him to write this
type of note, and that at the time, he still believed that
Huang ``was better than an average fund-raiser for the DNC.''
\84\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ Handwritten note from Don Fowler to John Huang dated July 4,
1996 (Ex. 13) (emphasis added).
\83\ Deposition of Don Fowler, May 21, 1997, p. 207.
\84\ Id. at p. 208; see also id. at p. 198.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
During the month of July 1996, Huang was responsible for
organizing two different DNC fund-raising events--a July 22
event at the Century City Hotel in Los Angeles and a July 30
dinner at the Jefferson Hotel in Washington D.C. Neither of
these events turned out the way DNC officials had hoped. In
fact, DNC officials were so troubled by the latter event--
including the list of guests at the event--that they made a
decision not to give Huang any more events with the President.
The July 22 event was designed to be a large fund-raising
event with Vice President Gore as the featured guest. The
ticket price was approximately $500 or $1,000. Many of the
attendees were the same people who attended the Hsi Lai Temple
fund-raiser in April 1996. 85 Huang had predicted
that the event would raise about $1 million. In fact, in
response to Harold Ickes asking in late June how fund-raising
looked for July, Sullivan responded, ``We've got a couple of
things going. One of them is big. John Huang said that he's
real excited about raising $1 million through a big Asian
community event in Los Angeles.'' 86
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\85\ Another chapter of this report provides a detailed discussion
of the Hsi Lai Temple event.
\86\ Deposition of Richard Sullivan, June 5, 1997, p. 88.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Despite Huang's predictions, the Century City event turned
out to be much less successful. According to Sullivan, by the
end of July, the DNC had only collected $200,000 to $300,000
from it. 87
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ Id. at p. 70.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Huang also had agreed to organize another fund-raiser
scheduled for July 30. Sullivan recalled that Karen Hancox of
the White House had called with some dates for fund-raising
dinners with the President, and Sullivan and Rosen approached
Huang. They asked him, ``Do you think you want to take on
another dinner? Do you think you can pull together another four
to 500 [thousand dollars]?'' 88 Huang replied that
he could ``do another dinner.'' 89
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ Id. at p. 66.
\89\ Id. at p. 67.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on his conversation with Huang, Sullivan expected a
dinner ``along the lines of [Huang's] previous ones, about
five, $10,000 a couple.'' 90 However, that is not
what occurred. A few days before the July 30 dinner, Huang gave
Sullivan the invitation list. Dismayed to see that it only
included a small group of people, many of whom appeared to be
foreign nationals, Sullivan showed the list to Rosen. According
to Sullivan, Rosen looked at the list and then stated, ``That's
fine. It's kind of too late to do anything else. Make sure you
send the list over to the White House.'' 91 It is
clear that, despite DNC officials' concerns about potential
illegalities, they opted to proceed with the Jefferson Hotel
dinner, apparently in the belief that raising some amount of
money was better than none. Sullivan recalled that there was
not enough time to cancel the Huang event and to organize
another event in its place.92 Apparently, White
House officials felt the same way. Sullivan recounted that he
did, in fact, send the attendee list to the White
House.93 Hancox then called Sullivan back and said
that the list was fine.94
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\90\ Id.
\91\ Id.
\92\ Id. at p. 72.
\93\ Id. at p. 68.
\94\ Id. at p. 83.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While the Committee has not received copies of any
correspondence between the White House and the DNC with respect
to this event, the DNC has produced the list of attendees at
the event.95 Besides President Clinton and DNC
officials Fowler, Sullivan, Rosen, and Huang (and Mrs. Huang),
four businessmen and their families attended. They were Mr. Ken
Hsui, along with his wife Betty and daughter Dorothy; Dr. James
L.S. Lin, along his wife Zu-Ying and son Thomas; Mr. James
Riady and his wife Aileen; and Mr. Eugene Tung-Chin Wu, and his
wife Shirley.96
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\95\ DNC list of attendees for July 30 event at The Jefferson Hotel
(Ex. 14).
\96\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sullivan and Rosen both made brief appearances at the
dinner. Sullivan said that he went for about five minutes, said
hello to Huang, and made sure that everything was okay.
Sullivan believed that he may also have met James Riady at the
event.97 Rosen recounted that he also was introduced
to Riady at this event.98
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\97\ Deposition of Richard Sullivan, June 5, 1997, p. 69.
\98\ Rosen deposition, p. 97.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Either the next day, or within a few days of the event,
Sullivan and Rosen discussed their displeasure with Huang.
First, they were upset because the dinner was not
``productive.'' 99 Instead of a larger dinner at
five or ten thousand dollars per couple, the Jefferson Hotel
event had been a private gathering that could not satisfy the
party's need for federal money. Sullivan explained, ``The fact
that it was a small dinner meant that it was our sense that
John would not produce a lot of--I didn't think a lot of
dollars were going to come out of that event anyway just by the
nature of who was there. It wasn't along the lines of what we
were really pushing for in July and August of 1996.''
100 Compounding their distress that the Jefferson
event simply would not generate enough money, Rosen and
Sullivan felt that Huang had let them down. Both men believed,
according to Sullivan, that ``John is not living up to what he
had voluntarily come to us and said he could do.''
101 Sullivan elaborated, ``[Huang's] about $700,000
down on what he said he'd do from Los Angeles . . . as the days
stretched on from that event and the funds didn't come in as
they normally do, I became more and more dubious as to whether
that would come anywhere near to what he said he could do.''
102
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\99\ Deposition of Richard Sullivan, June 5, 1997, p. 70.
\100\ Id. at p. 60.
\101\ Id. at p. 73.
\102\ Id. at p. 72.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, Sullivan and Rosen were concerned by the actual
attendees at the dinner. As Sullivan explained, ``[W]e are not
all that pleased with the fact that he put a couple of foreign
nationals into a small dinner with the President . . . we were
not happy with that because of the possible perception. The
press has made a big deal about, oh, you know, why did you have
them in when you knew you weren't going to get money from them.
Well, we knew that too, but we were just worried about the
perception.'' 103 This was not the first time that
Rosen and Sullivan had such a discussion. Sullivan testified
that after Huang's second major event, the May 13, 1996 fund-
raising dinner at the Sheraton Carlton Hotel in Washington,
D.C.,104 Rosen and he had a conversation about the
fact that ``there may have been some foreign nationals in the
room.'' 105 According to Sullivan, ``I think there
was a little concern from the May dinner, but we said . . .
people have the right to bring a guest with them to the dinner
if they are making the contribution. The important thing is
that John is vetting his checks with Joe.'' 106
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\103\ Id. at p. 73.
\104\ See the section of this report on Yogesh Gandhi.
\105\ Deposition of Richard Sullivan, June 5, 1997, p. 62.
\106\ Id. at p. 63.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the light of these concerns, Sullivan said that Rosen
made the decision after the July 30 Jefferson Hotel event not
to give Huang any additional events with the
President.107 Rosen, who was deposed before
Sullivan, provided the Committee with much less detail about
the conversations surrounding the Jefferson Hotel event. While
he recalled having a conversation with Sullivan after the
dinner, Rosen did not mention any concern about foreign
nationals or any decision to stop giving Huang events with the
President. For instance, when asked if he recalled any concerns
being expressed before the dinner, Rosen said no. When asked if
he recalled any concerns after the event, Rosen stated that the
press coverage tended to ``cloud'' his memory. He then went on
to testify, ``I can remember discussing the fact that what
struck me at the event, there were a number of--two or three
young children there, and talking to Richard after the event
that we needed to reach out a little more and get more
involvement of various people and I remember that discussion.
That was the sum and substance of it.'' 108 Rosen
agreed with the metaphor that the DNC would have hoped to get
``more bang for the buck'' out of a fund-raising event attended
by the President.109
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\107\ Id. at p. 70.
\108\ Rosen deposition, p. 98.
\109\ Id. at p. 99.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Huang Seeks to Launder DNC Contributions
It is unclear whether Huang knew that he was being
restricted from handling more Presidential events. It is
likely, however, that Huang knew at a minimum that his Century
City and Jefferson Hotel events were not generating the
predicted amounts of money. Accordingly, Huang either knew, or
could readily surmise, that his DNC superiors were not pleased
with his recent performance. Moreover, at this time period,
there was increasing pressure on DNC fund-raisers to raise hard
money. Without discussing the specifics of election financing,
the fact that it was getting closer to election day meant that
hard money was becoming much more valuable than soft money. DNC
staffers certainly knew about that priority. As Sullivan
explained, Huang was as ``aware as anybody on the staff about
our federal dollars, about our federal dollar push. Marvin and
I had held staff meetings and talked about it.'' 110
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\110\ Deposition of Richard Sullivan, June 5, 1997, p. 67.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is in this environment that Huang had lunch with Rawlein
Soberano, a Washington, D.C. businessman and the head of the
Asian American Business Roundtable (``AABR''), a group in
Washington that assisted Asian-Americans in procuring contracts
with the federal government. At a lunch in late July or early
August 1996, Huang asked Soberano to launder campaign
contributions through his association (and its members) in
exchange for a fifteen percent kickback. If successfully
laundered, these contributions could be turned into the much
desired hard money or federal contributions. In any event,
Soberano quickly terminated the conversation and never took up
Huang on his offer.
Soberano provided background in his testimony to the
Committee. He stated that he had met Huang on a few occasions
before 1996.111 Then, in late June 1996, at an
Organization of Chinese Americans conference in San Francisco,
Soberano saw Huang and learned that Huang had moved from the
Commerce Department to the DNC.112 During the summer
of 1996, Soberano was in the process of trying to identify
sponsors or people who could provide names of potential
sponsors for the upcoming AABR annual event.113 In
connection with that responsibility, Soberano called Huang and
set up a lunch with him at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington,
D.C. Soberano could not identify the exact date of the lunch,
but recalled that it was either the last week of July or early
August 1996. This range of dates is supported by Huang's travel
schedule. DNC records indicate that Huang was in California
from July 10 through July 23 and in New York City from August
10 through August 19.114 During the interim few
weeks, Huang was likely in Washington, D.C., especially since
he planned and attended the Jefferson Hotel event on July 30,
1996.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\111\ Testimony of Rawlein Soberano, September 16, 1997, p. 199.
\112\ Id. at p. 200.
\113\ Id. at p. 201.
\114\ DNC expense reports and receipts (Ex. 15).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Soberano testified that the conversation at the lunch
centered around the AABR. In response to questions from Huang,
Soberano described the organization's purpose and membership,
which at that time numbered approximately 360.115
Huang then asked about AABR's budget, to which Soberano
responded, ``[Y]ou won't believe this. We are on a shoestring
budget.'' 116 Soberano explained to Huang, for
instance, ``We really did not have a budget, per se, because we
all depended on the volunteer work of our membership. As a
matter of fact, the location of the organization moves
regularly on the generosity of the members to provide it
space.'' 117
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\115\ Soberano testimony, pp. 202 & 225.
\116\ Deposition of Rawlein Soberano, May 13, 1997, p. 33.
\117\ Soberano testimony, p. 203.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Near the end of the lunch, Huang made his money laundering
proposal. Soberano testified, ``I remembered that it was during
the discussion about the budget when he mentioned--and I
remember this as if it was yesterday. He said, `Perhaps we can
help you out,' and that's when I looked at him and I said,
`How?,' and he said categorically and plainly, ``We can give
you $300,000 and you can give it back to us later, and you can
give 15 percent for the organization,'' but that is when I told
him, ``John, this conversation never took place.''
118
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\118\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
At first, Soberano testified, he thought that Huang was
kidding. But as Huang continued, and when Soberano told him
that the conversation never took place, Soberano saw Huang's
``face drop'' and knew that Huang was serious.119
Soberano explained to the Committee, ``In the Asian culture, we
have what we call the nonverbal communication, and sometimes--
and we are very concerned about people losing face. I made him
to lose face when I turned him down.'' 120 Soberano
and Huang had no further conversation about Huang's proposal
and they awkwardly ended the lunch a few minutes later.
Soberano has not spoken to Huang since their
lunch.121
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\119\ Id. at p. 204.
\120\ Id.
\121\ Id. at p. 205.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Soberano cut off the conversation immediately, and thus he
never asked Huang to elaborate on his offer. In his deposition
and hearing testimony, Soberano resisted making any assumptions
about Huang's reference to ``we,'' particularly since Huang
never explicitly mentioned the DNC or the Democratic
Party.122 At the same time, however, Soberano
conceded the obvious. He testified, ``But when you look at it,
I mean I know what he meant, but I wouldn't want to put words
in his mouth.'' 123 Soberano acknowledged that he
knew that at the time of the lunch, Huang was working as a
``major fund-raiser'' at the DNC.124
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\122\ Soberano deposition, p. 116.
\123\ Id.
\124\ Soberano testimony, pp. 200 & 225.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The fact that Soberano had lunch with Huang is corroborated
by Jerry Parker, the Vice-President of the PrinVest Corp.
During the relevant time period, Soberano was consulting for
PrinVest, and working in its office, which is located near the
Mayflower Hotel. During an interview with Committee staff,
Parker stated that there is no doubt in his mind that Soberano
walked by his office one day and mentioned a meeting with John
Huang. Parker was less sure about whether Soberano's comment
took place before or after the meeting with Huang, but he
thinks that it was before, and that Soberano said he was going
to a meeting with Huang. Soberano's comment stuck in Parker's
memory, because Parker knew Huang, having trained him at a
local Washington, D.C. bank during the 1970's.125
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\125\ Interview of Jerry Parker, July 1, 1997.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
conclusion
Huang's approach to Soberano should not be viewed with
surprise--it is the logical outgrowth of his fund-raising
odyssey. Huang came to the DNC amid curious circumstances, and
his tenure at the DNC was rife with warning signs--which were
recognized but then ignored. These signs were ignored because
DNC officials were consumed by raising an unprecedented amount
of money under pressure from the White House.
The evidence shows that at the same time that the President
of the United States was prodding DNC officials to hire Huang,
Huang was already raising money in violation of the Hatch Act.
DNC officials apparently recognized the illegality and took
steps to cover the paper trail by substituting Jane Huang's
name for John Huang's on DNC check tracking
forms.126 Moreover, DNC officials expressed concern
about Huang right from the start. They were nervous that Huang
did not understand, and would not comply with, the various
fund-raising laws. Accordingly, they insisted that he have a
private training session with DNC general counsel Joe Sandler.
Nevertheless, they also offered Huang an incentive arrangement
for raising money.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\126\ See the section of this report on Huang's fund-raising at the
Department of Commerce.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Once Huang arrived at the DNC, DNC officials continued
their schizophrenic behavior. On the one hand, they were
worried about the large number of foreign nationals that Huang
seemed to have at his events. On the other hand, they
recognized that Huang was raising a large amount of
contributions and so they were reluctant to take any actions--
until it was too late. The Cheong Am contribution is a good
example of how the DNC had to know that the contribution was
from a foreign source, and thus illegal, but still accepted it
because it was too easy to pass up--$250,000 for a five minute
photo-op with the President.
Finally, the Committee is troubled by the discrepancies in
testimony from DNC officials. Senior DNC officials directly
contradict each other on such important points as whether Huang
ever received individualized training. Moreover, there are
various examples, including the return of Huang-solicited
contributions in March 1996, where DNC officials did not
provide the Committee with highly relevant information in a
timely manner. Even recognizing that memories fade over time,
it would seem that DNC officials who were closely involved in
the events the Committee was investigating should have a
greater command of detail than they claim to have. Huang's
assertion of his fifth amendment privilege against self-
incrimination made the Committee's investigation of his
activities difficult, and this difficulty was magnified by DNC
officials' conflicting accounts and alleged failures of memory.