| 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 |
MINORITY VIEWS OF SENATORS GLENN, LEVIN, LIEBERMAN, AKAKA, DURBIN,
TORRICELLI AND CLELAND
Chapter 7: Ted Sioeng............................................ 5573
Findings..................................................... 5573
Ted Sioeng's Background...................................... 5573
Sioeng's Connections to China................................ 5574
The ``China Plan'' and Ted Sioeng............................ 5576
The Sioeng Family's Contributions to Matt Fong in April 1995. 5576
The Source of Sioeng's April 1995 Contributions to Fong...... 5578
Fong Arranges for Sioeng to Meet Speaker Gingrich............ 5578
The Sioeng Family's Contributions to the National Policy
Forum...................................................... 5579
The Sioeng Family's Contribution to Matt Fong in December
1995....................................................... 5580
Jessica Elnitiarta's Contributions to the DNC................ 5581
The Hay Adams Fundraiser................................. 5581
Hsi Lai Buddhist Temple Event............................ 5582
Sheraton Carlton Hotel Event............................. 5582
Century City Event and Subsequent $50,000 Contribution... 5583
Conclusion................................................... 5584
Chapter 7: Ted Sioeng
Ted Sioeng, an Indonesian-born businessman who is not a
U.S. citizen or a legal resident, and other members of the
Sioeng family, who are U.S. legal permanent residents,
contributed to both Republican and Democratic organizations
during the 1990s. Sioeng has longstanding relationships with
business interests in the People's Republic of China (``PRC'')
and owns a pro-PRC newspaper in California. The circumstances
surrounding the Sioeng family's donations paint a disturbing
picture of fundraisers from both political parties assiduously
courting an individual (Sioeng) who, because of his status as a
foreign national, has no ability to make or direct legal
contributions under U.S. election laws.
Ted Sioeng and his family vigorously deny acting on behalf
of the Chinese government or pursuant to any plan to illegally
influence U.S. elections. Sioeng initially agreed to cooperate
with the Committee's investigation of the allegations involving
him and his family, and his daughter Jessica Elnitiarta--a
legal permanent resident of the U.S.--provided a voluntary
interview. After apparent leaks to the press of information
provided in this interview, however, Sioeng's attorney advised
against additional voluntary interviews. When the Committee
issued a subpoena for the deposition testimony of Jessica
Elnitiarta, her counsel refused to comply, invoking her Fifth
Amendment right not to offer self-incriminating testimony. As a
result, much of the following information was pieced together
from sources other than Sioeng or his family.
Based on the evidence before the Committee, we make the
following findings with respect to political contributions from
Sioeng and related persons:
findings
(1) The evidence before the Committee strongly suggests
that Ted Sioeng, a foreign national, was directly or indirectly
involved in a number of contributions to Democrats and
Republicans.
(2) Matt Fong, California State Treasurer, did not exercise
appropriate diligence in personally soliciting and receiving
$100,000 in contributions from Sioeng and a $50,000
contribution to NPF from a Sioeng-owned company. Fong has since
returned the $100,000 he received; NPF has reportedly returned
the $50,000 it received.
(3) The evidence before the Committee does not allow for
any conclusion as to whether Sioeng served as a conduit for
contributions from any foreign government, including the
Government of China.
(4) Sioeng's contributions enabled Sioeng and his
associates to gain access to senior figures in both the
Democratic and Republican parties, including President Clinton,
Vice President Gore, and House Speaker Gingrich.
ted sioeng's background
News accounts of the development of Ted Sioeng's far-flung
business empire portray him as an entrepreneur who has relied
heavily on partnerships with Chinese government-sponsored
enterprises and licensure agreements. According to several
accounts, Sioeng's first business ventures in the 1960s
involved the production of foam rubber in
Indonesia.1 In the early 1970s, as China began to
open to outside investment, Sioeng began selling used
cigarette-making equipment to tobacco companies in China's
Yunnan Province.2 Later, Sioeng also sold to China
medical, toy, and other manufacturing equipment acquired in the
U.S. and Canada.3 In the early 1980s, a Chinese
provincial government granted him a license to sell a cigarette
brand popular in China, Hongtashan (Red Pagoda), in non-Chinese
markets.4 Sioeng manufactured the cigarettes in
Indonesia and distributed them in Asia and, later, the United
States.5 Sioeng has also established a joint venture
with the Chinese government in Singapore.6
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Footnotes at end of chapter.
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In 1987, Sioeng's wife, Sundari Elnitiarta, acquired an
immigration visa and moved to Los Angeles with their five
children.7 One of their daughters, Jessica
Elnitiarta, is particularly active in Sioeng's business affairs
and is a legal permanent resident of the U.S. Sioeng himself
never acquired permanent resident status, although he appears
to have spent a substantial amount of time in the United
States.8 During the 1990s, the Sioeng family created
or acquired numerous businesses in the United States, including
a part ownership of Grand National Bank in Santa Ana,
California, and a real-estate development company, Panda Estate
Investments, which owns numerous properties in the Los Angeles
area.9 In almost all cases, Sioeng has provided his
adult children and/or their spouses with the money to purchase
these businesses.10
sioeng's connections to china
Although not an ethnic Chinese, Ted Sioeng was raised in
Indonesia by ethnic Chinese parents and is strongly attached to
China. ``His appearance is not Chinese, but he speaks Chinese,
he practices Chinese culture and he most certainly has a
Chinese heart,'' reports Daniel Gu, president of UCLA's 1,000-
member Chinese Students and Scholars Association.11
Sioeng readily agrees with this assessment and has been quoted
as saying, ``I don't have a drop of Chinese blood in me, but I
have a Chinese heart.'' 12
As Sioeng cultivated his business interests in China during
the 1970s and 1980s, he made gifts to Chinese government
officials and helped to finance community projects, such as
schools.13 Many observers have noted that the
Chinese government cultivates allies by awarding them lucrative
concessions. ``China is very good at using people,'' says one
prominent Chinatown businessman in Los Angeles. ``They give
businessmen some kind of special privilege or business
advantage so that these people work for China.'' 14
Even joint ventures with putatively ``private'' enterprises in
China raise the specter of government involvement. ``You have a
situation where public and private investment are not all that
clear,'' says Benjamin Ellman, professor of Chinese history at
UCLA. ``There are very, very few purely private enterprises.''
15 Or as another longtime chronicler of the Chinese-
American community put it, ``Right now it is very hard to say
which money is from the government and which money is
private.'' 16
Capitalizing on his reputation as ``a spokesperson for
state-enterprise entities from the mainland,'' Sioeng has
cultivated numerous business partners who have benefited from
their relationship with him and his relationship with the
People's Republic of China.17
Since he began investing in the United States in the late
1980s, Sioeng has emerged as a leader of the Chinese-American
community in Los Angeles. He has provided generous financial
assistance to the numerous mutual-aid associations that have
formed in Los Angeles to assist new Chinese immigrants from the
mainland, including the Southern California Cantonese
Association, the Southwest China Association of Southern
California, and the Southern California Teo-Chew
Association.18 In October 1996, he held a festival
in honor of China's National Day.19 Sioeng also
chaired a made-for-TV event called ``Welcome Home Hong Kong
Spectacular ``97,'' which was to be broadcast as part of the
official handover ceremonies on Hong Kong. To that end, the
event was filmed by camera crews from the state-controlled
China Central TV.20
In 1995, Sioeng's daughter, Jessica Elnitiarta, purchased
the Monterey Park-based Chinese-language newspaper, the
International Daily News. The paper's ultimate parent company
is Sioeng's Group, a holding company owned by Sioeng's daughter
Jessica Elnitiarta, her four siblings, and their mother, with
Elnitiarta holding the largest share.21 Elnitiarta
is also the sole director and officer of Sioeng's Group, as
well as the sole director of the company that directly owns the
paper, Chen International Publications.22 Elnitiarta
admits, however, that her father was the one who approached her
with the idea of purchasing the newspaper and, as with many of
the other businesses owned by the Sioeng family, he transferred
the monies used for the purchase from overseas.23 In
addition, Sioeng continues to pour money into the paper to
subsidize its unprofitable operations.24
Prior to the purchase by Sioeng's family, the IDN had
offered intermittent support for Taiwan.25 After
numerous complaints during the ensuing year from the Chinese
Consul General in Los Angeles, Feng Shusen, Sioeng installed a
new editor from New York and the paper is now ``breathlessly
pro-Beijing'' with respect to issues like Taiwan and human
rights.26 The paper runs releases issued by
Beijing's state-controlled news media and offered ``lavish''
praise for former Chinese leader Deng Xiaopeng upon his death,
including the banner headlines: ``HEAVEN, EARTH AND MAN GRIEVED
TOGETHER'' 27 and ``THE SUCCESS DENG MADE IN CHINA
SHOULD BE THE MODEL FOR ALL MANKIND.'' 28 David Ma,
a noted pro-democracy activist in the Los Angeles area, relates
that International Daily News reporters were provided with the
names of persons to contact for quotes after Deng's death, and
that Ma's name was left off that list because of his criticisms
of the Chinese government.29 The paper has also
played up events such as the visit of Chinese Navy vessels to
Los Angeles in 1996. Sioeng's lawyer argues that the switch in
editorial philosophy to a more pro-Chinese bent is actually
just good business sense designed to appeal to a growing
immigrant Chinese population, but the paper continues to lose
substantial sums of money each year.30 Moreover,
Sioeng sells only 500-600 cases of cigarettes a year in the
United States despite having been one of the International
Daily News's biggest advertisers for a number of
years.31 It seems untenable, therefore, to claim
that Sioeng's expenditure of $3 million to purchase a money-
losing newspaper was solely motivated by a desire to facilitate
cigarette advertisements.
the ``china plan'' and ted sioeng
During its investigation, the Committee received non-public
information regarding a Chinese Government plan to promote the
Chinese Government's interest in the United States during the
1996 election cycle.
The China Plan followed China's concerns about signs of
Taiwan's successful lobbying of Washington, expressed most
visibly in the period when the United States granted permission
in June 1995 for the Taiwanese president to enter the country
for an informal visit to Cornell University, his alma mater. In
response, Chinese officials hoped to advance Chinese interests
in in the United States by lobbying Congress and increasing
contacts with American lawmakers, the media and ethnic Chinese
Americans. One aspect of the China Plan included increasing
contacts with both Congress and state legislators. Although
there was insufficient evidence that the China Plan was
implemented by illegal means, some of the non-public
information received by the Committee related to Sioeng's
activities in the United States. See Chapter 2 of this Minority
Report.
According to public information derived from a news
article, in late 1994 or early 1995, funds from China were
wired to an Asian-owned bank in Los Angeles where the Chinese
consulate has its accounts.32 Shortly thereafter,
some money was transferred to another tiny Asian-American bank
in California, Grand National Bank, where it was deposited into
the account of the Hollywood Metropolitan Hotel.33
The Sioeng family is a part-owner of Grand National Bank and
the owner of the hotel.34 These published reports
invited intensive scrutiny of the circumstances surrounding the
Sioeng family's political contributions.
the sioeng family's contributions to matt fong in april 1995
Matt Fong, a Republican, is California's State Treasurer
and has announced his candidacy for the United States Senate.
He voluntarily agreed to be deposed by the Committee concerning
contributions he received from the Sioeng family in 1995. Fong
first met Sioeng in1988 at a rally for Julia Wu, the Republican
candidate for the Los Angeles Community College's governing body.
35 Fong understood Sioeng to be a supporter of Wu and was
introduced to Sioeng by Wu herself.36 Over the next few
years, Fong encountered Sioeng regularly at various community
fundraisers for cultural centers that helped first-generation
immigrants.37 According to Fong, Sioeng and his family were
generous contributors to these organizations and Sioeng frequently
served as a co-chair or host of these events.38 At these
events, Fong also met other members of the Sioeng family, including his
sons, daughters, son-in-laws and his wife.39 However, Fong
could not recall any names of the Sioeng family besides that of Jessica
Elnitiarta, one of Sioeng's daughters.40 In 1994, during his
campaign for state treasurer, Fong held a $1,000-per-ticket fundraising
event at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles. Jessica Elnitiarta attended
the event and donated $2,000.41
After Fong's election as state treasurer in the fall of
1994, his campaign had a deficit of approximately
$200,000.42 During the last quarter of 1994, Fong
received a $100,000 contribution from the owner of the San
Diego Chargers, Alex Spanos, accompanied by a request that Fong
use the contribution to ``challenge'' the Chinese-American
community to match it.43 Fong presented this
``challenge'' directly to Sioeng, among many others, during an
event in late 1994 or early 1995.44 Significantly,
Fong has no recollection of Jessica Elnitiarta being present at
the time that this challenge was presented to
Sioeng.45 In response, Sioeng indicated a
willingness to help, but did not commit to any specific dollar
amount.46
Fong saw Sioeng again during one of the numerous Chinese
New Year events in the first quarter of 1995 and reminded him
of his previously stated willingness to help. Sioeng again
offered a non-specific promise of assistance.47
Numerous follow-up phone calls from Fong and Steve Kinney,
Fong's ``fundraising strategist,'' secured Sioeng's agreement
to make a donation.48 Fong made arrangements with
Sioeng to visit Sioeng's offices and pick up the
check.49 Fong testified that Sioeng asked him during
this meeting about the legal restrictions on campaign
contributions.50 Fong informed Sioeng that, under
California state law, the contribution had to be from a U.S.
citizen, a green-card holder, or a U.S. company with assets
generated in the United States.51 (Fong related that
Sioeng or his daughter, Jessica Elnitiarta, had raised these
same issues about restrictions on campaign contributions on
previous occasions.) 52 Sioeng then went into
another part of his office and returned with a check for
$20,000 in an envelope.53 Sioeng promised Fong at
that meeting that ``more help will come'' and, indeed, a
separate check for $30,000 arrived about a week
later.54 Contrary to Fong's account, however, recent
press reports allege that Sioeng wrote both checks in front of
Fong and simply postdated the second check so that he could
replenish his account to cover the amount.55
Both of these checks, totaling $50,000, were written from
the account of ``San Wong Sioeng,'' 56 which is Ted
Sioeng's Chinese name. Fong claims that he did not believe that
these two contributions came from Ted Sioeng himself, but that
they came from either one of his sons or son-in-
laws.57 Fong explained that in the context of
earlier discussions about the rules for raising funds, Sioeng
indicated that his daughters and sons owned independent
businesses.58 When Fong was actually soliciting
support from Sioeng, Sioeng remarked that his children ``all
have companies here and we're all very successful.''
59 Fong also indicated that Sioeng was generally
very supportive of his children getting involved in the
political arena and making financial
contributions.60 Based on these statements from
Sioeng, Fong claimed it was ``always my understanding that the
support I was going to be getting was from his family.''
61
Fong's attempts to disavow knowledge that Ted Sioeng
personally contributed $50,000 to him is unpersuasive. Fong
personally solicited Ted Sioeng and challenged him--not his
children, only one of whom he could even name--to match the
$100,000 donation by Spanos. Pursuant to that challenge, Ted
Sioeng--not his children--promised to assist Fong. Fong admits
that Sioeng himself was the subject of follow-up contacts to
secure the contribution.62 Fong went to Sioeng's
offices and was personally handed a check by Sioeng along with
a promise that ``more help will be coming.'' The check named
only Sioeng as the account holder. In addition, the thank-you
letter from Fong's campaign was sent to Ted
Sioeng.63 Jessica Elnitiarta told the Committee in
her interview that she had no knowledge of either the $20,000
or $30,000 contribution at the time they were
made.64 Indeed, the circumstances so clearly point
to Ted Sioeng as the source of these contributions that if, as
Fong claims to have believed, the checks were actually from the
account of a family member, a reasonable person would question
whether Sioeng was directing a family member to make
contributions--a practice prohibited by law.65
The $50,000 in contributions made in April 1995 were, in
fact, drawn from the personal account of Ted Sioeng, a non-U.S.
citizen who did not have permanent residence status and was,
therefore, ineligible to contribute. Again, it is the
Minority's view that Fong had every reason to suspect that this
was a contribution from an individual not eligible to
contribute to his campaign.
the source of sioeng's april 1995 contributions to fong
The public evidence examined by the Committee including
Sioeng's banking records, presents evidence that these
contributions may have been funneled through Sioeng by persons
unknown. On April 28, a check was written from Sioeng's account
for $30,000 payable to Matt Fong.66 That same day, a
check for $30,000 from the Grand National Bank account of an
individual named Glenville A. Stuart was deposited into
Sioeng's account.67 A check of publicly available
databases indicates that Stuart is the proprietor and sole
employee of a small grocery store, Sunset Market and Liquor, in
Long Beach, California.68 The Committee was unable
to uncover additional information concerning Stuart. These
circumstances raise concerns about the true source of at least
$30,000 of the $50,000 donated to Fong by Sioeng.
fong arranges for sioeng to meet speaker gingrich
Approximately two months after the April 1995 donations,
Fong met Sioeng at another community event.69 Fong
was scheduled to travel to Washington in mid-July on state
treasurer business and asked Sioeng if he would like to meet
House Speaker Newt Gingrich.70 In response, Sioeng
asked Fong: ``Who is Speaker Gingrich?'' 71 When
Fong explained that he was the speaker of the Congress, Sioeng
asked: ``What's the Congress?'' 72 Notwithstanding
Sioeng's apparent lack of knowledge about U.S. politics, Fong
reminded Sioeng of his previously stated desires to increase
the political involvement of himself and his family and that
the Republican Party was trying to reach out to the Asian-
American community.73
According to Fong, Sioeng said that he was scheduled to be
in New York at around the same time and asked if his son-in-
law, who would be traveling with him, could also meet Speaker
Gingrich.74 Fong then asked Steve Kinney, his
campaign pollster in 1994, to contact Gingrich's office to
arrange a meeting.75 Kinney had long been Gingrich's
top advance person for California and, because of these ties,
he served as the primary liaison between Fong and the Speaker's
office.76 Fong credits Kinney for having him serve
on Newt Gingrich's National Strategies Group,77 a
panel that advises Representative Gingrich on domestic
policy.78
As described by Fong, the resulting meeting in
Representative Gingrich's office on July 12 was brief and
inconsequential. Fong and Sioeng were given a tour of the
office and Representative Gingrich spoke generally to Sioeng
``about empowerment and about getting involved in the community
and being Republicans.'' 79 The Speaker also posed
for photographs with Sioeng.80
the sioeng family's contribution to the national policy forum
According to Fong's deposition testimony, shortly after the
Gingrich meeting in July 1996, Steve Kinney asked Fong whether
the Sioeng family would be interested in supporting any of the
Speaker's activities.81 Fong advised Kinney to go
ahead and ask.82 Some time later, Fong recalls that
Sioeng or Jessica Elnitiarta, he cannot recall which, asked his
advice about whether they should support the
speaker.83 Fong responded, ``The speaker is a
friend, and supporting the speaker on my behalf is a good
idea.'' 84 During her interview with the Committee,
Jessica Elnitiarta interpreted this conversation as an actual
solicitation by Fong on behalf of the National Policy Forum
(``NPF''), a Republican Party think tank. She acknowledged that
the suggestion to give to NPF may have come from
Kinney.85 Fong testified that he did not know until
after 1995 that the Sioeng family contributed $50,000 to the
NPF when he read about it in news accounts.86
According to later news reports, however, Fong's wife received
a 10 percent commission from NPF on the contribution from the
Sioeng family, which Fong reported on his 1995 statement of
economic interest.87 When questioned about NPF,
Elnitiarta stated that she didn't care to what ``department''
the check went, indicating that she viewed it as a donation to
the Republican Party.88
Also in July 1996, Kinney was organizing a fundraising trip
to California by Speaker Gingrich, including a non-fundraising
``outreach event'' for Asian-Americans at the Beverly Hills
Peninsula Hotel.89 At Kinney's request, Fong
provided a suggested list of ``political Asian Republican
leaders that should be invited from the community'' that
included the Sioeng family.90 Kinney invited Jessica
Elnitiarta ``and [her] family.'' 91 The event was
attended by Ted Sioeng, Jessica Elnitiarta, and one of
Jessica's sisters.92 On July 18, having secured an
agreement from Jessica Elnitiarta to contribute to the NPF,
Kinney stopped by the HollywoodMetropolitan Hotel (owned by the
Sioeng family) to pick up the check, which is dated July
18.93 Elnitiarta provided Kinney with a $50,000 check from
the account of Panda Industries, an export-import
business.94 Elnitiarta serves as the president of the
company, but Ted Sioeng is the sole owner.95 The day after
this $50,000 contribution to the NPF, at the ``non-fundraising'' event
organized by Kinney, Sioeng sat next to Gingrich at the Beverly Hills
event.96 Sioeng's meeting with Speaker Gingrich was
described in a story on page one of the China Press, a Chinese language
newspaper in Alhambra, California. The story included two photos of the
luncheon, including one showing Sioeng seated next to the Speaker, and
related Sioeng's comments at the meeting that ``he was very honored to
have the opportunity to introduce his family members, as well as other
business friends to Gingrich.'' 97 Sioeng, whom the China
Press article identified as a ``consultant'' to the Chinese provinces
of Jilin and Yunan, also reportedly invited Representative Gingrich to
visit those two provinces.98
An examination of the bank records underlying the $50,000
contribution to the NPF raises troubling questions about the
actual source of the funds. The day before Jessica Elnitiarta
donated $50,000 to the NPF, the Panda Industries account had a
balance of only $1,300. That same day, Ted Sioeng wrote a check
for $50,000 from his personal account into the account of Panda
Industries.99 These transfers raise the fair
inference that Sioeng both directed and was the real source of
the NPF donation.
NPF President John Bolton testified at his deposition that
Joseph Gaylord, a fundraiser for Speaker Gingrich who had
accompanied him on the California trip, directed that $5,000 be
subtracted from the $50,000 contribution and paid as a
commission to another person whose name Bolton could not
recall.100 Steve Kinney testified that he received a
10 percent commission for the monies he raised for NPF
101 and Joseph Gaylord also recalled that Kinney had
called him during this time to specifically inquire whether he
would receive a 10% commission on contributions he solicited
for the NPF.102 Subsequent press reports, however,
indicate that Fong's wife, Paula Fong, also received a 10
percent commission on Elnitiarta's NPF
contribution.103 Bolton testified that he also asked
an NPF employee to question Gaylord about Panda Industries, and
that Gaylord responded by describing it as a ``Hollywood
entertainment company.'' 104 When asked about this
testimony, Gaylord testified that he had no understanding about
the nature of Panda Industries and that he had no recollection
of being asked by anyone to supply such
information.105 Kinney emphatically denied that
Gaylord had ever questioned him about the nature of Panda
Industries.106 These conflicting accounts raise
serious questions about the adequacy of NPF's vetting
procedures, at the least. Although Kinney testified that he had
solicited Elnitiarta for additional contributions besides the
one to NPF, his counsel instructed him not to discuss these
additional solicitations.107
The sioeng family's contribution to matt fong in december 1995
During the remainder of 1995, Fong continued to solicit the
Sioeng family whenever he encountered them at community events.
Specifically, Fong recalls soliciting both Ted Sioeng and
Jessica Elnitiarta at a reception in Pasadena,
California.108 Shortly before a badminton tournament
co-sponsored by the Sioeng family, Jessica Elnitiarta contacted
Fong and requested a congratulatory letter from Speaker
Gingrich.109 Fong contacted Kinney, who was able to
secure the requested congratulatory letter from the speaker
within a tight deadline.110 Fong attended the
tournament, saw the Sioeng family there and again solicited
them for additional contributions.111 Subsequently,
Fong received a check for $50,000, dated December 14, 1995,
from the account of Panda Estates Investment, Inc., a real
estate development company owned by the Sioeng
family.112 Fong denies any connection between the
congratulatory letter and the subsequent donation from the
Sioeng family,113 but Jessica Elnitiarta told
Committee staff that she gave the $50,000 ``in appreciation''
for the letter.114
Again, the bank records underlying this donation raise
troubling questions. On the day that Elnitiarta wrote this
$50,000 check to Matt Fong, there was only $14,000 in the Panda
Estates Investments bank account.115 Four days later
the December 14 check cleared, presumably producing an
overdraft in the account.116 The following day,
December 19, Elnitiarta's aunt, Yanti Ardi, made a telephone
transfer of $50,000 from her personal account into the Panda
Estate Investments account.117 For her part, Yanti
Ardi, a non-citizen living in the Los Angeles area, would not
have had sufficient funds to transfer the $50,000 to the Panda
Estate Investments account but for a December 11 wire transfer
from Pristine Investments Ltd of Hong Kong, a wholesale
clothing company with uncertain ties to Sioeng's business
empire.118 Between September 5, 1995 and January 6,
1996, Yanti Ardi received approximately $2.6 million in wire
transfers from Pristine Investments.119 Sioeng's
attorneys refused to answer questions about Pristine or other
companies in Asia that made large transfers to Sioeng-related
accounts.120
In April 1997, articles appeared in Newsweek and the Los
Angeles Times that raised questions about the source of the
Sioeng family contributions to Fong. In response to these
articles, Fong's campaign organization wrote letters addressed
to Sioeng and ``San Wong Sioeng'' insisting on verification
within 24 hours ``of the fact that these contributions were
made with your personal funds and not those of any other person
or entity.'' 121 Upon receiving no reply to these
letters within the prescribed time period, Fong returned a
total of $100,000 in contributions from the Sioeng family. At
no time since has Fong received any information from any member
of the Sioeng family concerning the source of those
contributions.122
Jessica elnitiarta's contributions to the DNC
In 1996, Jessica Elnitiarta contributed a total of $250,000
to the Democratic National Committee and attended several DNC-
sponsored events. These contributions appear to have been
arranged by John Huang, who first met Sioeng and Elnitiarta in
1995 at a Chinese community event.123 The available
information concerning these donations is sketchy and further
investigation by other entities may be appropriate.
The Hay Adams fundraiser
According to Elnitiarta, Huang telephoned her in January
1996 regarding a Chinese New Year event, the Asia-Pacific
American Leadership Council Dinner, being sponsored by the DNC
in Washington, D.C., at the Hay Adams Hotel. Elnitiarta invited
her father, Sioeng, on her own and is not aware of any
conversations between Huang and Sioeng regarding this
event.124 On February 10, 1996, Elnitiarta wrote a
check for $100,000 from her personal account to the DNC in
order to secure eight seats at the event, which were priced at
$12,500 each.125 At that time, Elnitiarta's account
had a balance of approximately $10,000. On February 22,
$200,000 was transferred into Elnitiarta's account from Yanti
Ardi's account.126 Ardi's account, in turn, had
received a wire transfer of over $500,000 from the Hong Kong
bank account of Pristine Investments Ltd. on February 12,
1996.127 Prior to that transfer, Ardi's account held
only approximately $3,000.128 Unlike the $30,000
donation to Matt Fong and the $50,000 donation to the NPF,
however, these transfers are not in the same amount of the
contributions, do not occur as closely in time to the
contribution, and Elnitiarta herself (who holds a power of
attorney over Ardi's account) most probably effectuated the
transfer from Ardi's account to her own. These transfers,
therefore, are not as strongly suggestive of contributions in
the name of another. Elnitiarta invited her father, her sister
Sandra Elnitiarta, Sandra's husband, Didi Kurniawan; her
brother, Yopi Gatot Elnitiarta; and two of Sioeng's business
associates.129 Elnitiarta and her husband were also
planning to attend, but did not due to their son's unexpected
illness.130
Hsi Lai Buddhist Temple event
Huang invited Elnitiarta to the Hsi Lai Buddhist Temple
event held in Hacienda Heights, California, on April 29, 1996.
(See Chapter 21.) Elnitiarta claims he invited her because she
had missed the Hay Adams event due to her son's
illness.131 Elnitiarta explained to Committee staff
that one of her sisters, Laureen Elnitiarta, is a Buddhist and
wanted to attend the event for that reason.132
Elnitiarta attended the event with her sister, Laureen, Sioeng
and his wife, and another family member, Sioeng Fei
Man.133 Sioeng sat with Vice President Gore during
the event.134 The Sioengs were not solicited for a
contribution in connection with this event and did not make
one.135
Sheraton Carlton Hotel event
Elnitiarta was contacted again by Huang and invited to
attend an event in May 1996 at the Sheraton Carlton Hotel in
Washington, D.C.136 She, in turn, invited her father
and five others to the event.137 In a fax to ``Uncle
Huang,'' Elnitiarta informed John Huang that in addition to her
father, six other Chinese executives would come to the dinner.
One was Guo Zhong Jian, an officer of the China Construction
Bank. One of four major banks run by Beijing, China
Construction last September became the first Chinese bank since
the laws were tightened after the BCCI scandal in 1991 to win a
federal license to do business in the U.S.138
Elnitiarta made no contributions at the event, but Huang
told her that he would collect a contribution check from her
the next time he was in Los Angeles.139 On July 12,
Elnitiarta wrote a $100,000 check to the DNC from the account
of her real estate company, Panda EstatesInvestment,
Inc.140 This is the same account used by Elnitiarta for her
December 1995 contribution of $50,000 to Matt Fong.141 At
the time the check was cashed, the Panda Estates Investment account had
a small negative balance.142 The monies used to cover this
check came from Panda Estates domestic rental income and Elnitiarta's
transfer of $60,000 from Ardi's account on July 26, 1996.143
Ardi's account, in turn, could not have financed the $60,000 transfer
without the benefit of a deposit of approximately $1.6 million from the
Hong Kong account of R.T. Enterprises, Ltd.--another business with ties
to Sioeng. In addition, Panda Estates Investment, Inc. appears to have
generated sufficient domestic revenues to cover the political
contributions drawn from that account. The Minority's examination of
the bank records of Panda Estates Investment, Inc., shows that the
company enjoyed a rental income of over $900,000 from approximately
mid-1995 through 1996. Nevertheless, the Committee was unable to
satisfactorily resolve the ultimate question of what role, if any, was
played by Sioeng himself in directing the contribution.
Century City event and subsequent $50,000 contribution
As with the previous fundraisers, Elnitiarta was contacted
by Huang about attending a DNC dinner to be held in the Century
City area of Los Angeles on July 22.144 Elnitiarta
brought her father, and Sioeng brought a business partner from
Hong Kong, Lam Kwok Man.145 Sioeng was seated at the
head table next to President Clinton at the
event.146 At Huang's urging, Elnitiarta also agreed
to be responsible for filling an additional five to six
tables.147 These additional invitees did not pay for
their seats.148 According to Elnitiarta, Huang did
not press her for a contribution at the time of the
event.149 On July 29, Elnitiarta wrote a check to
the DNC for $50,000 from the same Panda Estates Investment
account that had funded her July 12 DNC
contribution.150 At this time, the Panda Estates
Investment account did not contain sufficient funds to cover
the contribution.151 However, on August 1 and August
6, Elnitiarta made transfers totaling $47,000 from a different
account maintained by Panda Estate Investment, indicating that
Panda Estates Investment had sufficient funds to cover the
contribution.152 The FBI agent assigned to analyze
the Sioeng bank records concluded that all of the transfers
from Panda Estates Investment's other account was ``supported
by normal account activity'' except for the $60,000 transfer
from Yanti Ardi's account discussed above.153
Huang's internal documents link this $50,000 donation from
Panda Estates to a small fundraiser held on July 30, 1996, at
the Jefferson Hotel in Washington, D.C. that featured President
Clinton and was attended by the following individuals: James
Riady; Taiwanese businessman Eugene T.C. Wu, chairman of the
Shin Kong Group, a conglomerate that includes Taiwan's second-
largest life insurance company; James J.S. Lin, a Taiwan
businessman and associate of Wu's; and Sen Jong (``Ken'') Hsui,
the president of Prince Motors Co. in Taipei and a U.S.
citizen.154 Each of these attendees also brought
their wives and children.155 DNC officials projected
that the dinner would raise $500,000, but of the attendees,
only Hsui was legally permitted to make
donations.156 According to Huang's records, Hsui
contributed only $150,000 and the remaining amount was credited
to individuals who had not attended the event, including
Elnitiarta's $50,000 donation from the Panda Estates account
and an August 2 donation of $131,000 from Laurie M. Jonsson,
the president of a Seattle shipping company.157 When
interviewed, Jonsson disavowed any knowledge of Huang or the
Jefferson Hotel dinner and said she gave $100,000 to become a
designated trustee of the DNC's Women's Leadership Forum and
the other $31,000 for general purposes.158
Elnitiarta also stated that she had no knowledge of the
Jefferson Hotel event.159 It appears to the Minority
that, for reasons unknown, Huang was crediting unrelated
contributions from some donors to the Jefferson Hotel event.
Conclusion
The Committee found clear evidence that Sioeng, a foreign
national, contributed to Republican California State Treasurer
Matt Fong, who returned the contributions two years later. The
Committee also found evidence that suggests that Sioeng may
have participated in directing political contributions made by
his daughter Elnitiarta to both the National Policy Forum and
the Democratic National Committee, although it was unable to
reach any definitive conclusions on this issue. In addition,
our examination of the bank records surrounding the
contributions to both Fong and the NPF has raised serious
questions about the ultimate source of the contributions made
in those instances. The Minority believes that further
investigation by law enforcement authorities into these issues
is clearly warranted.
Regardless of the source of the contributions, the
contributions by the Sioeng family present a stark picture of
how quickly substantial contributions can be translated into
personal access to elected policy makers. The Committee found
no evidence, however, that any member of the Sioeng family
sought to exploit the access they were afforded to lobby on any
particular issue or to receive any favor other than pro forma
letters of support or congratulations.
footnotes
1 Business Week, 8/11/97.
2 Business Week, 8/11/97.
3 Business Week, 8/11/97.
4 Los Angeles Times, 5/18/97.
5 Los Angeles Times, 5/18/97.
6 Los Angeles Times, 5/18/97.
7 Business Week, 8/11/97.
8 INS records.
9 Business Week, 8/11/97.
10 Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
11 Los Angeles Times, 5/18/97.
12 Los Angeles Times, 5/18/97.
13 Los Angeles Times, 5/18/97.
14 LA Weekly, 7/4/97.
15 LA Weekly, 7/4/97.
16 LA Weekly, 7/4/97.
17 LA Weekly, 7/4/97 (quoting Anthony Chieng, a
``prominent Chinese-American attorney.')
18 LA Weekly, 7/4/97.
19 Newsweek, 4/28/97.
20 Newsweek, 4/28/97.
21 Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
22 Letter from Thomas P. McLish, counsel for Elnitiarta,
to Majority counsel-Special Investigation, 6/18/97
23 Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97;
Letter from Thomas P. McLish, counsel for Elnitiarta, to Majority
counsel-Special Investigation, 6/18/97.
24 Letter from Thomas P. McLish, counsel for Elnitiarta,
to Majority counsel-Special Investigation, 6/18/97.
25 Los Angeles Times, 5/18/97.
26 LA Weekly, 7/4/97; Newsweek, 4/28/97; Newsweek, 6/9/
97.
27 Business Week, 8/11/97; Newsweek, 3/10/97.
28 Newsweek, 4/28/97.
29 Interview with David Ma, 8/24/97.
30 Los Angeles Times, 5/18/97.
31 Interview by FBI detailee with Nancy La, 5/25/97;
letter from Thomas P. McLish, counsel for Elnitiarta, to Majority
counsel-Special Investigation, 6/18/97.
32 Newsweek, 4/28/97.
33 Newsweek, 4/28/97.
34 Newsweek, 4/28/97.
35 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, pp. 7-8.
36 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 8.
37 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, pp. 8-9.
38 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, pp. 8-9.
39 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 9.
40 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 10.
41 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, pp. 14-15.
42 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 25.
43 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 29.
44 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 29.
45 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 36.
46 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 30.
47 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, pp. 30-31.
48 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 54.
49 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 33.
50 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, pp. 34-35.
51 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 34.
52 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 53.
53 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 36.
54 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, pp. 35-37.
55 Los Angeles Times, 2/26/98.
56 Letter from William R. Turner, Treasurer, Matt Fong
for State Treasurer, to Mr. Ted Sioeng, Mr. San Wong Sioeng, requesting
information on legality of contributions, 4/21/97 (copies of
contribution checks dated 4/20/95 and 4/28/95 attached); Letter from
William R. Turner, Treasurer, Matt Fong for State Treasurer, to Mr. Ted
Sioeng, Panda Estates Investment, Inc., requesting information on
legality of contributions, 4/21/97 (copy of contribution check dated
12/14/95 attached).
57 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 23.
58 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, pp. 38-39.
59 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 39.
60 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 39.
61 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 39.
62 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 33.
63 Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 23.
64 Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
65 2 U.S.C. Sec. 441(e) (prohibiting a foreign national
from participating directly or indirectly in a contribution decision).
\66\ Letter from William R. Turner, Treasurer, Matt Fong for State
Treasurer, to Mr. Ted Sioeng, Mr. San Wong Sioeng, requesting
information on legality of contributions, 4/21/97 (copies of
contribution checks dated 4/20/95 and 4/28/95 attached).
\67\ Check from Glenville A. Stuart to Sioeng San Wong for $30,000,
4/28/95, and Grand National Bank miscellaneous credit slip
acknowledging deposit. [GNB 1280500063]
\68\ Report from Dun's Market Identifiers on ``Sunset Market and
Liquor.''
\69\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 44.
\70\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, pp. 44-45.
\71\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 45.
\72\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 45.
\73\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 45.
\74\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 45.
\75\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 49.
\76\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 47.
\77\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 47.
\78\ Los Angeles Times, 4/22/97.
\79\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 48.
\80\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 48.
\81\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 50.
\82\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 50.
\83\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 55.
\84\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 55.
\85\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\86\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, pp. 49, 54-55.
\87\ Los Angeles Times, 2/25/98.
\88\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\89\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 50; Steve Kinney deposition,
9/23/97, p. 11.
\90\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 51.
\91\ Steve Kinney deposition, 9/23/97, p. 19.
\92\ Steve Kinney deposition, 9/23/97, p. 19.
\93\ Los Angeles Times , 7/4/97.
\94\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97; letter from
Thomas P. McLish, counsel for Elnitiarta, to Majority counsel-Special
Investigation, 6/18/97.
\95\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97; letter from
Thomas P. McLish, counsel for Elnitiarta, to Majority counsel-Special
Investigation, 6/18/97.
\96\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Senate
Investigating Team re: ``China Press newspaper article of 7/22/95,''
7/23/97.
\97\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Senate
Investigating Team re: ``China Press newspaper article of 7/22/95,''
7/23/97.
\98\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Senate
Investigating Team re: ``China Press newspaper article of 7/22/95,''
7/23/97.
\99\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\100\ John Bolton deposition, 7/10/97, pp. 66-67.
\101\ Stephen M. Kinney deposition, 9/23/97, pp. 22-23.
\102\ Joseph Robert Gaylord deposition, 9/16/97, p. 35.
\103\ Los Angeles Times, 2/25/98.
\104\ John Bolton deposition, 7/10/97, pp. 67-68.
\105\ Joseph Robert Gaylord deposition, 9/16/97, pp. 42-44.
\106\ Stephen M. Kinney deposition, 9/23/97, p. 23.
\107\ Stephen M. Kinney deposition, 9/23/97, p. 26.
\108\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, pp. 60-61.
\109\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 62.
\110\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, pp. 62-63.
\111\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, pp. 61-62.
\112\ Letter from William R. Turner, Treasurer, Matt Fong for State
Treasurer, to Mr. Ted Sioeng, Mr. San Wong Sioeng, requesting
information on legality of contributions, 4/21/97 (copies of
contribution checks dated 4/20/95 and 4/28/95 attached); Letter from
William R. Turner, Treasurer, Matt Fong for State Treasurer, to Mr. Ted
Sioeng, Panda Estates Investment, Inc., requesting information on
legality of contributions, 4/21/97 (copy of contribution check dated
12/14/95 attached).
\113\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, p. 63.
\114\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\115\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\116\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\117\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\118\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\119\ Wire of $1 million to Yanti Ardi GNB account no. 240417614
from Pristine Investments Ltd., 9/5/95 [GNB 002970-2972]; Wire of
$928,432.17 to Yanti Ardi's GNB acct no. 240417614 from Pristine
Investments Ltd. [GNB 003000]; Wire of $150,000 to Yanti Ardi's GNB
acct no. 240979814, 12/11/95 [GNB 002888 & 002890]; Wire of $595,283.35
to Yanti Ardi's GNB acct no. 240417614, 1/3/96 [GNB 003030].
\120\ In addition to the monies received from the Sioeng family,
published reports indicate that Fong received at least $24,000 from
sources suspected of channeling contributions to the DNC. Los Angeles
Times, 4/22/97. In 1995, for example, records show that Fong received
$4,000 from two officers of the Lippo Group that were arranged by John
Huang. Los Angeles Times, 4/22/97. Fong acknowledges asking Huang for
help during his campaigns for treasurer and for controller and while he
served on the Board of Equalization, but denies that he asked Huang for
any assistance since the 1994 election cycle. Matt Fong deposition, 9/
19/97, p. 68.
\121\ Letter from William R. Turner, Treasurer, Matt Fong for State
Treasurer, to Mr. Ted Sioeng, Mr. San Wong Sioeng, requesting
information on legality of contributions, 4/21/97 (copies of
contribution checks dated 4/20/95 and 4/28/95 attached); Letter from
William R. Turner, Treasurer, Matt Fong for State Treasurer, to Mr. Ted
Sioeng, Panda Estates Investment, Inc., requesting information on
legality of contributions, 4/21/97 (copy of contribution check dated
12/14/95 attached).
\122\ Matt Fong deposition, 9/19/97, pp. 66-67.
\123\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\124\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\125\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97; Memorandum
from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority Counsel, re:
``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\126\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\127\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\128\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\129\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\130\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\131\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\132\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\133\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\134\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\135\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\136\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\137\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97; Los Angeles
Times, 7/4/97.
\138\ Newsweek, 3/10/97.
\139\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\140\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\141\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\142\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\143\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\144\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\145\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\146\ Los Angeles Times, 7/4/97.
\147\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\148\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\149\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.
\150\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\151\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\152\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\153\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\154\ POTUS Dinner July 30 Attendees [DNC 000597]; Los Angeles
Times, 2/7/97.
\155\ POTUS Dinner July 30 Attendees [DNC 000597]; Los Angeles
Times, 2/7/97.
\156\ Los Angeles Times, 2/7/97.
\157\ Los Angeles Times, 2/7/97.
\158\ Los Angeles Times, 2/7/97.
\159\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97.