| 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 |
PART 9 RESPONSE TO MAJORITY REPORT [EXCERPTS]
introduction
The Senate Resolution establishing the Special
Investigation into the 1996 elections stated that the Committee
on Governmental Affairs was to examine allegations of
impropriety and illegality by both political parties. Despite
the language of the Resolution, the investigation was conducted
in a highly partisan fashion: The hearings focused almost
entirely on allegations relating to Democrats, while largely
ignoring allegations relating to Republicans. It is thus not
surprising that the Majority Report on the investigation is a
highly partisan document. The partisan bias is manifested in
many ways, including questionable interpretations of the
evidence, the use of double standards when discussing similar
conduct by Democrats and Republicans, and even outright
misstatements of the facts and the law.
This part of the Minority Report provides an introduction
to the Minority's critique of the Majority's Report. In
pointing out the rather egregious errors, omissions,
misstatements, and unsupported allegations in the Majority
Report, we do not mean to suggest that we are defending the
system used by both the Democratic and Republican parties to
raise campaign funds in 1996. It is one thing to defend against
a false allegation that a fundraising practice is illegal. It
is another to say that the practice should continue to be
legal. That distinction is clear in the Minority Report.
Much of the evidence presented to the Committee was open to
widely varying interpretations. When the evidence is unclear,
it is unfair for the Committee to pretend otherwise by hurling
accusations either directly or by innuendo that may result in
unfairly damaging the reputations of innocent people. This
Committee had an unfortunate history in the early 1950's in
this regard, and it would be shameful to repeat it.
Unfortunately, the Majority has repeatedly chosen to
interpret facts in such a way that Democrats are portrayed in
the most unfavorable light while Republicans are given the
benefit of the doubt. A case in point is the contrast between
the Majority's treatment of Harold Ickes, former Deputy Chief
of Staff in the Clinton White House, and its treatment of Haley
Barbour, the former chairman of the Republican National
Committee. The Majority refuses to accept Ickes's denial of
accusations made against him by Warren Meddoff despite the lack
of any supporting evidence for these accusations and despite
numerous facts which undermine Meddoff's credibility. By
contrast, the Majority accepts Barbour's testimony about the
National Policy Forum's loan transaction even though it
conflicts with testimony from several credible sources and a
great deal of documentary evidence.
This double standard in the treatment of witnesses is also
evident in the Majority's chapter on the White House coffees.
That chapter contains a lengthy discussion of the allegation by
Karl Jackson that a solicitation was made at a coffee he
attended. Jackson had been a White House aide during the Bush
Administration and later went into business with former Vice
President Dan Quayle (the latter fact is omitted from the
Majority Report). Jackson's GOP ties have utterly no bearing on
his credibility, in the Majority's view, and yet the Democratic
ties of witnesses who contradict him are given overwhelming
importance. Moreover, the Majority includes a completely
baseless insinuation that the Democratic witnesses misled the
Committee, by stating that they ``claim'' not to have recalled
the alleged solicitation.
The Majority Report also applies a double standard to the
two political parties when the parties have engaged in similar
conduct. While Democratic examples are highlighted, comparable
Republican examples are downplayed or simply ignored. Thus, for
example, the Majority criticizes the Democratic National
Committee's coordination with the Clinton White House, ignoring
similar coordination by the Republican National Committee with
the Dole for President campaign and former Republican
Presidential campaigns. Similarly, in the discussion of the use
of access to elected officials as a fundraising tool, the
Majority strongly criticizes the White House coffees organized
by the Democratic National Committee (``DNC'), while ignoring
egregious practices on the Republican side, such as charging
specific prices for access to Republican officials.
Partisan bias is evident throughout the Majority's chapter
on Ted Sioeng, which either minimizes--or simply omits--
Sioeng's Republican connections. For example, the Sioeng
chapter mentions $100,000 in contributions to California State
Treasurer Matt Fong but fails to mention that Fong is a
Republican. The chapter also notes that political contributions
afforded Sioeng access to President Clinton and Vice President
Gore, but fails to mention that Newt Gingrich, the Republican
Speaker of the House, was the guest of honor at a Sioeng-
organized luncheon the day after a Sioeng family company gave
$50,000 to a Republican think tank. Nor does the chapter
mention that the donation was solicited by a top adviser to
Speaker Gingrich and that the think tank was, according to the
Internal Revenue Service, essentially an arm of the Republican
National Committee.
The Majority Report not only contains dubious
interpretations of the facts, it often misstates the facts. The
Majority also misstates the facts by supplying partial
evidence. For example, in the Majority's Charlie Trie chapter,
the Majority states that Xiping Wang testified that the DNC did
not reimburse her for her contribution, implying that the
contribution was not returned by the DNC. Actually, the DNC did
return the contribution--to the United States Treasury, as was
appropriate for a contribution that had been made by a conduit
who was not legally entitled to the money. Similarly, in the
Majority Report's chapter on DNC/White House coordination,
there are citations to the testimony of former DNC Chairman
Donald Fowler to support conclusions regarding the knowledge
and activities of DNC officials Marvin Rosen and Richard
Sullivan without any reference to Rosen's and Sullivan's own
testimony on these subjects.
The misleading character of the Majority's factual
assertions is also illustrated by internal contradictions
within the Majority Report itself. Evidence used to support one
claim is often used to support a contradictory assertion in
another chapter--sometimes even in the same chapter. Similar
inconsistencies are apparent in the Majority's treatment of
witnesses who are deemed credible when they support the
Majority's position but are deemed not credible when they
dispute the Majority's conclusions. Thus, throughout the
Majority'schapter on John Huang at the DNC, the testimony of
Richard Sullivan is cited and relied upon as an honest recitation of
the practices and beliefs of all DNC employees during the 1996 election
cycle. Yet, in the Majority's chapter on the Teamsters, the Majority
discredits Sullivan's testimony. Similar inconsistencies are apparent
in the Majority's treatment of Donald Fowler, whose testimony is
credited and relied upon with respect to his disagreements with Ickes,
but deemed dishonest in the Majority's Tamraz chapter.
The mishandling of evidence is one of the most disturbing
aspects of the Majority Report. Again and again, evidence that
undermines or contradicts the Majority's theories and
allegations is downplayed, mischaracterized, or more often
ignored, while disproved allegations are perpetuated. For
example, a great deal of evidence gathered by the Committee
undermines the theory that John Huang engaged in espionage when
he was employed at the Commerce Department. This exculpatory
evidence is largely absent from the Majority Report. As noted
in Chapter 4 of the Minority Report, Huang failed on many
occasions to exploit his post to obtain classified information.
Moreover, he offered to testify to the Committee under a grant
of immunity that would not have shielded him from prosecution
for espionage-related offenses; his offer was not mentioned in
the Majority Report. In the Minority's view, the most neutral
interpretation of the facts is that Huang was probably not
engaged in espionage. The Majority Report also repeats the
baseless suggestion that the President was involved in a
criminal conspiracy with a consultant to the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters, in spite of the fact that Chairman
Thompson admitted at a hearing that the Committee now had
evidence that disproved such an allegation.
Similarly, the Majority's chapter on Johnny Chung includes
his allegation (made in unsworn statements to journalists) that
a $50,000 contribution he made to the DNC had been solicited by
Margaret Williams, then Chief of Staff to First Lady Hillary
Clinton. The Majority Report fails to mention that Williams
denied this allegation, under oath, when she was deposed by
this Committee, and when she testified before a House
committee. And the Majority ignores a host of other witnesses
whose testimony before that committee supported Williams's
testimony. By publishing the allegation and not the denial, the
Majority creates the false impression that the allegation is
not only unchallenged, but unquestionably true.
Because of the Majority's questionable use of evidence,
sourcing is an extremely important issue. Every assertion that
might be in dispute should be attributed to a source, such as
testimony to the Committee or a document produced in response
to a Committee subpoena. In a number of cases, dubious
assertions in the Majority Report are not footnoted. In some
other cases, the footnotes show that questionable sources were
used, such as staff interviews at which the Minority staff was
not present.
The most important task of the Special Investigation was to
probe allegations of improper or illegal activity, and, thus, a
clear understanding of the campaign finance laws is
fundamental. It is thus surprising to find that the Majority
Report contains many allegations of illegality based on
misstatements of the law. A few examples will suffice:
The Majority's chapter on Clinton White House
coordination with the DNC alleges that this coordination was
illegal and yet fails to cite a single statute, court decision,
or regulation to support its position in this chapter. As
demonstrated in the Minority Report, coordination of an issue
advocacy advertising campaign between a party and its
candidates does not appear to violate provisions of the
existing campaign finance laws.
Allegations in the Sioeng chapter are based on a
misstatement of the law governing foreign contributions.
Contributing ``foreign money'' is not illegal so long as the
donor is legally entitled to give and is not acting as a
conduit for someone else. In Sioeng's case, the issue was not
whether he used funds from foreign bank accounts, but whether
he directed or participated in contribution decisions (which
would have been illegal given his status as a foreign
national). On the basis of its misstatement of the law, the
Majority analyzes the $100,000 in Sioeng-related money
contributed to Matt Fong and concludes that most of these funds
were donated legally, because only $16,000 could be traced to
foreign sources. In fact, Fong's deposition testimony to this
Committee--which is not mentioned in the Majority Report--
strongly indicates that Sioeng was the donor. If Sioeng was the
donor, the entire $100,000 was contributed illegally,
regardless of whether domestic or foreign funds were used.
A major shortcoming of the Majority Report is its failure
to acknowledge the fact that some of the most scandalous
conduct in federal elections is perfectly legal. The campaign
finance laws are so riddled with loopholes that legal
restrictions are largely meaningless. Because of the soft-money
and issue-advocacy loopholes, large corporations and wealthy
individuals are free to spend vast sums of money on behalf of
specific candidates. In both the hearings and in the Majority
Report, the Majority has given short shrift to these systemic
problems.
One of the most disturbing aspects of the Majority Report
is that it suggests, on the basis of inconclusive evidence,
that certain named individuals were spies or foreign agents.
These serious charges are supported solely by weak
circumstantial evidence and speculation--as acknowledged by the
Majority's use of phrases like ``may'' and ``if true.''
Allegations of espionage are grave charges and should not be
made without specific credible evidence. Such serious
allegations can inflict irreparable damage to the reputations
of innocent people, and to do so without having sufficient
evidence is irresponsible.
The remainder of this Response consists of detailed
comments on the Majority Report. It is organized both
thematically and on a chapter-by-chapter basis.
RESPONSE TO ISSUES INVESTIGATED BY THE COMMITTEE
foreign influence
The Majority Report addresses the issues of foreign
influence and foreign money in the 1996 election by focusing
almost exclusively on the alleged role of the Chinese
government. The report includes a declassified chapter
describing efforts by the Chinese government to influence the
U.S. government. The Majority Report also includes a chapter on
Indonesian-born businessman Ted Sioeng, four chapters on John
Huang, and one on Maria Hsia. Taken together, these chapters
are designed to suggest that the so-called China Plan involved
efforts to influence the 1996 presidential election and that by
using Sioeng, Huang, and Hsia as intermediaries, the Chinese
government succeeded in infiltrating the Democratic Party's
fundraising operations.
The Majority's analysis of foreign influence is deeply
flawed. It weaves together conspiracy theories by taking
unrelated facts and occurrences and giving them the most
sinister possible interpretation. The Majority also uses facts
in a highly selective manner. For example, classified
information that contradicts the Majority's theories is simply
disregarded.
Moreover, the Majority fails to acknowledge foreign money
that flowed to Republicans. As discussed in Minority Chapter 3,
the Republican National Committee received hundreds of
thousands of dollars from a Hong Kong businessman who provided
backing for a loan to an RNC affiliate. The Minority also found
strong indications that businessman Michael Kojima, who gave a
half-million dollars to the RNC, acted as a conduit for
Japanese businessmen (see Minority Chapter 6). The Majority
Report makes no mention at all of Representative Jay Kim, a
California Republican, who pleaded guilty to violating the
campaign finance laws because he had accepted illegal foreign
contributions (see Minority Chapter 8).
independent groups
The 1996 campaign saw a surge in activity by organizations
which are not registered with the Federal Election Commission
as political committees. These groups were typically nonprofit
organizations, registered with the Internal Revenue Service as
tax-exempt, social-welfare organizations. These supposedly
``nonpartisan'' groups spent tens of millions of dollars on
behalf of candidates and political parties. Many of them ran
political attack ads--under the guise of ``issue advocacy''--
during the closing weeks of the campaign, and some of the ads
appear to have determined the outcome of close races. Despite
the importance of this phenomenon, the Majority failed to
conduct a serious investigation of these groups.
In its Report, the Majority asserts that it was impossible
to form ``meaningful conclusions'' about nonprofit groups
because of obstruction by several organizations that were
served with Committee subpoenas. While the Majority cited the
AFL-CIO as the prime example of obstruction, several
conservative groups also failed to comply with
Committeesubpoenas, including the Christian Coalition, Americans for
Tax Reform, the National Policy Forum, and two tax-exempt organizations
controlled by Triad Management Services.
The Majority's assertion that it could form no meaningful
conclusions about such groups is questionable on several
grounds. First, such an obstacle did not stop the Majority from
forming conclusions about other investigatory targets who
failed to cooperate, including Democratic fundraisers John
Huang and Charlie Trie. Second, as far as the nonprofit groups
are concerned, the Committee obtained a great deal of
information about conservative groups in spite of those groups'
lack of cooperation--sufficient information to conclude that
several such groups engaged in improper and likely illegal
activity during the 1996 cycle. See Minority Chapter 3 on the
National Policy Forum and Minority Chapters 10 through 13 and
Chapter 15 on other nonprofit groups.
The activity by these and other organizations in the 1996
election cycle sounded only a warning note of what is to come.
As several experts testified in the Committee's hearings on
proposals for campaign finance reform, the use of nonprofit and
other independent organizations to air ``issue advertising''
that is simply disguised advertising on behalf of candidates
will only continue to grow. Given an opportunity for a
watershed examination of the direction that the election system
is heading, the Majority chose not to address any of the
substantial wrongdoing by these groups and actively prevented
the Minority from presenting hearings on the evidence it had
developed.
contribution laundering/third-party transfers
The federal election laws require that contributors donate
their own funds. Thus, it is illegal for a donor to channel
funds through a conduit, for an individual to act as a conduit,
and for a donor to be reimbursed by a third party after having
made a donation. The laws help to ensure that the public knows
who is really paying for elections and also discourage
contributions from individuals who are not legally entitled to
donate, such as foreign nationals who do not have permanent
resident status.
The Majority Report addresses several cases in which there
were allegations that political contributions were made in the
names of third parties during the 1996 election cycle. These
included contributions made in the names of Yogesh Gandhi, Hsi
Lai Temple monastics, and Yue F. Chu and Xiping Wang.
Although these Democratic examples are discussed at length,
the Majority Report ignores several Republican examples,
including some cases where laundering schemes have been
acknowledged by the donors or proven in court. Several
Republican examples involving Simon Fireman (a national Vice
Chair of the Dole campaign), officers and employees of Empire
Landfill, and DeLuca Liquor and Wine are mentioned in Chapter
22 of the Minority Report.
The Majority Report also fails to discuss third-party
contributions as a systemic problem that could perhaps be
addressed through legislative reform, regulatory reform, or
improved vetting of contributions by political parties and
candidates.
fundraising and political activities of the national parties and
administrations
Although the national political parties play a central role
in the federal election process, the Majority Report does not
contain a detailed, balanced discussion of the two parties.
Instead, it is largely a diatribe against the Democratic
National Committee. Using evidence in a highly dubious manner,
it examines coordination of election activities among the White
House, the Democratic National Committee (``DNC''), and the
Clinton Campaign (Chapter 2), the DNC's system to check the
legality and appropriateness of contributions, fundraising in
the White House, fundraising phone calls made from the White
House, the vetting of individuals with access to the President,
DNC donor Johnny Chung, and DNC donor Roger Tamraz.
A fundamental problem with many of these chapters is that
they characterize certain activities as illegal without citing
any legal authorities for this position. In fact, many of the
practices--notably coordination between the White House and the
DNC--appear to be acceptable under the current campaign finance
laws.
Moreover, the Majority Report states and implies that many
activities were unique to the Democrats. As shown in the
Minority Report, the Republican National Committee similarly
coordinated with the Dole for President campaign. See Minority
Chapter 33. The Minority Report also discusses how Republicans
have used access to public officials as a fundraising tool and
have used federal property for fundraising purposes (see
Minority Chapter 28). Regarding the vetting issue, the Minority
Report notes that in the 1992 and 1994 election cycles the
Republican National Committee took the position that it had no
legal duty to review contributions (see Minority Chapter 25).
The Minority Report also presents evidence that a number of
controversial individuals met with Republican Presidents at the
White House and at other events (see Minority Chapters 6 and
31). Finally, the Minority Report contains detailed discussions
of the Republican Party's close coordination with--and
financial support to--several supposedly ``independent'' and
``nonpartisan'' nonprofit groups (see Minority Chapters 10 and
11).
allegations of quid pro quo
A major goal of our campaign finance laws is to curb
corruption and the appearance of corruption, as the Supreme
Court recognized in Buckley v. Valeo. When political campaigns
are financed with private money, there is always a risk of quid
pro quos. Examples of alleged quid pro quos to Democratic
contributors are discussed in Majority chapters regarding the
DNC and Indian Gaming, the Hudson Casino, and the Cheyenne-
Arapaho contributions.
It is seldom easy to prove a quid pro quo, and inquiries
into alleged quid pro quos tend to rely heavily on
circumstantial evidence. Nonetheless, the extent to which the
Majority Report reaches its conclusions by marrying innuendo to
coincidence is startling. In its chapter detailing the DNC's
efforts to raise money from the Indian gaming community, the
Majority candidly acknowledges that, except for two instances--
the Hudson casino matter and the Cheyenne Arapaho matter--it
was unable to investigate whether ``there was any connection
between the financial support to the Democratic party and the
Interior decisions. . . .'' Nevertheless, the Majority goes on
to imply that numerous contributions received from Indian
tribes involved in gaming were all given in expectation of
specific government actions and that these expectations were
fulfilled. The factual bases for these conspiratorial
suspicions, by the Majority's own admission, amount to nothing
more than ``troubling coincidences.'' Indeed, this chapter is
so insubstantial that it resembles nothing so much as an
outline created at the beginning of an investigation rather
than a final product purchased at a cost of well over $3
million in taxpayer money.
One chapter of the Majority Report deals with Interior
Secretary Bruce Babbitt's supposed involvement in the decision
to deny an application to take land into trust for a gambling
casino in Hudson, Wisconsin--a community which strongly opposed
such a use. That community opposition--a crucial factor in
Interior's decision--is scarcely mentioned in the Majority
report, along with the fact that the tribes who sought to
locate the casino in Hudson lived on reservations located 80 to
190 miles away. Even more disturbing is the Majority's
insistence on interpreting evidence and documents in ways that
are uniformly contradicted by the sworn testimony of the career
Interior employees and officials involved. The Majority not
only fails to resolve these contradictions, it does not even
mention the great weight of testimony that contradicts the
Majority's interpretation of events.
Finally, in its chapter on political contributions made by
the Cheyenne-Arapaho Tribes, the Majority reaches the
condescending conclusion that these tribes' expressions of
political support, including contributions, for the Democratic
Party were the result of their naivete and political
gullibility at the hands of manipulative Democratic
fundraisers. In spinning this tale, the Majority Report
studiously ignores the ample evidence that these tribes were
sophisticated, politically aware, and made a hard-headed
calculation that the Democratic Party would likely assist them
in prevailing over Republican politicians who, in siding with
powerful oil and gas interests, consistently obstructed the
tribes' efforts to regain lands that they considered to be
rightfully theirs.
The Minority Report's chapters on the Hudson Casino and the
Cheyenne-Arapaho Tribes demonstrate that the evidence does not
support the quid pro quo allegations contained in the Majority
Report (see Minority Chapters 35 and 37). The Minority Report
also discusses the Republican Party's ties to one of its
biggest sources of funds: the tobacco industry (see Minority
Chapter 36).
process
The Majority Report covers the origins and procedures of
the Committee's investigation into the 1996 election by
focusing almost exclusively on document production by the White
House and the Democratic National Committee, which are the
subjects of two separate chapters. A third chapter of the
Majority Report discusses the compliance of nonprofit groups
that were subpoenaed by the Committee. Although the Majority
castigates all entities that did not comply with subpoenas, the
most pointed criticism is directed at the AFL-CIO. There is no
particular overarching theme that ties these chapters together,
except for a general refrain that Democratic individuals,
entities, organizations, and sympathizers tried to thwart the
Committee's investigation.
While the Majority discusses the history and debate over
Senate Resolution 39, which clearly stipulated that the Special
Investigation was to be conducted on a bipartisan basis, the
Majority spends the bulk of its chapter on procedural issues
lamenting the deadlines imposed unanimously by the full Senate
as the reason the Committee was not able to pursue enforcement
of its subpoenas. Moreover, while the Majority's chapter on
compliance by nonprofit groups does mention some of the
Republican entities that failed to comply with subpoenas, it
fails to discuss the Republican National Committee, the Dole
campaign, the National Policy Forum, Americans for Tax Reform,
and Triad, all of which were among the first entities
subpoenaed by the Committee and all of which failed to comply
fully with subpoenas. Several individuals associated with
conservative groups failed to appear for depositions; others
appeared but refused to answer any substantive questions. The
Majority does not even mention that the Republican National
Committee--alone among the dozens of entities subpoenaed--
unilaterally redacted as much as one third of all the documents
it produced.
The massive obstruction of the Committee's investigation
should never have been tolerated; indeed, the damage done to
this body's investigative authority as a result of that failure
may be the longest standing legacy of this investigation.
Obstruction of the Committee began, however, not with the AFL-
CIO, as the Majority has often asserted, but in July when the
National Policy Forum willfully refused to obey an order issued
by the Chairman to produce documents pursuant to subpoena. No
effort was made to hold the National Policy Forum in contempt
of the Senate, and on September 3, eight groups, including the
Christian Coalition and the National Right to Life Committee,
notified the Committee that they would not produce documents.
On September 8, Triad Management and its affiliated
organizations notified the Committee that its employees,
officers, and directors who were under personal subpoenas to
appear and answer questions would refuse to do so. While
Ranking Minority Member Glenn repeatedly expressed a
willingness to support a finding of contempt against all
entities not in compliance with Committee subpoenas, no motion
for contempt was ever brought before the Committee by the
Chairman.
A detailed response to each Majority chapter follows.
Majority Report Chapter 2: Procedural Background and Overview
The Majority Report lays out a procedural chronology and an
overview of the investigation. The Majority also presents its
view of the conduct of the investigation and the impact the
Majority believes the deadline had on the investigation as a
whole. Finally, the Majority summarizes the issues addressed in
testimony the Committee received in public hearings and issues
addressed in its Report.
While addressing the procedural history of the Committee's
investigation, the Majority seizes yet another opportunity to
highlight its version of ``Democratic obstruction'' including
harsh criticism of the White House and DNC for what the
Majority calls ``poor'' productions. In addition, the Majority
claims the Committee's deadline for ending the investigation--
unanimously agreed upon by the full Senate--precluded
procedural enforcement proceedings regarding Committee
subpoenas.
The Majority Report states that one of the main
purposes of the investigation was to let the public ``know what
went on during the 1996 campaign,'' when, in fact, the Majority
only investigated what happened in Democratic fundraising
circles during that time. The Majority neglects to mention that
the Minority requested only six of the 32 days of public
hearing time to present evidence of Republican fundraising
transgressions and was granted only three. Had the Minority
been allowed the additional three days it repeatedly requested,
the American people would have received a fuller picture of
``what went on during the 1996 campaign.''
While the Majority Report complains numerous times
about the deadline imposed on the investigation, it fails to
mention statements by Democrats that consideration of
reauthorization of the budget of the Committee would be
appropriate if the investigation had not been completed by the
end date, December 31, 1996. Every Member of the Committee--
Republican and Democrat--voted for S. Res. 39, the Resolution
authorizing the investigation, which included the
deadline.1 Committee Democrats also stated publicly
that they would have voted for enforcement of all of our
subpoenas and orders, including those against Democrats, if
enforcement was sought regarding all Committee
subpoenas.2 However, such motions were never brought
to a Committee vote.
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\1\ Congressional Record vote No. 29, pp. S2124-2125. The vote was
99-0.
\2\ Senator Glenn, 10/8/97, hrg., pp. 73-74.
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The Majority Report claims that the decision not
to enforce the Committee's subpoenas was at least partially
based on a dearth of resources. While the Minority respects the
Majority's wish not to waste taxpayer monies, nearly $1 million
of the original $4.35 million authorized by the Senate remained
at the end of the investigation.
The Majority Report claims that ``Committee staff
. . . conducted over 200 witness interviews'' yet fails to
mention that at least 20 of these interviews were conducted
unilaterally by the Majority. Some of these unilateral
interviews were with witnesses who later testified at Committee
hearings and some witness affidavits were received that were
never shared with the Minority.3
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\3\ See Appendix of Unilateral Interviews Conducted by the
Majority.
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Response to Majority Chapter 4: ``The Thirst for Money''
In this chapter, the Majority places blame for all
problematic contributions received by the DNC on an insatiable
``thirst for money'' emanating from the White House. The
ability to raise funds, however, is clearly an essential factor
in any election campaign. During the 1996 elections, a
Democratic President was running for re-election confronted by
a Republican Party that had outraised and outspent the
Democratic Party in all recent election cycles. Consequently,
the Majority's conclusion that the Democratic Party felt
pressure to raise funds for the 1996 election is a statement of
the obvious. In reaching its conclusion, the Majority alleges
violations of law without providing supporting facts or legal
citations, ignores the costs of federal elections, and ignores
the fact that the Republican Party again out-raised and out-
spent the Democratic Party in 1996.
The Majority asserts that the DNC and the Clinton
campaign violated campaign laws in their coordinated effort to
raise money, but provides no facts or legal citations to
support such a conclusion.
The premise of this chapter--that the need to
raise advertising money caused the ``panoply of DNC fundraising
irregularities''--rests on a single incorrect statement. The
Majority claims that ``[d]ue to the DNC's need to feed the
advertising beast [that was planned following the November 1994
Democratic losses in Congressional elections], it dismantled
its process for vetting contributions.'' In fact, the DNC's
system for checking contributions was changed in May of 1994,
five months before the November 1994 elections and over a year
before the idea for a large scale DNC advertising campaign was
first conceived.
The Majority focuses entirely on fundraising by
the Democratic Party, and fails to mention that the Republican
Party also broke all previous records in 1996, raising almost
$100 million more than Democrats. The Majority ignores the fact
that in the 1996 election cycle, the RNC out-raised (and out-
spent) the DNC by nearly $100 million, with the RNC raising
$306 million and the DNC raising $212 million.4
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\4\ Federal Election Commission press release FEC Reports Major
Increase in party fundraising, 3/17/97, available at www.fec.gov.
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The Majority ignores the across-the-board
explosion of money raised in the 1996 election. The Majority
also ignores the fact that in 1996, the national parties
together raised and spent almost 900 million dollars, a 43
percent increase over the 1992 presidential election
cycle.5 The Majority's characterization of the
Democratic Party as having a ``thirst for money,'' fails to
take into account that in the 20 years since the campaign
finance laws took effect, total hard money raised by both
parties has jumped from $110 million to $658
million.6
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\5\ Federal Election Commission press release FEC Reports Major
Increase in Party Fundraising, 3/17/97, available at www.fec.gov.
\6\ Federal Election Commission press release FEC Reports Major
Increase in Party Fundraising, 3/17/97, available at www.fec.gov.
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Response to Majority Report Chapter 9: ``White House Vetting of
Individuals With Access to the President''
In this chapter the Majority addresses the alleged failure
of the White House to appropriately screen visitors invited to
attend events at the White House with the President and Vice
President from 1993 to 1997. Although the Majority makes a
number of valid observations, its inclination to engage in
unfounded speculation and to ignore evidence of similar
procedures in Republican administrations undercuts its
credibility on this issue.
Without presenting any evidence, the Majority
Report speculates that the problems with the White House
vetting procedures from 1993 to 1997 might have been a
``conscious design for fundraising purposes.'' There is no
evidence to support this speculative assertion, and the
Majority does not cite any such evidence.
The Majority ignores evidence obtained by the
Committee establishing that the procedures for screening
political functions at the White House have been in effect for
several administrations. A career White House employee
testified that during her 18-year tenure at the White House,
the procedures for screening political guests were the
same.27 The National Security Advisor similarly
testified that NSC procedures for providing information as part
of the screening process have been in place since the
1970s.28
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ Judith Spangler deposition, 5/9/97, pp. 39-40.
\28\ Samuel R. Berger, 9/11/97 Hrg., p. 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority ignores that the system in place for
years has also resulted in a variety of individuals with
controversial backgrounds meeting with Republican Presidents.
Although the Committee's investigation of Republican vetting
was limited due to the Committee's focus on the Democratic
Party, it did uncover several examples where individuals with
controversial backgrounds were provided access to President
Bush. See Minority Report Chapter 28.
The Majority omits the fact that both the White
House and the DNC have implemented policies to formalize and
improve their procedures for assessing potential guests at most
DNC events.29
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ Exhibit 1073: New DNC Compliance Procedures and Fundraising
Manual; Exhibit 1072: Memorandum from Erskine Bowles to All Executive
Office of the President Staff, 1/21/97; Exhibit 1071: Memorandum from
Samuel R. Berger to all National Security Council staff, 6/13/97.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response to Majority Report Chapter 10: ``Johnny Chung and the White
House Subway''
In this chapter, the Majority alleges that Chung's status
as a DNC donor afforded him extraordinary access to the White
House, including ``access to the President and the First Lady''
and to ``the First Lady's office.'' The chapter devotes
considerable space to a $50,000 contribution to the DNC which
Chung gave to Margaret Williams, then-Chief of Staff to the
First Lady. The Majority alleges that the $50,000 contribution
was solicited by Williams and that Chung was provided with
access to the White House as an explicit quid pro quo for this
contribution.
The Majority Report refers repeatedly to Chung's
access to ``the White House,'' misleadingly implying that he
had frequent access to the executive mansion. The Majority
Report fails to distinguish between the White House itself--the
executive mansion--and the ``White House Complex,'' a term that
includes the White House and some nearby buildings, including
the Old Executive Office Building (``OEOB''). The vast majority
of Chung's visits were to the OEOB; 30 he frequently
dropped in on Margaret Williams or her assistant, Evan
Ryan.31
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ For example, Secret Service ``WAVE'' records, which record
visits by individuals who do not hold White House passes, show that
Chung visited the White House complex 30 times in 1995 and that most of
those visits were to Williams's office in the OEOB.
\31\ Margaret Williams's and Evan Ryan's offices were located in
Room 100 of the Old Executive Office Building.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority Report incorrectly implies that Chung
had frequent access to President and Mrs. Clinton. The evidence
before the Committee shows that Chung only met the Clintons on
a handful of occasions, usually at Democratic fundraising
events where he was one of a large number of attendees. The
references to his visits to ``the First Lady's office'' are
misleading because he actually visited the office of Margaret
Williams, the First Lady's Chief of Staff, in the Old Executive
Office Building.32
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ Evan Ryan deposition, 8/7/97, pp. 11-12: The suite of offices
in the OEOB where Williams and Ryan worked does not contain an office
for the First Lady.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority alleges that Margaret Williams
solicited a $50,000 contribution from Chung. The Majority's
discussion of the $50,000 contribution is based largely on
unsworn allegations to journalists by Johnny Chung and it
ignores a great deal of contradictory evidence in the form of
testimony to the Committee by Margaret Williams and Evan Ryan.
The Majority also ignores Williams's testimony on the same
subject to the House Government Reform and Oversight Committee
(even though evidence presented to that Committee has been used
elsewhere in the Majority Report). For example, the Majority
Report ignores Williams's denial that she solicited the $50,000
contribution from Chung and her testimony that she initially
rebuffed him when he tried to hand her the check.33
Ultimately, according to her testimony, she decided to treat
the check the same way she had treated unsolicited checks that
had arrived in the mail: She simply forwarded it to the
DNC.34 By ignoring these and other important parts
of Williams's testimony, the Majority has created a distorted
impression of what the Committee learned about Johnny Chung.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Margaret Williams deposition, 5/29/97, p. 184.
\34\ Margaret Williams deposition, 5/29/97, pp. 184-86.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority alleges that Williams provided Chung
with access to the White House as an explicit quid pro quo for
a $50,000 contribution. Regarding the alleged quid pro quo for
the $50,000 contribution, the Majority relies again, on unsworn
statements to journalists by Johnny Chung and ignores
contradictory evidence, including testimony to this Committee
by Margaret Williams and Evan Ryan. According to their
testimony, neither of them suggested to Chung that his requests
would be expedited if he contributed to the DNC. By ignoring
this evidence, the Majority has elevated press accounts over
actual evidence received by the Committee.
Response to Majority Report Chapter 11: ``The Contribution of Yogesh
Gandhi''
In this chapter, the Majority concludes that Yogesh Gandhi
was able to use a $325,000 contribution to gain access to the
President for Gandhi's own purposes. It concludes that the
contribution both originated from foreign funds and was
laundered through Gandhi. The Majority suggests that DNC
officials had concerns about the contribution at the time it
was received and concludes that DNC General Counsel Joseph
Sandler and the DNC willfully postponed returning the
contribution until after the election.
The Minority agrees that this contribution should have been
handled more carefully, but disagrees with the Majority's
presentation of the facts.
Despite evidence to the contrary, the Majority
asserts that the presentation of the Gandhi award to Clinton
was arranged well in advance of the DNC event. The evidence
obtained by the Committee indicates that the presentation of
the award to Clinton was not arranged in advance, but was
handled at the event.35 Gandhi told Committee staff
that he did not mention the award to anyone until the event,
and that he did not meet John Huang until the
event.36
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ Joseph Sandler deposition, 5/15/97, pp. 105-14. Joseph
Sandler, 9/10/97 Hrg., p. 100.
\36\ Staff Interview of Yogesh Gandhi, 3/26/97.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority incorrectly claims that evidence
indicates that the DNC purposefully delayed return of the
Gandhi contribution until after the election. Sandler testified
that the date of the 1996 election was not a factor in the
decision to return the Gandhi contribution.37 He
returned the contribution approximately two weeks after press
allegations first surfaced raising questions about Gandhi's
solvency.38
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ Joseph Sandler deposition, 5/15/97, p. 116.
\38\ Joseph Sandler deposition, 5/15/97, pp. 116-18.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority unfairly insists that there was
concern over the Gandhi contribution inside the DNC at the time
it was received. The Committee developed no evidence suggesting
anyone at the DNC was initially concerned about the Gandhi
contribution. DNC Finance Director Richard Sullivan actually
testified that ``John [Huang] showed me the $325,000
contribution from Gandhi, from Yogesh Gandhi, and I believe he
stated he was holding on to it until he could vet it with
Joe.'' Although Sullivan testified that Huang later told him he
had spoken to Sandler about the contribution, Sandler testified
that Huang did not bring the contribution to him for review and
that he would have remembered if Huang had done
so.39 Sullivan similarly testified that Huang
represented that at least one other contribution had been
reviewed, while Sandler testified Huang never brought it to
him.40
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ Richard Sullivan deposition, 6/5/97, pp. 37-39; Joseph
Sandler, 9/10/97 Hrg., p. 13.
\40\ Joseph Sandler, 9/10/97 Hrg., p. 13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response to Majority Report Chapter 12: ``Ted Sioeng''
In this chapter, the Majority examines political
contributions by Ted Sioeng, his family, and related business
interests in the United States. Sioeng is a wealthy Indonesian-
born businessman with extensive business interests in China.
The recipients of his contributions included the DNC, the RNC's
National Policy Forum, and Matt Fong, a Republican currently
serving as California State Treasurer. Although the Majority
acknowledges that it cannot establish any connection between
these Sioeng-related contributions and the Chinese government,
the Majority's principal conclusion is that approximately half
of the $400,000 contributed by Sioeng-related interests to the
DNC consisted of ``foreign money.''
The Majority's analysis is misleading and incomplete as to
the central question of whether any of these contributions
violated federal campaign laws. Existing law does not prohibit
using ``foreign money'' to fund federal political contributions
by individuals so long as those contributions are, in fact,
made by persons legally eligible to contribute (i.e., U.S.
citizens or legal permanent residents) with their own
funds.41 Much of the Majority's analysis of the bank
records underlying the contributions at issue completely
ignores this critical issue.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ See Minority Report Chapters 1 and 20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority report ignores Jessica Elnitiarta's
contribution to the National Policy Forum (``NPF'). The
Minority Report raises troubling questions about the actual
source of the funds donated to the NPF, a de facto subsidiary
of the Republican National Committee. The day before Sioeng's
daughter, Jessica Elnitiarta, donated $50,000 to the NPF, the
Panda Industries account which funded the contribution had a
balance of only $1,300.42 That same day, Ted Sioeng
wrote a check for $50,000 from his personal account into the
account of Panda Industries.43 These transfers raise
the fair inference that Sioeng both directed and was the real
source of the NPF donation. In examining this same transaction,
the Majority overlooks the evidence that Sioeng, a nonresident
alien, probably directed the NPF contribution and, instead,
merely concludes that, based on the evidence available to the
Committee, it is impossible to determine whether Sioeng's
reimbursement of his daughter's contribution came from foreign
monies. This does not, however, remove the principal concern
raised by this contribution: that Sioeng may have directed the
contribution of $50,000 to the NPF.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI detailee, to
Minority Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
\43\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI detailee, to
Minority Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority also ignores that Elnitiarta's contribution to
the NPF was solicited by Steve Kinney, an aide to Speaker
Gingrich, and was collected by Kinney the day before Sioeng sat
next to Speaker Gingrich at a Beverly Hills event in
1996.44 These facts raise the strong inference that
Sioeng's seating next to the Speaker was a reward for his
daughter's contribution to NPF, but are ignored by the
Majority.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI agent, to Senate
Investigating Team re: China Press newspaper article of 7/22/95'', 7/
23/97; Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot, FBI detailee, to Minority
Counsel, re: ``Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97; Staff
interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, 6/19/97; Los Angeles Times, 7/4/97.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority ignores the crucial legal questions
regarding Sioeng-related contributions because it focuses
solely on identifying possible ``foreign money'' sources of
those political contributions. As noted above, a U.S. citizen
or legal permanent resident, such as Sioeng's daughter and his
associates, can make contributions funded entirely by ``foreign
money'' so long as the money belongs to the donor and the donor
of record is actually the person making the contribution
decision, not simply acting as a conduit for
others.45 The issue of whether part of the monies
contributed to Fong comes from overseas is not nearly as
significant as the fact that Fong actively solicited a $100,000
contribution from Sioeng, a person ineligible to donate,
personally received a check for $30,000 from him, and failed to
ascertain whether Sioeng was eligible to contribute. Fong then
unpersuasively testified that he thought that Sioeng was making
a contribution on behalf of one of his sons--which would still
be illegal as a contribution in the name of
another.46 Indeed, the Majority Report contains no
reference whatsoever to the deposition testimony which Fong
provided to the Committee.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ See Minority Report Chapters 1 and 20.
\46\ Minority Report Chapter 7: Ted Sioeng.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Without sufficient evidence, the Majority
characterizes a $50,000 contribution to the DNC from Kent La, a
business associate of Sioeng's, as Sioeng-related. The Majority
suggests that Sioeng may have directed this contribution; it
bases this on La's characterization of Jessica Elnitiarta (in a
telephone interview) as his ``supervisor.'' 47 This
is an extremely slender reed upon which to ascribe La's
contribution to Ted Sioeng. The Majority failed to mention
another Committee interview in which La's wife described the
contribution at issue: ``La advised that after she and her
husband learned from Jessica [Elnitiarta] that Ted Sioeng had
made a big donation to the President, La's husband decided to
do the same. La advised that another reason they gave money to
President Clinton was because the President supported trade
increases with China and granted favorite nation status to
China. La advised that no one forced or coerced them into
donating the money.'' 48
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ The factual support for the Majority's contention that La
described Elnitiarta as his ``supervisor'' is exceedingly unclear. The
Majority's characterization of La's statements is not supported by the
only report of a telephone interview with La that is known to the
Minority. On May 13, 1997 FBI detailee Steven E. Hendershot contacted
Kent La and, because La's English was ``not very good,'' conducted an
interview in Chinese. Memorandum from Steven E. Hendershot to Senate
Investigative Team re: Contact with Kent La, 5/14/97. During that
interview, La offered no characterization of his business relationship
with Elnitiarta. Id. There are no records of any additional FBI
interviews of La and it is unlikely, given La's lack of English
fluency, that members of the Majority staff could have conducted such
an interview.
\48\ Memorandum from FBI detailee Vo Duong Tran to Senate
Investigative Team re: Interview of Nancy La, 5/25/97.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority also notes that it sought to depose La, but
was unable to get the Minority's approval for the issuance of
the subpoena. The resulting unstated inference--that the
Minority's failure to approve the proposed subpoena was
motivated by a desire to obstruct the Committee's
investigation--is unfair and inaccurate. What the Majority
Report failed to explain was that a subpoena to La had already
been issued with the Minority's approval, but that the Majority
came to discover it had issued an invalid subpoena which
mistakenly named La's cousin, Vinh B. La.49 When the
Majority proposed to re-issue corrected subpoenas for both Kent
La and Vinh B. La, the Minority sought equivalent technical
corrections of subpoenas that had been issued to RNC officials.
When the Majority made it clear that it was unwilling to extend
the Minority the courtesy of reciprocal technical corrections
on subpoenas already issued, the Minority declined to approve
the requested subpoenas for Kent La and Vinh B.
La.50 The Majority had the authority to vote to
issue the requested subpoenas over the Minority's objections,
but did not do so.51
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ Letter from Laura S. Shores, counsel to Kent La, to Majority
Counsel, re: Kent La, 11/6/97.
\50\ The text of Senator Glenn's 11/19/97 letter to Chairman
Thompson on this matter is as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pursuant to the Rules of the Governmental Affairs
Committee, I am writing to object to the Majority's
proposed issuance of two subpoenas--a corrected subpoena
for Vinh B. La and a new subpoena for Kent La. I do so
reluctantly because I have no interest in impeding the
legitimate course of the investigation. I am compelled to
object, however, because precisely the same requests by the
minority for subpoenas to correct alleged technical defects
have been ignored and effectively denied. For example, The
Committee issued deposition subpoenas for Curt Anderson and
Jill Hanson that asked for depositions on dates that had
already passed by the time that service was effected. The
Minority has twice unsuccessfully sought to have these
technical defects corrected by new subpoenas. On another
occasion, we detailed for the Majority how Martin
Weinstein, counsel for several RNC officials, misled the
Committee about his representation of Tim Barnes and caused
the Committee to serve a deposition subpoena on Mr.
Weinstein rather than his actual counsel, Mr. Burchfield.
Our request that a corrected subpoena be served on Mr.
Barnes was ignored.
The Minority has asked your staff to correct these
subpoenas at the same time that your requested subpoenas
are issued, but have received no response. Under these
circumstances, I am compelled to object to the issuance of
the Majority's proposed subpoenas to Vinh B. La and Kent
La.
\51\ Memorandum from Majority Counsel Michael Bopp to Chief
Minority Counsel Alan Baron re: Notice of Deposition Subpoenas, 11/14/
97.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority's unwillingness to explore Sioeng's
dealings with Republican candidates contrasts starkly with its
willingness to use bank records to tie Sioeng to Chinese
government officials. In one notable instance, the Majority
appears to have overreached considerably in suggesting that a
$10,000 check made out to the ``O.C. Chinese Friendship Ass.''
in 1995 ``may have been intended for an organization called the
Overseas Friendship Association'' which the Majority Report
describes as an instrument of the Chinese Communist Party. From
the Minority's perspective, a more reasonable interpretation
(at least one that takes into account the ``C'' following the
``O'') is that Sioeng donated this $10,000 to a slightly more
benign organization: the Orange County (``O.C.'') Chinese
Friendship Association.
Response to Majority Report Chapter 13: ``Huang's Years at Lippo''
In this chapter, the Majority suggests that the Lippo
Group's shifting focus from Indonesia to the emerging markets
of the People's Republic of China over the last five years
indicates that the Lippo Group has a suspicious relationship
with the Chinese Government. The Majority also claims that John
Huang engaged in a pattern of illegal political contributions
on behalf of the Lippo Group.
The Majority provides scant evidence for its conclusions,
however, and ignores much evidence to the contrary.
Based on scant evidence, the Majority asserts that
Lippo Group joint venture partner China Resources is a
corporate agent of espionage for the government of China. The
only evidence developed by the Committee indicates that the
Lippo Group has a business relationship with China Resources, a
major conglomerate owned by the Chinese government that acts as
a licensed intermediary for outside businesses doing business
in China.52 The Majority fails to mention, for
example, that according to a 1992 estimate, China Resources has
29 wholly owned subsidiaries and ``hundreds'' of joint
ventures, including ventures with U.S.
corporations.53 While there have been allegations
that China Resources engages in intelligence gathering on
behalf of the Chinese Government, no evidence has been
developed that suggests that the Lippo Group has ever acted as
agent of China Resources or provided any intelligence
information to the Chinese Government.54
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ Thomas Hampson, 7/15/97 Hrg. pp. 67-68.
\53\ Xinhua wire service, 11/10/92. On 2/7/96, the Harris
Corporation, an NYSE-listed company, issued a press release announcing
that it had been awarded a $2.7 million contract to supply radio
terminals to a Northwest Electric Power Group, an electric company in
the PRC. The press release states that China Resources National
Corporation, a branch of China Resources Group, represented Northwest
Electric Power. The press release described China Resources National
Corporation as ``an import/export company that acts as a licensed
intermediary for outside companies doing business in China.'' A 6/26/85
press release of the Universal Satellite Corp., a public company based
in New York, announced a contract to sell high-resolution television
projectors to Strong Progress Ltd., a subsidiary of China Resources
Group of Hong Kong.
\54\ According to the Los Angeles Times, the Riady family issued a
statement in February of 1998 explaining the nature of their commercial
relationship with China Resources and asserting that they have not
``gathered classified information or [performed] other intelligence
operations'' in the course of their dealings with international
partners. Los Angeles Times, 2/23/98. In addition, the classified
information provided to the Committee supports the conclusion only that
the Riadys' relationship with the Chinese Government involved normal
business dealings within China.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority asserts that an audiotape of a DNC
event attended by the Vice President indicates that Huang may
have arranged a White House meeting between Vice President Gore
and the vice chairman of China Resources, Shen Jueren. The
Majorityalleges that Huang may have arranged three ``meetings''
between Shen Jueren and the Vice President--a ``meeting'' in the White
House on Friday, September 24, 1993; a ``meeting'' at a California law
firm in the afternoon of Monday, September 27, 1993; and a ``meeting''
at a DNC event in California later that same Monday. There is scant
evidence, however, to support these alleged ``meetings.'' The meeting
on Friday was a short visit with the Vice President's Chief of Staff,
not the Vice President; 55 and the meeting on Monday in the
afternoon was with approximately 25 Asian Americans and Shen Jueren was
not listed as an attendee.56 Finally, the meeting on Friday
evening was in fact a DNC ``Reception/Dinner'' attended by
approximately 50 individuals, including Shen Jueren. The Vice President
was not seated at the same table as Shen at this event.57
Despite the documentary evidence, the Majority relies on an alleged
exchange captured on audiotape at the law firm event to argue that on
the previous Friday, a White House meeting may have occurred. This
audiotape is largely inaudible but appears to reflect that at the law
firm event, an individual stated that ``Kevin said he met you last
Friday and I also come.'' 58 The tape does not seem to refer
to Shen, nor, more importantly, was Shen listed as in attendance at
that afternoon event.59 The Majority's reliance on this tape
to allege a meeting, despite all evidence to the contrary, is
unpersuasive.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ White House Communications Agency audio tape, 9/27/93, Letter
to Jack Quinn, 10/7/93, EOP 49490.
\56\ List of attendees at 9/27/93 afternoon event, EOP 965-969.
\57\ Briefing papers and attendees for DNC ``Reception/Dinner,'' 9/
27/93, 6:00 p.m., EOP 962-964.
\58\ White House Communications Agency audio tape, 9/27/93.
\59\ List of attendees at 9/27/93 afternoon event, EOP 965-969; In
addition, even if the reference of ``Kevin'' is to Shen Jueren, the
individual could very well have been speaking to the Vice President's
Chief of Staff, Jack Quinn, who accompanied the Vice President to the
law firm event and who had briefly met Shen Jueren the Friday before
that event.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority implies that John Huang improperly
transmitted information to members of the Lippo Group and to
the Chinese government, despite insufficient evidence. The
Committee developed no evidence that Huang ever mishandled or
passed classified or other sensitive information. Moreover,
evidence gathered by the Committee indicates that Huang's
contacts with Lippo employees were for administrative or
personal reasons.60 For example, James Per Lee, the
current president of Lippo Bank in California testified in his
deposition that he had investigated the approximately 200 calls
exchanged between Huang and Los Angeles-based Lippo employees
and concluded that these calls were routine and brief. Per Lee
testified that the calls were exchanges primarily between Huang
and the bank's executive secretary in order to relay messages
of calls received, and that calls to other employees concerned
such matters as important bank clients, an appearance by Huang
in a Chinese New Year's parade, and administrative matters
dealing with the domestic subsidiaries.61 After Per
Lee's deposition, the Majority abruptly canceled his scheduled
appearance before the Committee 62 and fails in its
Report to recognize the Lee's deposition testimony.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ Among one summary of Huang's ``Lippo contacts'' were calls
placed from Huang's Glendale home to the home of Lippo bank employee
Ken Yuen, although Mr. Yuen testified in deposition that his wife was
friends with Jane Huang. Ken Yuen deposition, 4/30/97, p. 23. No
attempt was made to determine if Huang was in Glendale or Washington at
the time such ``contacts'' occurred.
\61\ James Per Lee deposition, 5/2/97, pp. 93-102.
\62\ Harold Arthur, 7/15/97 Hrg., pp. 140-141.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority incorrectly asserts that three 1993
contributions from Lippo subsidiaries in the United States to
the DNC were reimbursed with foreign funds. There is no
evidence to support the Majority claim that three contributions
to the DNC in September 1993 from three Lippo-owned California
corporations were reimbursed with funds from abroad. Documents
suggest that the contributions consisted of income generated in
the U.S. For example, the Committee discovered a reimbursement
request for a 1992 contribution from Hip Hing Holdings, but did
not discover similar requests for the 1993 contributions,
despite reviewing all such reimbursement requests for the
relevant time period.63 In addition, contrary to the
Majority's assertions, administrator Juliana Utomo did not
testify that these contributions were reimbursed from
Indonesia.64 And finally, unlike the domestic income
generated for the 1992 contribution, the domestic income
generated for each of the three companies that contributed in
1993 was more than sufficient to make the contributions from
those funds.65 The Majority's assertion that the
1993 contributions were reimbursed by funds from Indonesia has
no evidentiary support.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ Lippo Group holding companies requests for reimbursement of
expenses from August to December 1993, HHH 0236-37.
\64\ Juliana Utomo, 7/15/97 Hrg., pp. 12-15.
\65\ Exhibit 105. During the July 15 hearing, Senator Thompson
referred to an Advisory Opinion issued by the Federal Election
Commission, the summary of which states that ``in order for a
contribution to be legal, a domestic subsidiary must make contributions
out of net profits.'' Advisory Opinion 1992-16. While the Opinion holds
it is proper for the particular domestic subsidiary seeking the Opinion
to make contributions from its net profits, it does advise whether
contributions from the net income of a domestic subsidiary operating at
a loss are permissible. See legal analysis in Chapter 1, supra.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority asserts that the Lippo Bank of
California is controlled by the Lippo Group from abroad. In
public testimony before the Committee, former bank President
Harold Arthur testified the bank is owned and controlled by
James Riady and managed by the Bank's Board. Arthur testified,
``To the extent that any company controlled by a Riady family
member is included within the portfolio of companies and
investments under the common name of The Lippo Group, it could
be argued that it is part of the Lippo Group. However, . . .
the Bank is neither a subsidiary, nor a division of, nor
controlled by, any company, group, partnership trust or other
person or entity within the Lippo Group or otherwise.''
66
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ Harold Arthur, Opening Statement, 7/15/97 Hrg., p. 10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response to Majority Report Chapter 14: ``Huang at Commerce''
In this chapter, the Majority attempts to suggest that John
Huang, while employed at the Department of Commerce, was a spy
for the Riadys's Lippo Group, and, by extension, the Chinese
government. After first implying that Huang was purposefully
and carefully restricted from policy matters relating to China,
the Majority then suggests that Huang improperly accessed and
misused classified materials. The Majority also makes a point
of noting that the Committee's work was complicated by Huang's
refusal to cooperate.
The Majority fails to note, however, that Huang had offered
to testify before the Committee without any restrictions as to
allegations that he had engaged in espionage.67 The
rest of the Majority's conclusions are similarly based on
ignoring or mischaracterizing evidence before the Committee.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ Opening Statement of Senator Glenn, 7/8/97 Hrg., pp. 30-34.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority's assertion that it could not
adequately investigate Huang's role at Commerce because Huang
refused to cooperate with the Committee is partially correct.
The Majority ignores the fact that the Committee took dozens of
depositions, received thousands of documents and held public
hearings on Huang's role while at Commerce.
The Majority asserts that Huang was excluded from
policy-making at the Department of Commerce because he ``was
not capable of doing the work.'' In fact, Huang was not
explicitly excluded from any policy area or from receiving any
policy-related information. Huang was hired by his immediate
supervisor Charles Meissner to fulfill a primarily
administrative position with the concurrence of Undersecretary
of International Trade, Jeffrey Garten.68 While
Huang played a limited policy role at Commerce, this was
primarily due to the administrative nature of his position and
inter-department tension. Responsibility for high-profile areas
was vested primarily at the Undersecretary and Deputy
Undersecretary level, two levels above Huang.69 No
directive of any sort was ever issued by any of Huang's
superiors that Huang was to be restricted from access to any
policy area, including China, or that he be ``walled off.''
70 Huang was also never restricted, implicitly or
explicitly, from receiving information regarding any particular
country.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ Jeffrey Garten, 7/16/97 Hrg., pp. 120-21.
\69\ Jeffrey Garten, 7/16/97 Hrg., p. 122.
\70\ Jeffrey Garten, 7/16/97 Hrg., p. 122, 137.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority asserts that the Department of
Commerce security clearance procedures were inadequate and that
``warning signs'' pertaining to Huang were ignored. In fact,
procedures used for Huang's clearance were identical to every
other political appointee and no issues were uncovered in this
investigation to suggest that Huang should have been denied a
security clearance. Several issues relating to issuance of the
clearances follow:
The Majority asserts that the Clinton
Administration initiated the policy of granting all Department
of Commerce Officials an interim clearance. In fact, the policy
of granting all political employees interim clearances was
determined by career Department of Commerce Officials and not
by political appointees or other Administration
officials.71 Although interim clearances had been
issued in previous administrations, Steven Garmon, a career
employee was then the Director of the Department of Commerce
Security Office, instituted a policy of automatically granting
interim clearances to all appointees in reaction to criticism
which had been leveled at the Security Office in previous
administrations over the delays political appointees had faced
in obtaining their clearances and their consequent inability to
attend certain meetings or receive certain
information.72 The policy was changed by Secretary
William Daley in February 1997.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ Steven Garmon deposition, 5/23/97, pp. 25-27; Paul Buskirk
deposition, 6/3/97, pp. 31-35.
\72\ Steven Garmon deposition, 5/23/97, pp. 33-34.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority asserts that a background check prior
to issuance of Huang's interim security clearances showed that
he had been ``arrested or detained,'' and contends the finding
was not followed up. In fact, Huang was never arrested or
detained, and the NCIC record was reviewed by the agent
handling the Huang clearance and by his superior, Security
Office Deputy Director, Paul Buskirk.73 Buskirk
determined that the Immigration and Naturalization Service
entry was within days of Huang's marriage in 1972, and was
likely a fingerprint check as a part of the initiation of
Huang's application for citizenship.74 Buskirk's
determination is supported by INS records produced to the
Committee that indicate Huang was fingerprinted prior to being
granted permanent resident status and was never arrested or
detained.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\73\ Joseph Burns deposition, 5/23/97, pp. 55-56.
\74\ Paul Buskirk deposition, 6/3/97, pp. 53-54.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority asserts that the lack of an overseas
background check of Huang has left unresolved questions about
Huang's contacts with the Chinese government. An overseas
investigation was not conducted because the Office of Personnel
Management determined that it was not necessary based on the
fact that Huang had emigrated from Taiwan in 1969 and had been
living in the U.S. since that time. Moreover, no derogatory
information was discovered in the domestic background
investigation.75
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\75\ Letter to Rep. Larry Combest from James King, Director of OPM,
10/30/96.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority asserts that an OPM investigator made
a notation on Huang's file that signified he was a ``potential
security problem,'' and that this notation was ignored by the
Department of Commerce Security Office. In fact, the ``E''
notation on a security file refers to unresolved issues such as
a medical problem, not to indicate a potential security risk.
No evidence was found in OPM's background check on Huang that
related to loyalty, terrorism, dishonesty in the application or
examination process, felony offenses, liquor law violations,
employment information, or even disturbing the
peace.76
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\76\ Federal Investigative Programs Manual, Office of Personnel
Management, 1991. The Majority could not have regarded this as a
serious issue as the Minority was never notified of the interview of
the OPM staff person, and no witness was questioned about the ``E''
notation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority implies that Huang may have
improperly accessed classified information while at the
Department of Commerce or received classified information
beyond his 18-month tenure at Commerce. In fact, there is no
evidence that Huang ever improperly accessed classified
information or accessed any classified information outside of
his 18 months of employment at the Department of Commerce. None
of the intelligence officials questioned by the Committee
indicated that there was any evidence of mishandling of
classified information on the part of John Huang.77
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\77\ 7/16/97 Hrg., pp. 222-227.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority asserts that Huang had access to
unprecedented amounts of classified information. In fact, Huang
repeatedly declined access to additional classified information
and received less classified material than either his
predecessor or other individuals at his level. Huang turned
down the suggestion of Meissner and Security Officer Bob
Gallagher that he get an SCI clearance, a level above top
secret.78 Huang also never developed his cable
profile to receive anything other that cables at the secret
level addressed directly to him.79 Huang's
predecessor Rick Johnston received more frequent briefings and
more extensive information than John Huang.80
Testimony established that Huang's role, while primarily
administrative, required him to be able to make informed
decisions on a variety of policy issues about which he received
classified information.81
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\78\ Robert Gallagher deposition, 5/30/97, p. 13.
\79\ Staff Interview with Lewis Williams, 6/12/97.
\80\ Staff interview of Richard Johnston, Jr., 6/12/97.
\81\ David Rothkopf deposition, 6/2/97, p. 30.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority asserts that Huang's use of the
Washington D.C. office of Stephens, Inc. is ``cloaked in
mystery,'' and implies that Huang's visits to Stephens were
used to pass secret information to outsiders. Although the
details of Huang's visits to the Stephen's office are not fully
known to the Committee, the Majority neglected to request the
appearance at public hearings of those individuals with
knowledge of these details. For example, the Majority did not
call as a witness Vernon Weaver, the head of the Washington
office of Stephens, Inc., although Weaver had explained to the
Committee in an interview the uses of the Stephens office.
Weaver explained that Huang had used the office before he began
employment at Commerce, that other people used the office, and
that Weaver in turn used an office in the Lippo Bank when he
was in California.82 Rather than call Weaver as a
witness, the Majority instead called Paula Greene, a secretary
at the Stephens office, although she was not able to provide
similar information.83 The Majority is correct that
the purpose of Huang's visits is unclear, but it is unfair to
cast this ambiguity in the most sinister light possible.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ Staff Interview of Vernon Weaver.
\83\ Paula Greene, 7/17/97 Hrg.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority asserts that Huang arranged a meeting
between Weaver and California State Treasurer Matt Fong which
resulted in Stephens receiving business from the State of
California. The Majority appears to rely exclusively on Huang's
agenda in making this assertion. Neither Fong nor Weaver were
ever questioned about this meeting or the business relationship
between Stephens and the state although Fong was deposed and
Weaver was interviewed by Committee staff.
response to majority report chapter 15: ``john huang moves from
commerce to the dnc''
In this chapter, the Majority goes to great lengths to
imply that there was something sinister in the hiring of John
Huang by the Democratic National Committee (``DNC''). The
Majority repeatedly asserts that Huang was hired based upon the
President's intervention on his behalf.
The Majority's conclusions are not supported by accurate
descriptions of the testimony and omit critical facts. There is
no evidence that Huang's hiring was suspicious, that it was
part of an effort to raise foreign money, or that the
President's involvement in the process was either significant
or inappropriate.
The Majority falsely implies that there was
something inappropriate about the President being involved with
Huang's move to the DNC to raise money in the Asian American
community. The Majority's discussion of the President's
``involvement'' in Huang's hiring is misleading and a
distortion of the facts. As noted below, the President did not
play a ``central role'' in Huang's hiring, but even if he had,
as the leader of his party, it is perfectly appropriate for the
President to take an interest in DNC personnel matters,
particularly when the DNC was reaching out to a new community,
Asian-Americans. Nor does the fact that Huang was hired to
raise money in the Asian-American community mean that there was
a plan to funnel foreign money into federal elections. With the
November 1995 initiation of the Asian Pacific American
Leadership Council, the DNC was formally reaching out to a new
community; 84 previously, the DNC had established
fundraising and outreach programs in other minority communities
such as in the Hispanic, African-American, and Jewish
communities, and it also had fundraising and outreach to
women's groups.85
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\84\ Donald L. Fowler deposition, 5/21/97, pp. 190-191; Richard L.
Sullivan deposition, 6/5/97, pp. 12-13.
\85\ Richard L. Sullivan deposition, 6/5/97, p. 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority's claim that the President ``played a
central role'' in Huang's hiring is supported by misleading,
and inaccurately characterized testimony. The Majority cites to
press accounts and unsworn interviews to describe a
conversation between DNC Finance Chairman Marvin Rosen and the
President relating to Huang, despite the fact that the
Committee deposed Rosen and therefore sworn testimony was
available. The Majority fails to mention that Rosen stated in
his deposition that his conversation with the President
regarding Huang was ``very brief, seconds of time.''
86 The Majority's conclusion that ``the President
himself intervened'' with the DNC to hire Huang is supported
only by this brief conversation that occurred when the
President happened to see Rosen in the receiving line at a
fundraiser. In addition, DNC National Chairman Don Fowler
testified that he personally made the decision to hire Huang,
without consulting anyone from the White House and without
knowledge of the President speaking to Rosen.87
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\86\ Marvin S. Rosen deposition, 5/19/97, pp. 139-140.
\87\ Donald L. Fowler deposition, 5/19/97, p. 171.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority Report falsely implies that Huang
received no training. Despite a discussion about Huang's hiring
and conversations about his training (and additional discussion
of this subject in other chapters), the Majority fails to
mention the uncontested fact that Huang was trained. The
Majority extensively investigated this issue, asking numerous
witnesses about Huang's training and developed a significant
record that clearly establishes that Huang was trained. Huang
was placed at a group training session by fellow Finance
staffer and office mate Sam Newman; 88 a copy of the
DNC's legal guidelines for fundraising was found in his files;
89 DNC General Counsel Joseph Sandler testified that
after reviewing checks with Huang after a fundraising event,
Sandler determined that Huang was familiar with the laws and
guidelines by which he was to raise money; 90 and
Sullivan testified that Sandler communicated this to
him.91 Despite this uncontested record developed by
the Majority, there is absolutely no mention of these facts in
the Majority Report, which instead focuses on discussions
before Huang was hired regarding the type of training that
Huang should receive. These omissions leave the reader with the
false impression that Huang was not trained.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ Samuel Newman deposition, 7/17/97, pp. 142-143.
\89\ Joseph E. Sandler, 9/10/97 Hrg., p. 13.
\90\ Joseph E. Sandler deposition, 8/21/97, p. 17. Sandler also
testified that he communicated this level of comfort to either DNC
Finance Director Richard Sullivan or DNC Treasurer Scott Pastrick.
\91\ Richard L. Sullivan deposition, 6/5/97, p. 23.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
response to majority report chapter 16: ``john huang's illegal
fundraising at the dnc''
In this chapter, the Majority discusses Huang's fundraising
while at the DNC. The Majority states that there were concerns
regarding Huang's fundraising before he even undertook his
first event and concludes that Huang's involvement in and/or
organization of several events should have been a ``warning
sign'' for the DNC.
In so doing, however, the Majority draws conclusions that
are not supported by the evidence.
The Majority Report falsely claims that there is
``contradictory testimony on whether Sandler trained Huang.''
The testimony is absolutely consistent that Huang was trained
(see Response to Majority Chapter 15). In this chapter the
Majority tries to exploit a minor contradiction regarding the
``type'' of training Huang received--the training given to all
DNC fundraisers or a special training just for Huang. Even this
contradiction has been reconciled in testimony before the
Committee: former DNC Finance Director Richard Sullivan's
understanding that Huang received private training
92 most likely resulted from the session in which
Sandler reviewed checks with Huang after his first
event.93
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\92\ Richard L. Sullivan deposition, 6/5/97, pp. 23-24.
\93\ Joseph E. Sandler deposition, 8/21/97, p. 15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority Report illogically asserts that
contributions solicited by Huang and returned by him in March
of 1996 were a ``warning sign.'' Far from being evidence that
Huang was acting improperly, Huang's returns of contributions
suggest that he knew the rules and was following them by
initiating the return of funds he believed to be problematic.
The Majority Report fails to mention the lack of
any corroboration of Rawein Soberano's statements regarding
Huang and the DNC. The alleged lunch between Soberano and Huang
is not noted on Soberano's calendar, and Soberano says there
was no credit card, reservation, or other documentary evidence
of his lunch.\94\ Moreover, the Minority discovered that the
Majority made undisclosed failed attempts to corroborate
Soberano's story. When the Minority called the Organization of
Chinese Americans to determine whether Huang was registered for
its June 1996 conference in San Francisco (at which Soberano
claimed that he saw Huang), we learned that Huang was not on
the registration list, and that the Majority had (undisclosed
to the Minority) called and received the same information.
Indeed, the sole corroboration the Majority claims to have for
Soberano's story is an interview with Jerry Parker (from whom
Soberano rented office space). It should be noted that the
Majority neither notified nor invited the Minority to this
interview. The Majority also failed to provide the Minority
with either a transcript or a memorandum from this interview.
According to the Majority, Parker ``confirmed'' in this
interview that Soberano told him he had lunch with Huang. If
the Majority had, in fact, obtained corroboration of Soberano's
allegations, it is unclear why the Majority did not provide
this information to the Minority or mention the information
during the public hearing on this subject.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\94\ Rawlein Soberano, 9/16/97 Hrg., pp. 211-212; Rawlein Soberano
deposition, 5/13/97, pp. 29-31, 39.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
response to majority report chapter 17: ``The Hsi Lai Temple Fundraiser
and Maria Hsia''
In this chapter, the Majority discusses the DNC-sponsored
event at the Hsi Lai Buddhist Temple in Hacienda Heights,
California. The Majority spends nearly half of the chapter
discussing the activities of Democratic activist Maria Hsia and
her associates, including DNC fundraiser John Huang. The
Majority details the contributions made by monastics since 1993
who were reimbursed by the Temple. Finally, the Majority
discusses the DNC event held at the Hsi Lai Temple on April 29,
1996, focusing on what the Majority believes the Vice President
knew and when he knew it.
The Majority's analysis is riddled with inaccuracies and
baseless conclusions. In the most serious of these conclusions,
the Majority inaccurately claims that this event was a
fundraiser, that the Vice President knew this in advance of the
event, and that he proceeded to participate in this event
despite this information.
By mischaracterizing testimony and using documents
in a misleading fashion, the Majority incorrectly asserts that
the Vice President and his staff were aware as early as January
1996 that the Hsi Lai event was to be a fundraiser. The
Majority cites to several memoranda from White House Deputy
Chief of Staff Harold Ickes to prove that the Vice President
was personally and specifically informed of amounts of money
the Temple event was intended to raise. All of these memoranda
are spreadsheets with dozens of other events and goals listed;
none specifically discusses or names the Hsi Lai Temple event.
Contrary to the Majority's assertion, the Vice President's
Deputy Chief of Staff, David Strauss, testified in his
deposition that the Vice President did not look at these
spreadsheets. There were events on those spreadsheets which
never, in fact, occurred but which stayed on the list.\95\ In
making these allegations, the Majority ignores the testimony of
all witnesses with first-hand knowledge about the scheduling
practices of the Vice President's office and about the events
that surrounded the scheduling of the Temple event, including
Strauss,\96\ Kimberly Tilley \97\ and Ladan Manteghi.\98\ In
fact, the Majority refused to call Manteghi as a public witness
despite a letter of request from every Minority Member of the
Committee. For a full discussion of these events, see Minority
Chapters 4 and 21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\95\ David Strauss deposition, 8/14/97, p. 236.
\96\ David Strauss, 9/5/97 Hrg., pp. 31, 39. And see pp. 41-44
where Strauss testifies:
Q: Prior to the time that the newspaper articles appeared
in the fall of 1996, did you have any reason to believe
that anybody on the Vice President's staff had heard that
there was any fundraising engaged in by Ms. Hsia, by virtue
of a call from Mr. Huang?
A: I have no knowledge that anyone did know.
Q: Did you ever know anything about contributions having
been collected or monies having been collected prior to the
April 29th event at the Hsi Lai Temple? There has been
testimony that a certain amount of money was generated in
advance of the event.
A: I had no knowledge of that.
Q: Do you have any reason to believe that the Vice
President knew anything relative to this event, either
prior to the event or that after the event any monies had
been collected?
A: I have no reason to believe that he knew anything
about this.
\97\ Kimberly Tilley deposition, 623/97, p. 124.
\98\ Ladan Manteghi deposition, 8/26/97, pp. 53-57, 67.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority's basis for concluding that the
Temple event was a fundraiser ignores significant evidence that
establishes that it was not. The DNC routinely organizes both
fundraisers and community outreach events since it is important
to motivate both financial and political supporters during a
campaign.\99\ At the Temple event, there was no entrance fee;
tickets were not collected or sold at the door; the speakers
did not solicit donations; and many of those who attended did
not contribute to the DNC at all.\100\ In addition, attendees
at the event confirm that it did not appear to be a fundraiser.
Charlie Woo, told Committee investigators that there was ``no
mention of money at the event.'' \101\ Mona Pasquil, DNC
Western States political director and former director of Asian-
Pacific affairs, testified that she saw no signs of
fundraising, such as a table at the door, name tags, checks
being exchanged, or solicitations for money.\102\ DNC Chairman
Fowler described it as an ``outreach event'' similar to those
he attended at churches in the 1960s; not everyone who attended
also contributed, and there were none of the typical trappings
of a fundraiser.\103\ Fowler also testified, ``[T]here were
three people who made presentations there--myself, the temple
master, and the Vice President. None of the three of us made
any reference to raising money, contributing money, giving
money before or after.'' \104\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\99\ See Chapter 25 of the Minority Report for further discussion
of the distinction between fundraisers and community outreach events.
\100\ Donald L. Fowler, 9/9/97 Hrg., pp. 26-29.
\101\ Staff interview of Charlie Woo, 5/30/97.
\102\ Mona Pasquil deposition, 7/30/97, pp. 59-62.
\103\ Donald L. Fowler, 9/9/97 Hrg., pp. 26-29, 71-72.
\104\ Donald L. Fowler, 9/9/97 Hrg., pp. 29.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Persons associated with the Temple who helped organize the
event also indicated that they did not consider the event to be
a fundraiser.\105\ Man-Ho, assistant to the Temple abbess,
testified at the hearing that Temple personnel did not focus on
fundraising during planning before the event.\106\ In her
deposition, she said that the guests ``were not required to pay
a buck for [the] luncheon. . . .'' \107\ She also told the
Committee that she did not see anything at the event that would
indicate that it was a fundraiser.\108\ The head of the Temple,
Venerable Master Hsing Yun, provided a statement to the
Committee with consistent information.\109\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\105\ Man-Ho Shih, 9/4/97 Hrg., p. 83; Man-Ho Shih deposition, 8/6/
97, pp. 136-146.
\106\ Buddhist nuns, 9497 Hrg., p. 143.
\107\ Man-Ho Shih deposition, 8/6/97, pp. 134-37.
\108\ Man-Ho Shihm 9/4/97 Hrg., pp. 137-139.
\109\ Statement of the Venerable Master Hsing Yun presented during
his interview with Committee investigators, 6/17/97, p. 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ignoring this evidence, the Majority concludes that the
event was a fundraiser based on unfounded inferences:
According to the Majority's Report, Immigration and
Naturalization Service official Daniel Hesse heard references
to money raised, but what the Majority writes that he heard--
``they had raised X amount of dollars''--does not amount to a
solicitation. A solicitation is generally believed to be a
request for contributions whereas this is merely a statement of
what the DNC had raised; far from a request for funds.
Furthermore, this interview was conducted unilaterally by the
Majority, and, though the Majority cites the interview as
having occurred in August of 1997, before the Committee's
hearings on the Temple event, this information was not
introduced at the Committee's public hearing which might have
presented a fuller picture of the event.
The Majority's reliance on Sherry Shaw's assertion that she
heard a solicitation from a luncheon speaker is also not
credible; not one of the approximately 100 others in the
audience claims to have heard this. Moreover, Shaw's assertion
does not comport with Hesse's statements to the Majority or the
recollections of Charlie Woo (another attendee) or Boston Globe
reporter John Aloyisius Farrell. According to the Majority, in
addition to Shaw's statement to Committee FBI agents on May 14,
1997, Shaw submitted a sworn statement to the Committee in
August 1997 which contained this information. Again, this was
the month before Committee hearings on the Temple event, and
once again, the Majority did not divulge this material which it
believed to have been relevant to the investigation.
The Majority inaccurately states that the
solicitation of contributions by Hsia assistant Matt Gorman and
the nuns proves the Temple event was a fundraiser. While Huang
and Hsia used the event to encourage contributions to the DNC
the day after the event occurred, there is no evidence that the
DNC was aware of these activities nor do the activities
establish that the Temple event was a fundraiser.
The Majority incorrectly asserts that the Vice
President's March 15, 1996, meeting with Master Hsing Yun was
set up for the sole purpose of the Master inviting the Vice
President to the Hsi Lai Temple for a DNC event. Temple
administrator Man Ho testified that the Master was not
particularly interested in going to Washington for a possible
meeting with the Vice President.\110\ Although the meeting took
place, it lasted only 10 minutes.\111\ Briefing memos prepared
for the Vice President for the meeting do not mention a DNC
event at the Temple in April of 1996; the Master simply invited
the Vice President to visit the Temple.\112\ Moreover, there is
no evidence that a DNC event was ever discussed, and the
Majority's assertion to the contrary is nothing more than
speculation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\110\ Man-Ho Shih deposition, 8/6/97, p. 96.
\111\ Statement of the Venerable Master Hsing Yun presented during
his interview with Committee investigators, 6/17/97.
\112\ David Strauss, 9/5/97 Hrg., p. 12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority incorrectly states that there never
really was a second event planned at a restaurant in Southern
California for April 29, 1996. While there is little
testamentary evidence that such an event was planned, this does
not prove that Huang and Hsia never contemplated such an event.
At least two documents produced by Hsia's consulting firm, Hsia
& Associates, show that such an event was contemplated by Hsia
at one time.\113\ And Charlie Woo, an attendee at the April 29,
1996 event, told Committee FBI detailees that Huang originally
invited him to attend an event at a restaurant in Southern
California and later called to tell him that the location had
been changed to the Hsi Lai Temple.\114\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\113\ Exhibit 772: 3/23/96 letter from Maria Hsia to the Vice
President, SEN 01719; Invitation to DNC Asian Pacific American
Leadership Council event at Harbour Village Restaurant in Monterey
Park, California; the name of the restaurant is crossed out and Hsi Lai
Temple is written in, SEN 00111.
\114\ Staff interview of Charlie Woo, 5/30/97; see also Richard
Sullivan deposition, 6/25/97, pp. 21-22.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority concludes that the nuns' alteration
and destruction of documents constituted ``deliberate
destruction of evidence'' and was done to protect the Vice
President and Maria Hsia. After the Temple events were
publicized, two nuns involved in Temple bookkeeping and
administration altered and destroyed some documents.\115\ There
is, however, absolutely no evidence that their actions were
undertaken with the knowledge or consent of anyone at the White
House or the DNC. Nonetheless, the evidence does indicate that
at least some Temple officials were conscious of possible
wrongdoing. Yi Chu, the Temple bookkeeper, testified that she
knew the Temple could not contribute directly, in its own name,
which is why she had to go through the process of finding
individuals to write checks.\116\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\115\ Man-Ho Shih, 9/4/97 Hrg., pp. 34-35; Yi Chu, 9/4/97 Hrg., pp.
60-61.
\116\Yi Chu deposition, 8/7/97, p. 31.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority falsely implies that beginning in the
1980s, Maria Hsia had inappropriate access to then-Senator Gore
based on her fundraising activities. What the Majority does not
mention is that fundraising and political outreach
organizations are not only an appropriate and legitimate means
of stimulating public interest in the democratic process, they
are also commonplace. The Majority's insinuation that when
organizations and leaders within the Asian-American community
participate in these activities, something untoward or sinister
must be involved is disturbing. In the 1980s, Hsia helped form
the Pacific Leadership Council and was an active and open
fundraiser in the Asian-American community. There is nothing
sinister about the Vice President reaching out to and raising
money in this community. Hsia was one of hundreds of people who
raised money for the Democrats throughout this country.
The Majority repeats its allegations that Maria
Hsia is an ``agent,'' without stating that the classified
information that forms the basis for this allegation--certain
activities she undertook while an immigration consultant in the
early 1990s--has no connection whatsoever to Hsia's fundraising
for the Democratic party.\117\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\117\ See Minority Chapter 2. See also Affidavit of Maria Hsia, 2/
98.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this chapter, the Majority also takes the
opportunity to mischaracterize the Democratic Senatorial
Campaign Committee's (``DSCC's'') tally program. The Majority
falsely states that the tally program serves as a means by
which contributors can ``earmark'' large ``soft money''
contributions to particular senate candidates in circumvention
of the FECA's hard money limits. The Majority also incorrectly
suggests that the tally program was ``ultimately found to be
illegal'' and terminated. The Majority is wrong on all scores.
First, the Majority is incorrect in its characterization of the
tally program as a program that permits ``earmarking.'' In
fact, the Federal Election Commission rejected this precise
claim when it was made by the National Republican Senatorial
Committee in 1996.\118\ When it dismissed that complaint, the
FEC's general counsel stated that ``there is no evidence that
the DSCC accepted earmarked tallied contributions or pass [sic]
earmarked contributions on to the Democratic Senate candidates
in the form of coordinated party expenditures.''\119\ In fact,
an earlier agreement between the DSCC and FEC was premised on
the fact that the DSCC did not earmark tallied contributions--
although some contributors' participants in the program may
have been confused. As the FEC stated in its April 14, 1997,
letter to the DSCC dismissing the NRSC's complaint about the
tally program ``[u]nderlying the need for the remedial
requirements in the August 1995, conciliation agreement was the
belief that participants in the tally program did not
understand how the tally program differed from earmarking.''
The FEC dismissed allegations that the 1996 tally program
amounted to earmarking or violated the law.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\118\ See Complaint filed 9/27/96 in MUR Nos. 4490 and 4502.
\119\ MUR Nos. 4490 and 4502 at 12 (General Counsel's Report.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response to Majority Report Chapter 18: ``The China Connection: Summary
of Committee's Findings Relating to Efforts of the People's
Republic of China to Influence U.S. Policies and Elections.''
In this chapter, the Majority explains that the Committee's
investigation of campaign finance activities included both a
public examination of foreign interests connected to the U.S.
political process during the 1996 federal election cycle, and
an examination of classified information regarding possible
Chinese Government involvement in the U.S. political process.
The Majority states that the public and classified information
together warrant a number of conclusions. The Majority
identifies six individuals with ``extensive ties'' to the
Chinese Government who ``produced or facilitated foreign
campaign contributions'' from ``the Greater China area'' and
states that ``discussions took place and actions were taken
that suggest . . . that a variety of PRC entities were acting
to influence U.S. elections.'' The Majority concludes:
The Committee has learned in sobering detail of a
wide range of covert PRC efforts in the U.S. and
overseas designed to influence elections in this
country. Many of these activities may or may not have
been part of a single, coordinated effort. Regardless,
a coordinated approach may have evolved over time.
Other efforts, though undertaken by PRC government
entities, have been characterized as rogue activities.
Such fine distinctions fall beyond the scope of this
report.
Unfortunately, the Majority chapter addressing these
important issues does not lay out the information received by
the Committee and then draw clear conclusions based on that
evidence. For example, the chapter does not identify sources
for most of its conclusions or state whether the information
for those conclusions came from the Committee's public
investigation or from the Committee's review of classified
information. In fact, the vast majority of the statements made
in the Majority chapter are derived from public information
that has been available to the Committee and the public for
some time.
Another example of this obfuscation is the Majority's
identification of six individuals who it states have
``extensive'' ties to China or the Chinese Government followed
by its assertion that these ties are demonstrated by political
contributions or other activities that in fact have stronger
connections to Indonesia, Taiwan, Cambodia or Hong Kong. Having
found that there is very little evidence connecting the
individuals it has targeted to China, the Majority curiously
refers to these Asian countries and the then-British controlled
property as the ``Greater China'' area.
Along the way, the Majority chapter also makes a number of
inaccurate or exaggerated statements to support its case. The
Majority chapter contains errors in fact and characterization
even when they are based on public information. Such false and
exaggerated statements based on public information raise
significant questions about the accuracy of the Majority's
conclusions based on classified (``non-public'') information,
which is not available for independent public assessment.\120\
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\120\ The conclusions based on classified information, as stated in
the Majority and Minority Reports, were not approved by any Executive
Branch agency. Letter from George J. Tenet, Director, Central
Intelligence Agency to Senator John Glenn, 2/18/98; Letter from George
J. Tenet to Chairman Fred Thompson, 2/18/98; Letter from Robert M.
Bryant, Deputy Director, FBI to Senator John Glenn, 2/25/98. See also
Letter from Andrew Fois, Assistant Attorney General, Department of
Justice to Chairman Fred Thompson, 7/11/97.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Most important is the fact that, after the Committee's
year-long investigation into the ``China Plan,'' the Majority
chapter does not provide clear or useful information to the
public. For ananalysis of the classified information received
by the Committee during its investigation, see Chapter 2 of this
Minority Report.
The Minority responds to some of the statements set forth
in the Majority chapter:
Most of the Majority's conclusions are based on
media allegations and public information that has been
available to the Committee and the public for months.
Throughout the Majority's chapter on the China Plan, there are
bold assertions about connections to Chinese Government
officials and other fundraising activities without clarifying
upon what information those assertions are based. As a result,
the Majority makes no clear statements about what conclusions
can be derived from public information presented to the
Committee and what conclusions are drawn from classified (or
``non-public'') information. This approach implies that the
Committee received more non-public information than it actually
did to support the Majority's conclusions.
The Majority's quotations of newspaper articles do
not appropriately or accurately describe information made
available directly to the Committee. Reliance in a Senate
Committee report on the media's second hand characterizations
of non-public information is unwarranted, particularly here
where the Committee had the direct information available for
its review.121
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\121\ For example, the Majority chapter cites a February 13, 1997
Washington Post article that stated that Executive Branch agencies had
discovered information that the Chinese Government ``sought to direct
contributions from foreign sources to the Democratic National Committee
before the 1996 presidential campaign.'' Several months later, however,
the Committee received direct testimony from the Executive Branch
agencies themselves that, based on the information available at the
time, there was no indication that the China Plan was directed at
influencing the presidential race or that it had affected that race
with campaign contributions. Closed Committee Hearing, 7/28/97, pp. 41-
44, 54. The Majority chapter also cites a March 9, 1997 Washington Post
article in order to describe a 1996 FBI briefing to members of Congress
regarding the China Plan. Several months after that article appeared,
however, the Committee received direct information and testimony from
the Executive Branch agencies about this and similar briefings. Closed
Committee Hearing, 7/29/97, p. 19-12, 84.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority's chapter on the China Plan fails to
make any clear conclusions, demonstrated by the fact that the
chapter contains 25 statements that include phrases such as
``may or may not,'' ``possibly,'' ``believed to be,''
``indicated,'' and ``suggest.''
The Majority chapter also makes a number of
contradictory assertions and also ignores, without explanation,
crucial facts regarding the foreign connections uncovered in
the Committee's investigation. Some examples are:
The Majority does not explain how
contributions from Indonesia, Taiwan, Cambodia or Hong
Kong demonstrate that the Chinese Government ``may or
may not'' have funneled money into political campaigns.
The contributions and activities listed by the Majority
in its chapter derive from a variety of independent
Asian countries. The Majority's use of the term
``Greater China'' or the ``Greater China Area'' is an
unjustifiable attempt to bend the facts to make all
connections to every Asian country look like a
connection to China.
The Majority does not explain why it has
focused exclusively on certain individuals' ``ties to
China'' without recognizing that the individuals
targeted in its chapter have equal, if not stronger,
ties to Taiwan and Indonesia. It is clear from the
Majority chapter itself that most of the individuals it
lists as having ``extensive ties'' to China or the
Chinese Government in fact have strong ties to Taiwan,
Indonesia or Hong Kong, entities not under the control
of the Chinese Government during the 1996 election
cycle. For example, John Huang was raised in Taiwan
before moving to the United States in 1969 and becoming
an American citizen; Maria Hsia was born in Taiwan and
is an American who continues to have strong family and
institutional ties to that country; and the Riadys are
Indonesians with business interests around the world.
The Majority chapter provides no explanation or
analysis of why it ignored ties to other Asian
countries in order to focus exclusively on China or why
it assumes all ties to any Asian country demonstrates a
tie to China. The Majority also provides no explanation
for why it ignored non-public information about other
countries and their political activities in the United
States. See Minority Chapter 2, Information Not Pursued
by the Committee.
The Majority ignores the contradiction in
its assertion that connections to Taiwan demonstrate
connections to China. The Majority states in its Report
that Taiwan is considered by China to be ``a rogue
province'' but nonetheless assumes that certain
individuals'' connections to Taiwan may also
demonstrate connections to China or to the China Plan.
The Majority chapter explains that a China
Plan was developed after Taiwanese President Lee's
visit to the United States in the spring of 1995, but
does not explain why a number of the activities it
highlights occurred before that time period. The
Majority states that after Taiwanese President Lee's
visit to the U.S. in 1995, the Chinese Government
``[s]ecretly'' developed a plan that went beyond
increasing lobbying efforts to include ``influencing
U.S. policies and elections through, among other means,
financing election campaigns.'' The Majority then
highlights, among other things, a 1989 trip to Taiwan
organized by Maria Hsia, 1993 political contributions
from Lippo Group subsidiaries, and 1993 ``meetings''
involving Shen Jureun. Whether these activities are
connected to the Chinese Government is one question.
Another question is why these activities are
highlighted when the Committee was informed in closed-
door proceedings that prior to 1995 and the formulation
of the so-called China Plan, the Chinese Government's
efforts to promote its interests in the United States
were focused almost exclusively on using traditional
diplomatic means.122
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\122\ Closed Committee Hearing, 7/28/97, p. 5-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority chapter also makes assertions based
on public information that are unsupported by either publicly
available or classified information. This raises serious
questions about the accuracy of the Majority's assertions that
it claims are based on classified information not available to
the public. A few examples of the Majority's misstatement and
exaggerations based on public information are:
The Majority inaccurately claims that in
September 1993, contributions to the DNC by three Lippo
Group subsidiaries located in California were `` paid
with foreign money'' from Jakarta, Indonesia. The
Majority then uses this unproven conclusion to tie the
supposed foreign contributions to ``meetings'' between
the Vice President, and John Huang and Shen Jueren.
According to the Majority, Shen is the head of a
commercial enterprise ``identified as a PRC
intelligence gathering operation.''
There are several inaccuracies in these Majority
assertions.
First, while it is true that the Committee received
evidence that in August of 1992, one subsidiary of the
Lippo Group made a $50,000 contribution to the DNC and,
according to a reimbursement requests obtained by the
Committee, the subsidiary was likely reimbursed for
this contribution from Indonesia, no such evidence was
received regarding the 1993 contributions. The
Committee reviewed the same reimbursement forms for the
three subsidiaries that contributed to the DNC in 1993
and found no document requesting reimbursement for
those checks.123 In addition, the Majority's
general citation to the testimony of a LippoBank
employee does not establish that the 1993 contribution
was reimbursed.124
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\123\ Lippo Group holding companies requests for reimbursements of
expenses from August to December 1993, (HHH 0236-37).
\124\ See Juliana Utomo, 7/15/97, Hrg. pp. 14, 53. (Utomo did not
testify that the 1993 contributions were reimbursed and, in fact, she
did not even take over the relevant responsibility when working for
these subsidiaries until 1994.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, the Majority apparently makes this new
allegation about the 1993 contributions so it can
falsely assert that foreign funds were connected to two
``meetings'' attended by Huang and Vice President Gore
in that same month of 1993. Even here, the Majority has
it wrong. The Majority states that ``the day after
Huang wrote'' the checks, he ``escorted Shen Jueren to
a White House meeting with Gore's chief of staff, Jack
Quinn, and may have met with Gore as well.''
125 Public documents received by the
Committee, however, establish that Huang and Shen
Jueren did not have a meeting with Vice President Gore
on that day.126 Regarding the second alleged
``meeting,'' the Majority is referring to a ``DNC
Reception/Dinner'' in Santa Monica attended by the Vice
President and approximately 50 other people. The Vice
President was not seated at the same table as
Shen.127 The Majority assertions that Shen
had a meeting in the White House with Vice President
Gore is not supported and its description of a DNC
reception and dinner as an additional ``meeting''
between Shen and Vice President Gore is a
mischaracterization of the facts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\125\ The Majority chapter, as provided to the media in February
1988 and as provided to the Minority in ``final'' form on March 2,
1998, stated that ``Huang escorted Shen Jueren to a White House meeting
with Gore and his chief of staff, Jack Quinn.'' On March 3, 1998, the
Majority changed the language to assert that Huang ``may'' have met
with Vice President Gore on that day. This change was welcome, but as
described below, the Majority has continued to make this less
definitive assertion despite the fact that the evidence does not
suggest that a meeting with Vice President Gore occurred on that date.
\126\ The first ``meeting'' was in reality a ``stop by'' meeting
with Jack Quinn, a staff member in the Office of the Vice President.
Letter from Huang to Quinn, 10/07/93 (EOP 049490). In fact, despite the
Majority's assertions in its report about the possibility of a
``meeting'' with Vice President Gore, the Majority never requested the
schedules for the Vice President or Quinn on that day, or requested any
other information from the Vice President's office or Quinn about this
alleged meeting. As a result, the schedules were not received by the
Committee because they were not requested, nor are they responsive to
other Committee requests. In order to assess the Majority's new
allegation in its Report, the Minority requested documents and
information regarding the activities of that day. In addition to the
fact that Huang's letter to Quinn makes clear that Huang and Shen did
not meet with the Vice President on September 24, 1997, documents also
establish that no ``meeting'' took place. Schedule of Vice President
Gore for 9/24/93; Schedule of Jack Quinn for 9/24/93. Instead, it
appears that Huang, Shen and Shen's assistant dropped by for a visit
with Quinn. Letter from Huang to Quinn, 10/17/93 (EOP 049490).
\127\ Briefing papers for Vice President Gore, DNC Reception, 3/27/
93( EOP 000959J-64J) (approximately 50 attendees and Shen Jureaun is
not listed as one of the few people seated at the Vice President's
table.). Earlier that day, Vice President Gore met with over 20 Asian
American leaders at a Los Angeles law firm for approximately 40
minutes. In its chapter on Huang's activities while at the Lippo Bank,
the Majority asserts that an audio tape proves that Shen was present at
that event as well. However, the attendance list for that afternoon
event does not include Shen and the audio tape also does not refer to
Jueren. Briefing papers for Vice President Gore, Meeting with Asian
American Leaders, 4:35-5:15, 9/27/93 (EOP 000965-69); Audio tape, 9/27/
93, White House Communications Agency (Produced to the Committee 10/
97). See Minority Response to Majority Chapter 13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Third, the Majority's description of ``China
Resources Holding,'' a company then ``head[ed]'' by
Shen Jueren who retired in 1995, as one ``identified as
a PRC intelligence-gathering operation'' is apparently
designed to imply there was contact between a Chinese
Government intelligence official and the Vice
President. In addition to falsely stating that the 1993
contributions came ``from foreign funds'' that had some
connection to ``meetings,'' the Majority's description
of China Resources Holding is also an exaggeration.
According to public information, China Resources
Holding is apparently the current name of the entity
once called, and often still referred to as, China
Resources.128 The company has been located
in Hong Kong for 50 years and engages in trading and
investment involving ``retailing, property development,
hotels and infrastructure,'' with an estimated asset
value of 6.5 to 8 billion dollars, 76 percent of which
is in Hong Kong, 17 percent in Mainland China and 7
percent overseas.129 The organization is
also known to be a Chinese Governmen-owned trading and
import/export intermediary that does business within
China as well as with foreign companies, including
American companies.130 The Minority does not
set forth any conclusions about this organization
because the Committee did not conduct a meaningful
investigation on the topic. However, the Majority's
characterization of the organization as a ``PRC
intelligence-gathering operation,'' something the
Majority also alleged during the Committee's public
hearings in July 1997,131 appears to be an
exaggeration of the facts in order to support its
unwarranted conclusion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\128\ See www.chinaresources.co in the internet. The site provides
information about the group and states that China Resources Holding is
the current name of the entity once called, and often still referred to
as, China Resources.
\129\ Financial Times (London), 8/21/93; Time, 5/5/97; Washington
Post, 7/18/97; www.chinaresources.co.
\130\ Time, 5/5/97; Reuters Wire, 3/31/96, 6/26/85, 2/7/96; Xinhua
Wire, 11/10/92; Washington Post, 7/18/97.
\131\ Thomas Hampson, 7/15/97 Hrg. pp. 67-73; Senator Bennett, 7/
15/97, Hrg. pp. 67-73.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority's statement that ``Ted Sioeng
was one of the DNC's largest contributors during the
1996 federal election cycle'' is not supported by the
evidence. The Majority states that ``Sioeng, his family
and his business enterprises contributed $400,000 to
the DNC in 1995 and 1996.'' Public records show,
however, that the $400,000 apparently attributed to
Sioeng by the Majority includes $250,000 given to the
DNC by Sioeng's adult daughter, a U.S. permanent
resident and businesswoman, or from companies that she
legally controls, and $150,000 from two individuals who
are not employed by Sioeng and who are also eligible to
contribute to the DNC.132 Although Sioeng is
associated with these individuals and attended several
DNC events with his family, there certainly is not
sufficient evidence to state that Sioeng, who is not
attributed with giving any money to the DNC, was one of
the ``largest contributors'' to the DNC in the last
election cycle.133
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\132\ Staff interview with Jessica Elnitiarta, Sioeng's daughter,
6/19/97; Memorandum of Steven Hendershot, FBI Agent detailed to the
Committee, ``Re: Jessica Elnitiarta Record Review,'' 8/22/97; Letter
From Thomas McLish, counsel for Elnitiarta, 6/18/97; FEC Records; Other
contributions came from Subandi Tanuwidjaja and Kent La, both of whom
are associated with Sioeng and Elnitiarta, but neither of whom are
employees of Sioeng's. FEC Records; Staff interview with Jessica
Elnitiarta, 6/19/97; FBI Special Investigator interview with Kent La,
5/13/97 (La is an independent distributor who does business with
Sioeng). This interview was conducted in Chinese by an FBI agent
detailed to the Committee who transcribed the contents of the interview
in a report to the Committee dated 5/14/97. There is nothing in the
interview report that states that La works for Sioeng or that La
contributed to the DNC based on requests from Sioeng.
\133\ The Majority also states that Sioeng and his family and
business interests ``spent over $550,000 on political campaigns and
organizations in 1995 and 1996.'' This figure is derived from the
$400,000 contributed to the DNC by his daughter, her companies and
associates; $100,000 contributed to Matt Fong, a Republican California
official, apparently by Sioeng's companies in Hong King and $50,000
contributed by his daughter's company to the National Policy Forum, an
arm of the RNC. See Chapter 7 of this Minority Report.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority's conclusion that the Chinese
Government consulate in Los Angeles gave a hotel owned
by Sioeng $3,000 ``for the purpose of making or
reimbursing'' Sioeng for a political contribution to a
California state candidate is not based on a sufficient
investigation. The Majority states that ``the Committee
has concluded'' that the Chinese Government provided
$3,000 to a hotel in California in order to reimburse
Sioeng for a $5,000 political contribution to a
Republican California state candidate. The Majority
apparently reached this conclusion based only on review
of two bank transfers.134 The Majority did
not request information from the hotel about the reason
for this $3,000 payment and it appears that the payment
may have been made to the hotel to cover expenses of a
Chinese Government television crew that stayed there in
1996.135
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\134\ See footnotes 13 and 14 of the Majority chapter.
\135\ Los Angeles Times, 2/23/97 (stating that attorneys for the
hotel supplied billing records to verify that the hotel charges were to
cover the expenses of a Chinese government television crew in early
1996). The Committee did not request such information and therefore the
Minority is unable to reach a conclusion about the purpose of the
payment to the hotel.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority's statement that Charlie Trie's
contributions solicited for the Presidential Legal
Trust Fund were ``ultimately'' reimbursed with money
from Taiwan and Cambodia is an exaggeration. Putting
aside the propriety of Trie's unsuccessful attempt to
provide the private trust fund with nearly $500,000 in
contributions,136 the evidence before the
Committee supports the conclusion that of the nearly
$500,000 of attempted contributions, only $70,000 came
from abroad: $40,000 from Taiwan and $30,000 from
Cambodia.137
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\136\ In Majority Chapter 20, which discusses Charlie Trie's
attempted contributions to the Presidential Legal Expense Trust, the
Majority claims that the amount of Tries' attempted contributions was
not ``nearly $500,000,'' but instead ``$789,000.'' The Majority's
figure in this chapter is the accurate one.
\137\ Zhi Hua Dong deposition, 6/17/97, pp. 98-105. Interviews
reports and other analyses on this topic written by FBI agents on
detail to the Committee do not suggest that additional funds came from
abroad.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority chapter's pattern of misstating
and mischaracterizing public information received by
the Committee is continued in the Majority's treatment
of classified information received by the Committee.
When the Executive Branch agencies reviewed the
portions of the Majority and Minority report regarding
the China Plan, they expressly noted that their review
was limited to deleting direct factual errors or
classified information. The agencies informed the
Committee that they did not take any position regarding
conclusory statements made by either the Majority or
the Minority based on classified
information.138 And indeed, the Minority
here responds to some of the most egregious allegations
made by the Majority against American citizens and
other individuals based on ill founded conclusions of
classified and other information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\138\ The conclusions based on classified information, as stated in
the Majority and Minority Reports, were not approved by any Executive
Branch agency. Letter from George J. Tenet, Director, Central
Intelligence Agency to Senator John Glenn, 2/18/98; Letter from George
J. Tenet to Chairman Fred Thompson, 2/18/98; Letter from Robert M.
Bryant, Deputy Director, FBI to Senator John Glenn, 2/25/98. See also
Letter from Andrew Fois, Assistant Attorney General, Department of
Justice to Chairman Fred Thompson, 7/11/97.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority's two statements about John
Huang do not show that he had ``extensive ties'' to the
Chinese Government. The Majority states that Huang is
one of six individuals identified by the Majority who
had ``extensive ties'' to the Chinese Government and
then describes two activities to support its assertion:
(1) that in 1993 Huang made a political contribution
reimbursed by funds from Indonesia and escorted Shen
Jueren to ``two meetings'' and that (2) the Committee
obtained a ``single piece of unverified information . .
. that indicates that Huang himself may possibly have
had a direct financial relationship with the PRC
government.'' The first activity is based on public
information and the factual inaccuracies of the
Majority's assertions regarding these contributions and
``meetings'' are discussed above. The second activity
highlighted by the Majority is based on non-public
information. Indeed, the facts are derived from an
unsubstantiated hearsay speculation gathered well after
Haung's campaign finance activities were extensively
publicized in the press.
The Majority's statements about Maria Hsia
also do not demonstrate ``extensive ties'' to the
Chinese Government. The Majority states that Hsia also
had ``extensive ties'' to the Chinese Government and
then lists several activities to support its assertion:
(1) a long standing relationship with the Hsi Lai
Temple in California, (2) contributions ``laundered''
through the Temple, (3) a trip to Taiwan organized by
Hsia in 1989, (4) fundraising for the Democratic Party
generally, (5) attendance at the Santa Monica
``meeting'' attended by Shen Jueren in 1993, (6)
activities considered to constitute being an agent for
the Chinese Government and (7) information that Hsia
worked with Sioeng and Huang to identify donors for the
Democratic Party. The first four activities, which are
based solely on public information, demonstrate that
Hsia has a long-standing relationship with Taiwan as
well as with a Temple in California that is both
wealthy and ardently pro-Taiwan. The fifth activity,
also based on public information, is Hsia's attendance
at a 1993 ``meeting'' with Shen Jureun. This meeting,
however, was in fact a ``DNC Reception/Dinner'' in
California attended by approximately 50 individuals.
Regarding the sixth activity mentioned by
the Majority, it should be noted that the Committee
received no information suggesting that Hsia's
fundraising activities were connected to the Chinese
Government. Indeed, the information characterized by
the Majority from the classified information regarded
some of Hsia's duties while an immigration consultant
in California in the early to mid 1990s. In an
affidavit submitted to the Committee, Hsia explains
those duties, raising doubt regarding any improper ties
to China. The allegations made by the Majority against
an American citizen without a thorough analysis of the
facts is troubling. The final activity of Hsia
described by the Majority, number seven above, is again
based on the same non-public information in which Huang
is referred, which contained a hearsay speculation
gathered well after allegations of fundraising
improprieties against these individuals were publicized
in the media.
The Majority's assertions that the Committee
uncovered connections between the Riadys and a Chinese
intelligence entity does not imply that the Riadys were
involved in foreign spy or similar intelligence
activities. The Majority's conclusions about the
Riady's business interests and their connections to
Chinese intelligence sources is based primarily on
public information presented to the Committee during
its open proceedings.139 The non-public
information received by the Committee supports the
conclusion that the Riady's business dealings may have
involved a relationship with a Chinese intelligence
entity, but does not support the implication that the
Riadys were involved in foreign spy or other similar
intelligence activity. The Minority agrees that the
Riadys have ties to China but is unable to assess
whether those ties are ``extensive'' or whether they
are appropriate ties based primarily on business
dealings within China.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\139\ Thomas Hampson, 7/15/97, Hrg. pp. 67-73.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority Report's assertions regarding
Charlie Trie are based solely on public information
received by the Committee. The Majority does not make
any conclusion about Trie based on non-public
information and the Minority agrees with this decision.
For information about Trie, see Chapter 5 of the
Minority Report.
conclusion
In describing the basic elements of the China Plan, the
Majority provides information that the plan, for the most part,
contemplated legitimate activities that have been undertaken by
most other countries for years. However, in order to expand on
the plan and its significance in the 1996 election cycle, the
Majority makes a series of speculative assertions and
conclusions. The Majority strings together a number of
activities connected to several Asian countries, labels those
countries the ``Greater China Area,'' and implies or assumes
that they ``may or may not'' be related to the China Plan or
the Chinese Government. This is a necessary predicate for the
Majority to establish because the activities the Majority lists
in support of its theory have limited connections to China.
Huang's contribution though a Lippo Group subsidiary in 1993 is
connected to Indonesia; Trie's attempted contributions to the
President's Legal Expense Trust was partially reimbursed by
funds connected to Taiwan and Cambodia; Hsia's association with
the Hsi Lai Temple is connected to Taiwan; and the Riadys are
connected to Indonesia and have global business interests.
The incidents mentioned by the Majority in its China
Connection chapter that actually show any possible connection
to China are (1) alleged ``meetings'' with Shen Jueren in 1993;
(2) Hsia's immigration work on behalf of Chinese nationals, (3)
the Riady's business dealings with China Resources; (4) an
event attended by Wang Jun 140 and (4) Sioeng's
contacts and business interests in China. While these
connections are important, they are greatly exaggerated by the
Majority chapter. The Minority does not downplay the
seriousness of the allegations of foreign connections that were
exposed by the Committee's public hearings or closed
proceedings. In fact, as stated in Chapter 2 of the Minority
Report, the allegations and information raised legitimate
questions about contributions from a number of countries making
their way into the 1996 federal elections.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\140\ The Majority repeats its characterization of Wang Jun as a
``Chinese arms'' dealer, despite the fact that the Committee was
informed that Wang Jun is primarily associated with the Chinese
investment company CITIC, which has a board of international advisors
that includes prominent Americans. Staff interview with Robert
Suettinger, Director, Asian Affairs, National Security Council, 6/3/97.
The Minority does not make any conclusions about Wang Jun, but believes
that this repeated characterization of Wang Jun by the Majority is, at
best, simplistic.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority's treatment of the important issue of foreign
influence in the 1996 election cycle and its highly
questionable and damaging conclusions based on the information
presented to the Committee were unfortunately driven by a
conclusion looking for supporting information that was not
available. Ultimately, the information presented to the
Committee demonstrated a number of foreign contributions making
their way into both political parties from businessmen and
companies in a variety of Asian countries. The information
submitted to the Committee to date, however, does not
demonstrate that these troubling instances were connected to a
grand scheme by the Chinese Government to influence our
electoral process.
Response to Majority Report Chapter 19: ``Charlie Trie and Ng Lap
Seng's Laundered Contributions to the DNC''
In this chapter, the Majority analyzes Charlie Trie's
contributions to the DNC and possible involvement in
contribution conduit schemes, and concludes that Trie used
foreign funds supplied by Macao businessman Ng Lap Seng to pay
for both his own contributions and to reimburse others for
making contributions to the DNC. The Majority also implies that
the DNC failed to return a conduit contribution by Xiping Wang.
The Minority generally agrees with the Majority's
conclusions in this chapter, but notes that several facts have
been omitted. For example, the Committee did not receive
evidence that most of the money Trie raised for the DNC
involved conduit funds. In addition, the Majority fails to
mention that the DNC returned the Xiping Wang contribution to
the U.S. Treasury.
The Majority concludes that Trie used foreign
funds supplied by Macao businessman Ng Lap Seng to pay for both
his own contributions and to reimburse others for making
contributions to the DNC. The Minority agrees with the
Majority's conclusion, but disagrees that ``most'' of the money
Trie raised for the DNC involved conduit funds; for example,
there is no evidence that Trie reimbursed the $325,000
contribution by Yogesh Gandhi which comprises more than half of
the funds attributed to Trie by the DNC.
The Majority suggests that the DNC has not
returned Xiping Wang's contribution. The Majority references
Xiping Wang's testimony indicating that she was not reimbursed
by the DNC for her contribution. However, the Majority fails to
note that the DNC did in fact return the contribution--it sent
the money to the United States Treasury after failing in an
attempt to locate Wang and it informed her attorney of that
fact.141
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\141\ Letter from DNC retained counsel, Judah Best, Debevoise &
Plimpton, to R. Michael Haynes, Esq., attorney for Xiping Wang, 2/20/
98.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response to Majority Report Chapter 20 : ``Charlie Trie's Contributions
to the Presidential Legal Expense Trust''
In this chapter, the Majority analyzes Charlie Trie's
fundraising efforts on behalf of the Presidential Legal Expense
Trust (``PLET'' or ``Trust''). The Majority concludes that the
donations were ``highly questionable,'' may have been
``coerced,'' and that the Trust acted improperly in how it
investigated the donations, returned them, altered the Trust's
accounting procedures, and delayed revealing the matter to the
news media. The Majority further suggests that Trie's PLET
fundraising efforts may have been linked to, among other
things, his appointment to a Presidential Commission and to his
obtaining an invitation for Wang Jun to a White House coffee.
The Majority's analysis of Trie's fundraising efforts for
PLET is deeply flawed. The Majority chapter apparently double
counts a number of the checks that Trie presented to the Trust;
notes the bipartisan, impressive credentials of the trustees,
but then ascribes partisan motives to their actions and;
speculates on linkages between the PLET donations and Trie's
Commission appointment, Wang Jun's coffee invitation.
The Majority incorrectly states that Trie
presented PLET with donations totaling $789,000. This figure
apparently double counts a number of the checks. In Trie's
first meeting with the Trust, the Trust declined to accept
checks totaling $70,000, whose deficiencies Trie promised to
correct. Bank records establish that the Trust actually
deposited $380,000.142 In Trie's second meeting, the
Trust declined to accept checks which Trie said totaled
$179,000. In a third meeting, the Trust declined to accept
checks which Trie said totaled $150,000. The $380,000 bank
deposit and the $150,000 figure Trie used in the final meeting
result in a total of $530,000, almost a third less than the
inflated figure used in the Majority chapter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\142\ See Michael Cardozo, 7/30/97 Hrg., p. 7. See also Minority
Chapter 5 on Trie.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Majority acknowledges the bipartisan,
impressive credentials of the Trustees, but then attributes
partisan motives to the trustees. The Majority suggests that
the trustees sought White House permission for the Trust's
actions, while failing to acknowledge testimony by the Trust's
executive director that the Trust never took direction from the
White House. The Majority also suggests that the trustees hid
the Trie-related donations to protect the President until after
the election, while failing to acknowledge that the trustees'
accounting decisions were made on a unanimous, bipartisan basis
for substantive reasons. In short, the Majority unfairly
impugns the motives of the respected, bipartisan trustees and
fails to acknowledge that the Trust acted prudently and with
restraint in declining to accept apparently eligible
contributions.
The Majority's analysis of a link between Trie's
Commission appointment and the PLET donations fails to
acknowledge the documentary evidence that Trie's appointment
was finalized before he ever met with the Trust.143
The facts do not establish any link between the PLET donations
and Trie's Commission appointment, the Wang Jun invitation, or
Trie letter. The Majority fails to cite any facts linking the
PLET donations to the DNC's decision to invite Wang Jun to a
White House coffee as Trie's guest. There is no evidence before
the Committee that the DNC personnel involved in the coffee
invitation. DNC officials David Mercer, Richard Sullivan, and
Marvin Rosen were aware of the PLET donations. In addition, the
White House personnel involved in responding to Trie's letter
to the President have stated that they handled the letter
routinely, using standard language they had developed to
respond to a host of letters on the same subject.144
The Majority chapter also fails to acknowledge testimony by FBI
detailee Jerry Campane that Trie's letter was apparently
prompted by one of his employees, had no connection to China,
and no impact on U.S. policy.145
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\143\ See Minority Chapter 5, including analysis of a 12/15/95
White House personnel office memorandum stating that ``President
Clinton has approved'' Trie for the Commission appointment, and 2/5/96
White House legal counsel memorandum reporting successful completion of
a background check and stating that the Commission appointment of Trie
and another individual ``may proceed.'' Trie first contacted the Trust
on 3/20/96.
\144\ See Minority Chapter 5; staff interview of Robert Suettinger,
director, Asian affairs, National Security Council, 6/3/97.
\145\ See Minority Chapter 5; Jerry Campane, 7/29/97 Hrg., pp. 58,
77-78, 95; staff interview of Robert Suettinger, director, Asian
affairs, National Security Council, 6/3/97.
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The Majority labels the donations made by members
of the Buddhist Ching Hai sect as ``highly questionable'' and,
in part, ``coerced,'' even though the majority of PLET
donations met the Trust's requirements. The Majority fails to
acknowledge the evidence that most of the donors appeared to be
U.S. citizens who contributed voluntarily to help the
President.146 The recent indictment of Trie does not
reference any questionable conduct in connection with the PLET
donations.
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\146\ See Minority Chapter 5; see also Michael Cardozo, 7/30/97
Hrg., p. 80.; Sally Schwartz deposition, 5/6/97, p. 144; 5/9/96
memorandum from Sally Schwartz to Michael Cardozo, Document 0078.
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Response to Majority Report Chapter 21: ``The Saga of Roger Tamraz''
In this chapter, the Majority describes Tamraz's attempts
to gain access to U. S. Government officials and concludes that
in the spring of 1996, senior U.S. Government officials looked
for ``any reason'' to support Tamraz's pipeline project based
on his political contributions to the Democratic Party. The
Majority's conclusion that Tamraz was successful at gaining
access to U.S. Government officials is correct. Before Tamraz
made political contributions to the Democratic Party, he met
with several Government officials. After he made contributions,
he attended several DNC events where senior Government
officials were in attendance.
The Majority's chapter, while containing several statements
and conclusions with whichthe Minority agrees, also contains
omissions of significant evidence, assumptions not based on evidence,
and conclusions contrary to the evidence.
The Majority Report erroneously states that the
DNC ``pressure[d] NSC officials to change their position on the
merits of Tamraz's Caspian Sea Pipeline.'' The Majority claims
for the first time in its Report that the DNC did more than
invite Tamraz to DNC events in the spring of 1996. The Majority
now claims that the DNC and the White House actually pressured
``NSC officials'' to change U.S. Government policy regarding
Tamraz's pipeline project. This assertion is contradicted by
the facts.
The Majority provides absolutely no citations for its
conclusion that seven months after U.S. policy was
implemented,147 senior Government officials were
looking for ``any reason'' to support Tamraz's pipeline
proposal. In fact, the evidence contradicts these assertions.
Tamraz testified that he mentioned his pipeline in March and
April 1996 during a brief ``introduction to the President'' and
``for about 30 seconds'' to White House official Thomas
(``Mack'') McLarty, both at DNC events.148 He
testified that he described his pipeline proposal during those
brief encounters as one that would supposedly bring peace to
the region and jobs to Americans. In response, McLarty asked
his Energy Department contact, Kyle Simpson, to provide him
with information about the pipeline project.149
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\147\ U.S. policy was implemented in October of 1995 and Tamraz
played no role in that policy. Sheila Heslin, 9/17/97 Hrg. pp. 5-6, 19-
20, 28, 52, 72.
\148\ Mack McLarty deposition, 6/30/97, pp. 5-9; Memorandum for
Jonathan Marks to Ann Ngo, 10/25/95; E-mail from Ira Sockowitz to
Jonathan Marks, 10/27/95; Melissa Moss Deposition, 6/11/97, pp. 190-
193.
\149\ Thomas McLarty deposition, 6/30/97, p. 56; Kyle Simpson
deposition, 6/25/97, p. 26. Simpson testified that requests for
information about American companies and their projects are not
uncommon. He explained that the U.S. Government sees value in U.S.
companies participating in foreign projects although it is ``not
terribly particular'' about which U.S. company it is if more than one
is vying for a project. Kyle Simpson deposition, 6/25/97, p.54.
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In addition, despite the assertions that this request was
based on Tamraz's political contributions, both McLarty and
Simpson testified unequivocally that they were not aware of
Tamraz's political contributions at the time of this request
nor did they mention political contributions to
anyone.150 Tamraz himself testified that he had
never mentioned political contributions to anyone in the White
House ``ever.'' 151 The Majority ignores the fact
that even Jack Carter, another Energy Department official,
testified that Simpson's request for information about the
pipeline was not, in any way, an attempt to tie alleged
information about political contributions to U.S. Government
support for, or meeting with, Tamraz.152
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\150\ Thomas McLarty deposition, 6/30/97, pp. 30. 56-57; Kyle
Simpson, 9/18/97 Hrg. pp. 50-51; Kyle Simpson deposition, 6/25/97, pp.
43, 46-48.
\151\ Roger Tamraz, 9/18/97 Hrg. p. 73.
\152\ Jack Carter deposition, 6/23/97, pp. 44-45. The Majority
relies on Carter's testimony to assert that political contributions
motivate this request for information. However, the Majority at the
same time asserts that Carter's recollection of other issues are not
accurate. The Majority also attempts to bolster its decision to rely on
Carter's testimony by stating that Carter's ``handwritten notes of his
encounter with Simpson corroborate that they discussed Tamraz and
suggest also that Simpson made clear President Clinton's interest in
the matter.'' The statement is correct only as far as it goes. The
notes say ``do background on Tamraz'' and ``consider distance'' and
``memo to Pres.'' The notes do not contain any figures or any mention
of political contributions whatsoever. Exhibit 1199, p. JC-007 (Notes
of Jack Carter, 4/3/96).
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Apparently recognizing that its conclusion is
unsupported by the evidence, the Majority makes several
questionable assertions in its attempt to support its assertion
that U.S. officials were ``looking for any reason'' to change
U.S. policy in the spring of 1996. The Majority unsuccessfully
attempts to cast doubt on the testimony of other witnesses
whose testimony was consistent. The Majority suggests that
Simpson's testimony about his exchange with Carter may have
been influenced by a call from McLarty and is less credible
because he attended a fundraiser in his home town of Houston.
Simpson's deposition and hearing testimony, however,
demonstrate that these suggestions are false.153 The
Majority's allegations regarding a DNC-generated list of
Tamraz's contributions also ignores the testimony of four
witnesses. McLarty, Simpson and Carter all testified that they
have never seen this list 154 and Tamraz himself
testified that he never showed the list to anybody. Tamraz also
testified that ``nobody at the White House has ever talked to
me about contributions, ever.'' 155 Finally, the
Majority's speculation that Carter was acting at the behest of
someone else fails to address the inaccuracies of the
speculation, the contrary testimony by all other witnesses, and
the documentary evidence that demonstrate what actually
occurred. See Minority Chapter 30.
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\153\ Kyle Simpson deposition, 6/25/97, p. 83 (Simpson called
McLarty in March of 1997 in response to an answer Simpson gave to a
reporter that confused a 1995 meeting between Tamraz and Jack Carter
and McLarty's later request for information on the pipeline); Kyle
Simpson, 9/18/97, Hrg. pp. 135-38 (Simpson was given a complimentary
seat at the fundraiser during his tenure at the Energy Department and
did not raise money for the DNC while he was at the Department.)
\154\ Thomas McLarty deposition, 6/30/97, p. 30; Kyle Simpson
deposition, 6/25/97, p. 50; Jack Carter deposition, 6/23/97, p. 32.
\155\ Roger Tamraz, 9/18/97, Hrg. p. 73.
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The Majority Report's discussion of Tamraz's
attempt to meet with the Vice President is incorrect. The
Majority recounts that at ``some point in August or early
September 1995'' the Vice President ``expressed interest in
Tamraz's pipeline and `requested that Harut Sassounian set up a
meeting about the proposal.' . . . and that ``[a]s a result,
Tamraz was invited to a breakfast with the Vice President
scheduled for October 5, 1995.'' The Majority also states that
Tamraz was disinvited from the coffee due to Sheila Heslin's
efforts, but was ``not unhappy'' because he attended a private
fundraiser on October 2, 1995 and sat at the head table with a
number of individuals, including Vice President Gore. There are
several factual misstatements in this version of events.
Although relatively minor points, the Majority's treatment of
this issue is the looseness with which the Majority handles the
facts.
The Vice President's staff did receive a request that the
Vice President meet with Sassounian and his associate, Roger
Tamraz.156 Contrary to the Majority Report, however,
the response to this request was not to invite Tamraz ``to a
breakfast with the Vice President scheduled for October 5,
1995.'' Rather, the evidence establishes that the Vice
President's staff responded by sending a memorandum to the Vice
President on September 13, 1995, suggesting that he not agree
to such a meeting.157 And in fact, after that
memorandum was sent, the Vice President's staff notified
Sassounian and Tamraz that no meeting would be scheduled. No
meeting was ever scheduled, nor did one occur.158
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\156\ Exhibit 1127: Memorandum to the Vice President from Leon
Fuerth, 9/13/95, EOP 45766-67. The Vice President received this request
after meeting with Sassounian on August 8, 1995, not in ``early
September,'' as the Majority asserts. Exhibit 1126; Exhibit 1127; EOP
045766 and EOP 56535, 5639-40.
\157\ Exhibit 1127: Memorandum to the Vice President from Leon
Fuerth, 9/13/95, EOP 45766-67.
\158\ EOP 25006-006; 250-4; Exhibit 1135.
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Tamraz's attendance at a October 2 private fundraising
dinner was scheduled by the DNC and, upon discovering this, the
Vice President's staff, not Heslin, caused Tamraz to be
``disinvited'' from the October 5, 1995 coffee. The DNC
organized the fundraiser on October 2 and decided whom to
invite.159 On October 3, 1995, having learned that
the DNC had invited Tamraz to an event the night before, the
Vice President's staff faxed to the DNC a copy of Vice
Presidential National Security Advisor Leon Fuerth's September
13, 1995 memorandum advising the Vice President not to meet
with Tamraz, apparently to make clear to the DNC that it should
not invite Tamraz to future events with the Vice
President.160 It was this fax that resulted in the
DNC withdrawing Tamraz's invitation to the October 5, 1995
coffee.
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\159\ Exhibit 1136.
\160\ Exhibit 1137 and Exhibit 1138.
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Ultimately, the assertion that the Vice President or the
DNC responded to a request for an official meeting by inviting
Tamraz to the October 5 coffee is inaccurate.
The Majority Report's description of the two phone
calls between Bob of the CIA and DNC National Chairman Donald
Fowler is incomplete. The Majority Report states that Fowler
called Bob of the CIA twice, once on October 19, 1995 and again
on December 13, 1996. The Majority states that ``Fowler was
closely engaged in efforts to contact Bob at the CIA'' and that
Fowler was not truthful in his testimony before the Committee
when he denied having any memory of calling the CIA. The
Majority analysis of these phone calls is incomplete.
First, the Majority's factual statement is correct as far
as it goes, but evidence omitted--most notable relevant
references to Bob of the CIA's deposition--casts serious doubt
on the Majority's conclusion. Regarding the October phone call,
the Majority ignores the testimony of Bob, who stated that he
called Fowler first on October 18, 1995 and left his name, and
possibly his phone numbers, with a receptionist who answered
the phone. Fowler returned the call the next day.161
There is no explanation in the Majority Report why they call
Bob's name and phone number ``classified'' in the context of
these calls.
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\161\ Bob of the CIA deposition, 7/11/97, p. 3.
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Second, the Majority also ignores the fact that Bob
testified that during both phone calls with Fowler his
affiliation with the CIA was never mentioned. Bob testified
that during the October phone call he was working undercover,
that he never mentioned his CIA affiliation and was ``not sure
that Fowler [knew] who he [was] talking to.''162 Bob
testified that during the December phone call he still could
``not say for certain how [Fowler] knew who he was talking to
because CIA was never mentioned.''163
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\162\ Bob of the CIA deposition, 7/11/97, p. 6.
\163\ Bob of the CIA deposition, 7/11/97, p. 11.
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Finally, although the Majority criticizes Bob for lobbying
the NSC's Sheila Heslin on issues regarding Tamraz, the
Majority ignores the evidence that establishes that Bob's
lobbying began in June 1995, long before Bob had his first
contact with Fowler in October of 1995. In fact, according to
Heslin, Bob's lobbying from June through October 1995 focused
on getting Tamraz's proposal accepted by the U.S. Government
and, accordingly, stopped after October of 1995, probably
because Bob was aware that U.S. policy regarding the Caspian
Sea pipeline had already been determined and Tamraz had already
been excluded.164 Fowler's contacts began after U.S.
policy was already established and were focused on gaining
information on Tamraz to permit him to attend DNC events. The
Majority's conclusion that ``Fowler was closely engaged in
efforts to contact Bob at the CIA'' is called into serious
doubt when all the evidence about their two phone conversations
is examined.
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\164\ Sheila Heslin, 9/17/97, Hrg. p. 20; Staff interview with
Sheila Heslin, 5/28/97.
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The Majority Report incorrectly asserts that
Tamraz was not able to obtain access to Republicans. The
Majority agrees that in the 1980s, Tamraz ``gave enough money
to become a Republican Eagle.'' However, the Majority states
that ``Tamraz received no response to his overtures from the
Reagan Administration; he could not even gain access to the
Reagan White House.'' Although Tamraz testified that he did not
visit the Reagan White House, the evidence before the Committee
shows that in 1985, the chairman of the Republican National
Committee, Frank Fahrenkopf, apparently endorsed Tamraz for a
position in the Reagan Administration by sending a letter to
Robert Tuttle, Reagan's White House Personnel Director. The
letter of endorsement was clearly based on Tamraz's political
contributions to the Republican Party.165 Tuttle
responded to the letter by requesting that the RNC forward
Tamraz's resume to the White House. Tamraz also testified that
he received two letters from President Reagan thanking him for
his contributions to the Republican Party 166 and
that during the 1980s, he had access to high level CIA
political appointees.167 As late as 1997, Tamraz was
offered meetings with Republican Senators in exchange for
contributions to the Republican Party.168
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\165\ Roger Tamraz deposition, 5/13/97, p. 36; Roger Tamraz, 9/18/
97 Hrg. p. 18; Senator Levin, 9/18/97 Hrg. pp. 64-44; Exhibit 1064M.
\166\ Roger Tamraz deposition, 5/13/97, p. 40.
\167\ Roger Tamraz deposition, 5/13/97, pp. 11-14, 123-24; Roger
Tamraz, 9/18/97 Hrg. pp. 3-4.
\168\ Roger Tamraz, Hrg. pp. 67, 169-170; Exhibits 1065 & 1066.
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