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March 28, 2006

Tom Delay's Inside Trader? (Hello, SEC?)

Via Daily Kos, the Wall Street Journal reports today on an effort to shut down insider trading in Capitol Hill offices:

Amid broad congressional concern about ethics scandals, some lawmakers are poised to expand the battle for reform: They want to enact legislation that would prohibit members of Congress and their aides from trading stocks based on nonpublic information gathered on Capitol Hill.

Two Democrat lawmakers plan to introduce today a bill that would block trading on such inside information. Current securities law and congressional ethics rules don't prohibit lawmakers or their staff members from buying and selling securities based on information learned in the halls of Congress.

It isn't clear yet what kind of support the bill will garner from Republicans. But its prospects are enhanced by the current charged environment in Congress; lawmakers from both parties in both houses have placed a high priority on passing ethics and lobbying-reform legislation. Such legislation would provide a vehicle to which proponents could attach a measure on stock trades.
. . .

The two Democrats who wrote the bill say they were motivated by the trading activity of a former top aide to Rep. Tom DeLay, the onetime Republican majority leader in the House. The aide, Tony Rudy, bought and sold hundreds of stocks from his computer in the U.S. Capitol in 1999 and 2000, according to financial-disclosure forms and other DeLay aides.

Recall that miscreant Republican Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist has also been implicated in this game.

February 7, 2006

Those Amazing, Fiscally Incontinent Republicans


World News Australia reports The White House will boost defence and homeland security spending, while cutting many social programs, if its proposed budget, of US$2.77 trillion (A$3.74 trillion) – the biggest spending proposal in American history - is approved.

President George W Bush's overall budget for the 2007 fiscal year, starting October 1, represents a rise of about 2.2 percent in spending from this fiscal year.

Cutting past the bone on domestic programs, letting our transportation infrastructure crumble further, and savaging what's left of health care funding. How charming.

And junk like $10 billion annually down the Missile Defense rathole continues apace.

October 23, 2005

More Evidence that Bill Frist Flat-out Lied. Surprised?

Gee, we had our suspicions, but had no idea that Frist had been informed of the addition of a million or two in HCA stock to his "blind trust" in such a formal manner.

So reports the Washington Post:

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) was given considerable information about his stake in his family's hospital company, according to records that are at odds with his past statements that he did not know what was in his stock holdings.

Managers of the trusts that Frist once described as "totally blind," regularly informed him when they added new shares of HCA Inc. or other assets to his holdings, according to the documents.

Since 2001, the trustees have written to Frist and the Senate 15 times detailing the sale of assets from or the contribution of assets to trusts of Frist and his family. The letters included notice of the addition of HCA shares worth $500,000 to $1 million in 2001 and HCA stock worth $750,000 to $1.5 million in 2002. The trust agreements require the trustees to inform Frist and the Senate whenever assets are added or sold.

The letters seem to undermine one of the major arguments the senator has used throughout his political career to rebut criticism of his ownership in HCA: that the stock was held in blind trusts beyond his control and that he had little idea of the extent of those holdings.
. . .

October 11, 2005

Frist's Wiggly World

Do Bad Liars Beget Bad Liars as well, or is Bill the first in a new line?

Bill Frist, Republican Senate Majority Leader, anachronistic haircut model, sometimes reluctant White House rentboy, long-distance video diagnostician, lucky stock liquidator, Splendide Mendax:

AP: Frist Accumulated Stock Outside Trusts
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 9:55 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Outside the blind trusts he created to avoid a conflict of interest, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist earned tens of thousands of dollars from stock in a family-founded hospital chain largely controlled by his brother, documents show.

The Tennessee Republican, whose sale this summer of HCA Inc. stock is under federal investigation, has long maintained he could own HCA shares and still vote on health care legislation without a conflict because he had placed the stock in blind trusts approved by the Senate.

However, ethics experts say a partnership arrangement shown in documents obtained by The Associated Press raises serious doubts about whether the senator truly avoided a conflict. . . .

But back to the matter of those so-called "blind trusts" about which Frist received regular holdings reports:

Kathleen Clark, a government ethics expert at the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law, said she doesn't believe the Senate trusts or the Tennessee trust insulated Frist from a conflict because the senator or his brother were advised of transactions and could influence decisions.

''What I find most appalling is the Senate calls it a qualified blind trust when it's not blind,'' Clark said. ''Since the Senate says it's OK, the Senate has made it a political question. It's up to the voter. But there's no doubt it's a conflict of interest.''. . .

September 28, 2005

"Workin' It!" with Tom Delay

Journalist Laura Rozen deftly explains today's Tom Delay indictment in today's Village Voice article, What's the Deal With the Tom DeLay Indictment?

Meaty Excerpt:

A press release from the Travis County District Attorney's office summarized the charge against DeLay as follows:

The indictment charges DeLay with conspiring with [James] Ellis and [John] Colyandro to violate the Texas Election Code by contributing corporate money to certain candidates for the Texas Legislature. It describes a scheme whereby corporate, or "soft" money, was sent to the Republican National Committee where it was exchanged for "hard" money, or money raised from individuals, and sent to those candidates. Criminal conspiracy is a State Jail Felony punishable by six months to two years in a State Jail and a fine of up to $10,000.

Specifically, D.A. Ronnie Earle has accused TRMPAC of receiving $190,000 in corporate donations, sending the money to an arm of the Republican National Committee for the express purpose of having it sent back in the form of campaign contributions to seven Texas GOP candidates running in the 2002 state elections. “The corporate fundraising," CBS reported earlier this year, based on an interview with Earle, "was done to elect Republicans to the Texas legislature so they could redistrict the state and ensure that more Republicans would be elected to the house in Washington."
. . .

September 27, 2005

Give Us This Day Our Daily Frist

Jason Leopold has written quite an article on the Frist mess. Excerpt:

In fact, Frist had attempted to have it both ways since he created his so-called blind trust in the 1990s: being intimately involved with his investments that directly conflict with his political work as a senator and then claiming that he’s totally unaware of his personal financial investments—and stock sales—because it’s in a blind trust.

The mainstream media, quick to accept Frist’s statements that he’s been in the dark about his HCA holdings, was complicit in allowing the obvious conflict of having a senator who makes national decisions on healthcare that directly benefit the senator’s fortunes and that of his family, fall off the radar screen.

September 26, 2005

That's Bill's Story and He's Stickin' To It!

Sept. 26 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist said he did nothing wrong in selling shares of HCA Inc. before a weak earnings report and pledged to cooperate with probes by the Justice Department and Securities and Exchange Commission.

``I acted properly,'' Frist, a Tennessee Republican, told reporters in Washington. ``I had no information about HCA or its performance that was not publicly available.'' . . .

``Senator Frist had no control over when the shares were sold through the mechanism of a blind trust,'' Call said.

Frist ordered the trustees to sell his shares on June 13, one month before the company said second-quarter profit would miss earnings estimates. The trustees notified Frist on July 1 that the shares had been sold.

Huh? He had no control, but he ordered the sale of HCA? And he had maintained since 2000 that he didn't know that he owned HCA? This is only the bare outline of this very weird story that Frist is telling (and that he'll probably get to tell to the SEC Enforcement Division, and to investigators from the US Attorney's office for the Southern District of New York). More later.
_ _ _
Later: Interesting paragraphs from an MSNBC Report:

Blind trusts are designed to keep an arm’s-length distance between federal officials and their investments, to avoid conflicts of interest. But documents suggest that Frist knew quite a bit about his accounts from nearly two dozen letters from the trust administrators.

Frist, R-Tenn., received regular updates of transfers of assets to his blind trusts and sales of assets. He also was able to initiate a stock sale of a hospital chain founded by his family with perfect timing. Shortly after the sale this summer, the stock price dived.

The SEC Chair's "Recusal" in the Frist Matter

From Reuters:

Sep 26, 2005 — WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Christopher Cox, chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, said on Monday he has recused himself from an SEC probe of sales of stock in hospital company HCA Inc. by Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, a former congressional colleague of Cox.

"The staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission have commenced a review of sales of HCA stock by a blind trust established by the U.S. Senate Majority Leader," Cox said in a statement.

"Because of my service in the congressional leadership for the last 10 years, I have recused myself in this matter," he said.

Cox's campaign committee donated $1,000 to Frist's 2000 re-election campaign, according to Federal Election Commission records made available by PoliticalMoneyLine, a non-partisan group that tracks money in politics.

. . .

I guess this means that Cox is not going to hassle the hell out of Linda Chatman Thomsen and her crew.

September 25, 2005

More Bush Crony Contracts, This Time for Katrina

Doesn't anybody care any more when (far future) tax dollars are just thrown away like this? As Laura Rozen has been asking about other matters all weekend, where is the oversight?

Eric Lipton and Ron Nixon report on the latest in a long long series of Bush squander scandals in the New York Times:

More than 80 percent of the $1.5 billion in contracts signed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency alone were awarded without bidding or with limited competition, government records show, provoking concerns among auditors and government officials about the potential for favoritism or abuse.

Already, questions have been raised about the political connections of two major contractors - the Shaw Group and Kellogg, Brown & Root, a subsidiary of Halliburton - that have been represented by the lobbyist Joe M. Allbaugh, President Bush's former campaign manager and a former leader of FEMA.

September 23, 2005

Will Bill Pull a Martha?

HCA documents have been subpoenad, apparently in the Frist matter.

Later: More details from Bloomberg:

The SEC ``contacted Senator Frist's office after the story appeared in the press about the sale,'' spokesman Bob Stevenson said in a statement. ``The majority leader will provide the SEC any information that it needs with respect to this matter.'' HCA said it ``intends to cooperate fully.'' HCA spokesman Jeff Prescott said today that the information in the subpoena indicated that the probe relates to Frist's stock sale. He declined to comment further.

That seems about right for Christopher Cox's SEC. They investigate the trade after the story appears in the papers. Kind of like George Bush's hurricane response, where he decides to so something after somebody shows him a DVD of TV news reports. And a tangentially related tidbit to that note, via The Washington Note: looks like Hurricane Czar Karl Rove will be doing some political fundraising in North Dakota when Rita hits Texas.

Par for the course.

September 21, 2005

Bill Frist's "Blind" Stock Trade and the Smell Test


My goodness.

Jonathan Katz reports for the AP:

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, a potential presidential candidate in 2008, sold all his stock in his family's hospital corporation about two weeks before it issued a disappointing earnings report and the price fell nearly 15 percent.

Frist held an undisclosed amount of stock in Hospital Corporation of America, based in Nashville, the nation's largest for-profit hospital chain. On June 13, he instructed the trustee managing the assets to sell his HCA shares and those of his wife and children, said Amy Call, a spokeswoman for Frist.
. . .
To keep the trust blind, Frist was not allowed to know how much HCA stock he owned, Call said, but he was allowed to ask for all of it to be sold.
. . .
HCA -- formerly known as Columbia HCA Healthcare Corp. -- has been a top contributor to the senator's campaigns, donating $83,450 since 1989, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
. . .
Frist's father, Thomas, founded the company (HCA), and his brother, Thomas Jr., is a director and leading stockholder. The family is worth $1.1 billion, according to Forbes magazine.

September 20, 2005

Bush's Thievery Corporation in Action: One Brief Study in Contrasts

Mindful of the crony contracts, and of our tax expenditures, this contract watchdog was demoted:

September 13, 2005

The Corps recently demoted Bunnatine Greenhouse—a top-level civilian employee who was responsible for ensuring the Corps follows competitive bidding requirements—after she accused the Corps of giving KBR improper influence over the contracting process.
http://www.tompaine.com/articles/20050913/watch_whos_cleaning_up.php

White House OMB Chief of Procurement Oversight Busted for Federal Property Scheme with Scumbag Lobbyist, Lying to Investigators, Obstructing Justice

September 19, 2005

The affidavit filed in support of the criminal complaint alleges that from May 16, 2002 until January 10, 2004, Safavian served as Chief of Staff at the GSA. During that time he allegedly aided a Washington D.C. lobbyist in the lobbyist's attempts to acquire GSA-controlled property in and around Washington, D.C. In August 2002, this lobbyist allegedly took Safavian and others on a golf trip to Scotland.

The false statement and obstruction of the investigation charges relate to Safavian's statements to a GSA ethics officer and the GSA-OIG that the lobbyist had no business with GSA prior to the August 2002 golf trip. According to the affidavit, Safavian concealed the fact that the lobbyist had business before GSA prior to the August 2002 golf trip, and that Safavian was aiding the lobbyist in his attempts to do business with GSA

Since Nov. 29, 2004, Safavian has served as the administrator of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy at the Office of Management and Budget.

http://releases.usnewswire.com/GetRelease.asp?id=53613