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Author Topic: Breaking>>>Reports: Rangel Cuts Deal, Avoids Trial  (Read 87 times)
mystery-ak
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« on: July 29, 2010, 10:19:06 AM »

http://wcbstv.com/politics/charlie.rangel.ethics.2.1831649.html

 Jul 29, 2010 12:01 pm US/Eastern
Reports: Rangel Cuts Deal, Avoids Trial
Embattled Representative Reportedly To Admit Ethical Wrongdoing

NEW YORK (CBS) ―New York Congressman Charles Rangel has reportedly cut a deal to admit to ethical wrongdoing and avoid a potentially humiliating public trial.

 

Harlem friends of Rangel tell CBS 2 they have been told that the details could be unveiled when the House Ethics Committee meets Thursday afternoon.

 

It's the culmination of two years of scandal for the 20-term Democratic lawmaker. At issue is whether the former head of the House Ways and Means committee will admit to any serious ethical wrongdoing. Rangel is being charged with misusing his office for fundraising, failure to disclose income, belated payment of taxes and possible help with a tax shelter for a company whose chief executive was a major donor.
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Lando Lincoln
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« Reply #1 on: July 29, 2010, 10:23:50 AM »

Hmmm... wonder what the nuts and bolts are on this "deal".  Will we ever really know?
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mystery-ak
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« Reply #2 on: July 29, 2010, 10:32:05 AM »

We'll never know..unless someone leaks it.....no Dem wants all the info against Rangle aired.
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Lando Lincoln
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« Reply #3 on: July 29, 2010, 10:37:42 AM »

You know, I would respect even my political opposite if they would come down on the side of justice...  But the House Dems will never do that (nor will the Repubs, I suppose).

So much for drainin' the swamp.
« Last Edit: July 29, 2010, 11:03:48 AM by Lando Lincoln » Logged
areafiftyone
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« Reply #4 on: July 29, 2010, 12:29:08 PM »

WIMPS!   All of them! 
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« Reply #5 on: July 29, 2010, 02:45:16 PM »

"Rangel is being charged with misusing his office for fundraising, failure to disclose income, belated payment of taxes and possible help with a tax shelter for a company whose chief executive was a major donor."

And no doubt this is the tip of the iceberg with this particularly CORRUPT RAT-bastard & GREEDY PowerWhore...and there will be NO TRIAL!!  Whoever agreed to this in the House needs to be handcuffed and charged almost as badly as Rangel deserves it...

CONSPIRACY 2 SWINDLE WeThePeople!!

Book'em, Dan-O...MUD police
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mystery-ak
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« Reply #6 on: July 29, 2010, 03:07:24 PM »

http://thehill.com/homenews/house/111641-ethics-recites-rangel-charges-


Ethics panel brings 13 counts against embattled Rep. Rangel
By Susan Crabtree - 07/29/10 04:19 PM ET

The House ethics committee announced 13 charges Thursday against Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.), who is accused of breaking House rules as well as federal statutes.

Rep. Gene Green (D-Texas), the chairman of an investigating committee, read the charges against Rangel as the ethics committee began an organization meeting setting up a public trial for Rangel.

The charges deal with four main areas of improper activity.

Rangel, who did not attend the session, is accused of improperly using his letterhead, staff and franking privilege to solicit donations to the Charles B. Center for Public Policy at the City College of New York; of using a rent-stabilized apartment in Harlem for his campaign office; of failing to report more than $600,000 on his financial disclosure report; and of failing to pay taxes on rental income from a villa he owns in the Dominican Republic.

The investigative subcommittee also looked into whether Rangel broke House parking rules by storing his Mercedes too long there and found that the House Administration Committee was not enforcing the parking rules.

“I think it’s safe to say that none of us enjoyed this assignment – no one wants to investigate their peers,” Green said before reciting the specific charges. “But we recognize this was a task that was requested of us and the investigative subcommittee spent a significant amount of time closely examining the factual and legal issues involved in this matter.”

During the 21-month investigation, Green said the investigative subcommittee conducted approximately 50 depositions, as well as formal interviews, issued more than 160 formal requests for documents, reviewed more than 28,000 pages of documents and testimony and held more than 60 meetings. The panel also met with Rangel three times, including one in which he gave a deposition.

“This is truly a sad day when no one – regardless of their partisan stripes – should rejoice,” said Rep. Jo Bonner (R-Ala.), the ranking member of the investigative subcommittee and the full ethics panel.

Reports that Rangel had reached a deal that would prevent a public trial his party wanted to avoid circulated throughout Thursday, but members of the ethics panel said efforts to reach a settlement had failed.

Ethics panel member Mike McCaul (R-Texas) said Rangel had an opportunity to reach a settlement during the panel's investigatory phase. “We are now in the trial phase,” McCaul said.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.), who chairs the ethics committee and will oversee the trial, explained the trial process and said the panel was planning a trial because Rangel had failed to settle the case.

“We live in a time where public skepticism about the institutions in our country is very high,” she said. “It has been the goal of our Ethics Committee throughout this Congress to, by our actions, rebuild and earn trust by the public and our colleagues,” she said.

The panel did not set a date for the trial, but most expect it to begin in mid-September.

McCaul, who will serve as ranking member of the adjudicatory panel conducting the trial, said the impact of the trial could not be more dire for the House as an institution.

“This is a very important day for Rangel, for ethics, for this committee, this Congress and the American people,” he said. “…Credibility is exactly what’s at stake here – the very credibility of the House of Representatives.”

McCaul said Rangel had been given opportunities to strike a deal that would have prevented a public trial.

“Let me be clear that Mr. Rangel under these rules was given opportunities to negotiate a settlement during the investigation. Let me be clear that I did not participate in any attempts to cut a back room deal behind closed doors. The American people deserve to hear the truth in this case and the charges against him. That is precisely why we are having this hearing today,” McCaul said.

Rangel, who earlier this week described the ethics panel’s actions against him as a “public lynching,” on Thursday told reporters he had nothing to say about a deal, but suggested he was not admitting to any corruption.

“Although this is not a good day for me, there's no inference of corruption" he told reporters. “The idea of corruption and dishonesty has never been an issue” in the investigation, he said.

Earlier on Thursday, Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) defended her caucus’s record on ethics. She said Democrats had implemented ”the toughest ethics reform in a generation” when they took over the House in 2006.

In regards to the Rangel Center at the City College of New York, the panel found that Rangel violated the House gift ban, as well as the federal statute prohibiting members from soliciting “anything of value” from a person “whose interests may be substantially affected by the performance or nonperformance of the [member’s] official duties.”

The panel argued that the solicitations also violated the Code of Ethics for Government Service because they made to people with
interests before the Ways and Means Committee, which Rangel chaired at the time.

In addition, the panel said, Rangel abused his Congressional franking privilege by sending the letters through the House mail and rules against soliciting for charities in Congressional buildings.

The investigation found that Rangel had become interested in creating an institution similar to a presidential library to preserve his
legacy and first contacted City College of New York’s president about the idea in late 2004. He also suggested during his first letter to the president, that he was “exploring” ways to fund the Center through Congressional appropriations. One proposal, written by Rangel’s district director, estimated the cost as $30 million or $6 million each year for the next five years.”

Rangel asked for a $6 million and later secured a $445,000 earmark for the Center in 2006. In addition, in June 2005, Rangel sent letters on congressional letterhead to solicit the foundations of Verizon, New York Life, JPMorgan Chase, Citi, Ford, AT&T, Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, Wachovia and Bristol-Meyers Squibb for a gift of “$30 million or $6 million/year for five years” to help fund the proposed Center.

He later used Congressional letterhead to solicit meetings with Donald Trump and David Rockefeller regarding the Center, among others.

In dealing with more than $600,000 in omissions from Rangel’s financial disclosure records, the panel found that he violated the Ethics in Government Act, which requires a “full and complete statement” on assets. Instead, the panel found that Rangel “engaged in a pattern of submitting financial disclosure statements that were incomplete and inaccurate” and failed to report numerous items required to be reported between 1998 through 2007.

The panel also said his amendments fixing the errors and omissions, which he filed last year, were “not timely.”

Rangel leased four rent-stabilized apartments at Lenox Terrance in Harlem, but the investigation singled out the use of one for his campaign office as violating the Code of Ethics for Government Service, which prohibits the acceptance of special favors based on his position as a member of Congress.

Because the terms of the lease stipulated that the apartment was “for living purposes only,” the panel considered Rangel’s use of it for campaign purposes a special favor.

Lastly, the panel found that Rangel violated the Code of Government Ethics as well as tax laws when he failed to report rental income on a beachfront villa in the Dominican Republic.
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Repub4Sarah
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« Reply #7 on: July 29, 2010, 03:45:13 PM »

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/07/29/rangel-prepares-hearing-alleged-ethics-violations/

Ethics Panel Says 'Sorry, Charlie, No Deal'

Published July 29, 2010
| FoxNews.com


A House ethics panel was meeting Thursday to discuss a deal with New York Rep. Charles Rangel after holding a briefing earlier in the day on possible charges against the longtime lawmaker.

Rangel said he's done nothing wrong to warrant an adjudicatory subcommittee's review of 13 allegations of misconduct.

Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, ranking member on the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, said Rangel was given an opportunity to settle charges during the investigative process, and that time has passed.

"Let me be clear that Mr. Rangel under these rules was given opportunities to negotiate a settlement during the investigation. Let me be clear that I did not participate in any attempts to cut a back room deal behind closed doors," McCaul said at the start of a hearing on possible corruption charges.

McCaul said it's not lost on any member of the panel that the approval rating of Congress is at an all time low, and requires the probe, which has involved 28,000 pages of documents and 60 meetings as well as one deposition from Rangel, be fair and open.


Rangel said Thursday that no deal had been struck to spare him from the drawn-out ethics trial, as reports surfaced than an agreement with the congressional panel investigating several alleged violations was in the works.

"I'm not involved in a deal," Rangel said after a CBS affiliate in New York and Reuters reported that a deal was being worked out. Any arrangement would have to be approved by the subcommittee hearing the case, the full ethics committee and potentially the full House of Representatives.

Despite the meeting, Rangel said there is "no inference of corruption" in his dealings, a contention that flies in the face of the meeting taking place by the adjudicatory subcommittee, which was asked to "prove" the allegations.

"The good thing is that no matter how this thing ends, corruption and dishonesty have never been on the table," he said.

Rangel did not attend the meeting, which lasted about 15 minutes, but submitted a 32-page written statement.
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« Reply #8 on: July 29, 2010, 03:47:17 PM »

I can't imagine the GOP members on the panel would be dumb enough to agree to a deal.......
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mystery-ak
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« Reply #9 on: July 29, 2010, 03:50:22 PM »

Drudge's headline.....GOP: NO DEAL - TRIAL!

yahoo

Panel hits Rangel with 13 alleged ethics charges

  By LARRY MARGASAK and LAURIE KELLMAN, Associated Press Writers Larry Margasak And Laurie Kellman, Associated Press Writers   – 16 mins ago

WASHINGTON – House investigators accused veteran New York Rep. Charles Rangel of 13 violations of congressional ethics standards on Thursday, throwing a cloud over his four-decade political career and raising worries for fellow Democrats about the fall elections.

The allegations — which include failure to report rental income from vacation property in the Dominican Republic and to report more than $600,000 in assets on his congressional financial disclosure statements — came as lawyers for Rangel and the House ethics committee worked on a plea deal.

One was struck, people familiar with the talks said, but Republicans indicated it was too late.

The deal between the lawyers will have little meaning if the committee members don't approve it, and Republicans said at the proceeding they were insisting on going forward with a trial. The panel is evenly divided between Democrats and Republicans.

"Mr. Rangel was given multiple opportunities to settle this matter. Instead, he chose to move forward to the public trial phase," said Rep. Jo Bonner of Alabama, the senior Republican on the ethics panel

Chairman Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., has made clear that she wants the committee to be unanimous — leaving little chance for agreement without Rangel capitulating on virtually all counts.

Many Democrats had urged Rangel to settle the case to avoid the prospect of televised hearings right before November congressional elections that will determine which party controls Congress next year.

However, as Thursday's public airing of the charges drew nearer, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi seem resigned to the case proceeding.

"The chips will have to fall where they may politically," she told reporters. Pursuing ethics cases against House members is "a serious responsibility that we have," she said.

The alleged violations of House standards of conduct also include using congressional letterhead to solicit donations for a center for public service to bear Rangel's name on the New York campus of the City College of New York.

Rangel was also accused of accepting a rent-stabilized property in Manhattan for his campaign office and initially not paying federal taxes on the Dominican Republic property.

The ethics panel said Rangel failed to report rental income on his original tax returns for 1998 through 2006 from the Dominican Republic villa. It also said he violated federal laws in addition to House ethics rules, including the 1989 Ethics Reform Act, Postal Service laws and government service codes.

The ethics charges, agreed upon after a two-year probe, were read in a public session of the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, as the ethics committee is formally known.

Rangel, 80, did not attend.

The session set the stage for a committee trial, expected to be held in September. Democrats had hoped to avoid such a public confrontation as November elections approach.

"We live at a time when public skepticism about the institutions in our country is very high," said Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., the ethics committee chair.

She said it had been the panel's goal "to by our actions rebuild and earn trust by the public and our colleagues."

Republicans have been trying to turn the case into an indictment of Democratic leadership. Rangel stepped down earlier this year as chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, one of the top posts in the House.

But Bonner told colleagues, "No one, regardless of their partisan stripes, should rejoice."

"It is the duty of the House to punish its members for disorderly behavior. As such, this is truly a sad day," the Alabama Republican said.

Under the tentative plea deal, it was not immediately clear how many of the 13 charges of ethical violations Rangel agreed to accept.

It includes eight members, equally divided between Democrats and Republicans. Thus, for any deal to be accepted it must be approved by at least one Republican.

In the frantic hours leading up to the meeting, Rangel's lawyer, Leslie Kiernan, talked to attorneys for the panel about how to avoid a trial for the 40-year veteran.

Rep. Michael McCaul of Texas, the top Republican on the panel that will try Rangel, said that the Democrat had been "given the opportunity to negotiate a settlement during the investigation phase."

However, he said, that phase is now over. "We are now in the trial phase," he said.

A congressional trial could be avoided only if Rangel admitted to substantial violations, or resigned.

Punishment could range from a report criticizing his conduct to a reprimand or censure by the House, or a vote to expel him — which is highly unlikely. Any agreement would have to be approved by Rangel and ethics committee members.

"Sixty years ago I survived a Chinese attack in North Korea and as a result I haven't had a bad day since," Rangel told reporters earlier Thursday. "But today I have to reassess that statement."

"I think everyone is looking forward to getting all the facts out in the open, and people will have to react once we know what we're dealing with," said Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Ill.

Rangel is tied for fourth in House seniority. He's still vigorous at 80 years old.

He had substantial influence as Ways and Means chairman. The panel handles taxes, trade, portions of health care, Medicare and Social Security.

But he stepped down from that post in March after the ethics committee criticized him in a separate case, saying he should have known that corporate money paid for two trips to Caribbean conferences.

Rangel had repeatedly said he looked forward to a public discussion of the current allegations. A four-member investigating panel, with separate members from the judging subcommittee, brought the charges.

The 42-member Congressional Black Caucus has warned Democrats against a rush to judgment, and any lawmaker with a significant African-American constituency must consider whether it's worth asking Rangel to quit.

However, some Democratic House members in close races may think it's more important to distance themselves from Rangel. They don't want to have to answer negative Republican ads about Pelosi's promise to wipe Congress clean of ethical misdeeds.

Two Democrats didn't wait to hear the charges.

Rep. Betty Sutton of Ohio, a second-term lawmaker who received 65 percent of the vote two years ago, said Rangel needs to resign to preserve the public's trust in Congress.

Rep. Walt Minnick of Idaho, a freshman who got 51 percent of the vote last time, called for resignation if the charges are proven.

Congress adjourns for its August recess after this week.
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Oceander
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« Reply #10 on: July 29, 2010, 09:59:34 PM »

We'll never know..unless someone leaks it.....no Dem wants all the info against Rangle aired.

Yeah.  Where's wikileaks when you really need them?
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« Reply #11 on: July 30, 2010, 12:39:08 PM »

If I were Charlie, I'd have a food taster posted right ouside my bunker door during the August break.
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Peach
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« Reply #12 on: July 30, 2010, 04:47:59 PM »

I thought the mentally challenged libs promised to drain the swamp.
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