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Sleaze in the Capitol
New York Times
One of the sorriest chapters of American history, the gulling of native Indian tribes, is continuing
apace in Washington, where two Capitol insiders close to the House majority leader, Tom DeLay,
are being investigated for allegedly fleecing six tribes of more than $80 million with inflated
promises of V.I.P. access.
The shameful dealings of Jack Abramoff, a Republican power lobbyist, and Michael Scanlon, Mr.
DeLay's former spokesman, are coming to light as Senate and Justice Department investigators
follow leads from nouveau-riche tribes whose casino profits spurred a new category of lucre and
greed in the hyperkinetic world of Washington lobbying.
Even as the two fast-talking political brokers banked large profits for three years of minimal labor,
it was found, they were exchanging gleeful private messages mocking tribal leaders as "morons,"
"troglodytes" and "monkeys."
"I want all their MONEY!!!" Mr. Scanlon exuberantly e-mailed in the midst of one deal.
The outrageous affair includes evidence that the two sought to manipulate tribal elections to
ensure their lobbying boondoggles, while dropping the names of Mr. DeLay and other leaders and
urging tribal contributions to Republican political funds.
In the latest high-roller abuses laid bare by The Washington Post, Mr. Abramoff was found to
have prodded the tribes to pay for his luxury skyboxes at Washington sports arenas - yes, even at
the home of the football Redskins - so he could impress Capitol politicians, staff members and
fund-raisers with swank perches to push causes unrelated to tribal issues.
A colleague pronounced Mr. Abramoff a master of schmooze, but sleaze seems a far better word.
While the Senate Indian Affairs Committee is continuing its inquiry, the Republican House
leadership remains mute. The gulling of the casino tribes is a blot on Congress and the lobbying
industry that cries out for a thorough public vetting. But no one is taking any bets, particularly at
tribal casinos, that Capitol politicians can fully face the task.
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