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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

DeLay report prompts call for bribery probe


DeLay
 (The Spokesman-Review)
Todd J. Gillman Dallas Morning News

WASHINGTON – A public interest group that has long accused House Majority Leader Tom DeLay of ethical lapses said Thursday it will ask the Justice Department to investigate him for bribery, citing a report that a Kansas company donated to one of his political committees to gain favorable treatment in an energy bill.

Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington said the revelation goes beyond anything the House ethics committee looked into or found when it admonished DeLay last fall for playing golf with Westar Energy executives. That was shortly after the company sent $25,000 to Texans for a Republican Majority.

The ethics panel last fall said that the outing looked improper even though no favors were issued. It found that DeLay did not improperly solicit Westar donations or grant special favors.

Spokeswoman Shannon Flaherty said the public interest organization “is simply a Democrat attack group that’s desperately trying to recycle false allegations that have already been dismissed.”

Three DeLay lieutenants associated with TRMPAC are under indictment in Austin, Texas, accused of steering corporate contributions to state candidates in violation of Texas law. Westar has also been indicted in the case.

All deny wrongdoing.

Also Thursday, an Austin grand jury reissued indictments against two of the DeLay associates charged with illegal use of $190,000 in corporate funds for state campaigns. The new indictments refer to the transfer of “funds” rather than checks. Lawyers for the defendants, Jim Ellis and John Colyandro, had complained that the relevant statute didn’t refer to checks.

Westar officials have long maintained that the company donated to TRMPAC in hopes of gaining access to DeLay, and the company repeated that stance this week. On Thursday, the Dallas Morning News reported that in a recent court document, Westar said company officials “were told they needed to write a check for $25,000” to TRMPAC to get a meeting with DeLay.

And at an April hearing, on a lawsuit brought by Democratic state lawmakers against TRMPAC, Westar attorney Martha Dickey told an Austin judge that company officials hoped the contribution would also prompt DeLay to help them on pending energy legislation.

“The question is, were they paying for more than just the meeting?” said Melanie Sloan, president of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics.