Monday, February 06, 2006

Novak Credits Souder For Swaying Vote For Boehner

Robert Novak credits two unliked, outsiders for swaying the House GOP caucus vote against Rep. Roy Blunt (R-MO) and towards Rep. John Boehner (R-OH) for the House Majority Leader position. According to Novak's "inside" account, Blunt was confident he had the votes to win, but what Rep. Bill Thomas (R-CA) and Rep. Mark Souder (R-IN) had to say ended it for Blunt. As Novak calls it:

The speeches by Thomas and Souder built concern that Blunt's election would signal that Republicans really want nothing to change. Blunt would have continued the promotion from within for Republican leadership of a select circle of insiders intimately connected to the K Street lobbyist community. Blunt's campaign exuded an aura of entitlement, especially when he declined to appear with his opponents on Sunday televised interview programs.

Novak describes Souder in less than flattering terms. He says:

Souder, a back-bench bomb thrower for 11 years, suggested that the election of Blunt could ratify the Democratic indictment of the GOP as the party of corruption . . . Souder can claim even fewer friends in Congress than Thomas. An ardent conservative and evangelical Christian, Souder has been a hair shirt for GOP leaders since his election in the famous Class of '94. His nominating speech for Rep. John Shadegg, running for majority leader on a platform of conservative reform, moved his colleagues. "If these elections come back with the same top leadership," Souder declared, "we will be telling the American people that we have not changed -- that the rest of the world has shifted, but we have not."


"Whether the reform advocated in Souder's speech is realized under Boehner is another matter," Novak concludes. Based upon Boehner's debut performance as Majority Leader this weekend, which we reported on earlier, much-needed reform is not likely to be achieved under his leadership.

It should be pointed out that Souder never asked anyone to support Boehner, just Shadegg, who lost on the first ballot with 40 votes; however, the vast majority of Shadegg's votes went to Boehner on the second ballot.

Sunday, February 05, 2006

Gay Bar Shooter Involved In Hate Crime Was A Nazi

The teen-ager who shot up a gay bar in New Bedford, Massachusetts last Thursday after first wielding an axe at several patrons and leaving several patrons seriously injured was a self-described Nazi according to PageoneQ. The teen-ager died in a shoot-out this weekend with Arkansas police, which also left one dead police officer and a female acquaintance he had picked up along the way in his cross-country trek. Jacob Robida, age 18, shot the woman in the head before opening fire on police.

Robida, age 18, maintained a personal website on myspace.com where he went under the name Jake Jekyll. PageoneQ reports:

There are, on the site, many text and graphic references to murder, Nazis, anarchy and antisocial behavior. One such entry refers to Seig Heil, a popular Third Reich chant and greeting which translates as "Hail to Victory."

Prominently headlined on the site is a section of prose titled, Pass the Axe: PASS THE AXE "Pass me something Sharp and Wicked and I'll pass it back don't worry I'll pass it back." Hey click on the axe and grab it. Get your hands bloody baby! Add it to your page or put it in a comment box. Doesn't matter where you put it just PASS THE FUCKIN AXE!


Family and friends claimed that Robida had not previously expressed any anti-homosexual views. But Robida did have a swastika tatoo on his arm according to his friends. And PageoneQ discovered that a member of Robida's family in New Bedford had signed an anti-gay marriage petition according to records maintained by the Secretary of the Commonwealth.

Robida resided in a district represented by the openly gay Rep. Barney Frank (D). According to news reports, Frank hopes that this tragic hate crime will help convince Congress to add "sexual orientation" to the federal hate crimes law. The bill passed the House last year and is currently pending in the Senate.

Indiana is just one of 4 states in the country without any hate crimes law. Marion Co. Prosecutor Carl Brizzi had pledged last year to push for legislation during this year's legislative session, which included sexual orientation, but those efforts never materialized.

Hostettler and Sodrel Races Key To Control Of House

The Washington Post paints a dim picture for Republicans and a realistic hope for Democrats to regain control of the House this year, and two seats currently held by Republicans John Hostettler and Mike Sodrel figure to be key in determining the outcome. As the Post describes the landscape:

Not since 1994 has the party in power -- in this case the Republicans -- faced such a discouraging landscape in a midterm election. President Bush is weaker than he was just a year ago, a majority of voters in recent polls have signaled their desire for a change in direction, and Democrats outpoll Republicans on which party voters think is more capable of handling the country's biggest problems.

The result is a midterm already headed toward what appears to be an inevitable conclusion: Democrats are poised to gain seats in the House and in the Senate for the first time since 2000. The difference between modest gains (a few seats in the Senate and fewer than 10 in the House) and significant gains (half a dozen in the Senate and well more than a dozen in the House) is where the battle for control of Congress will be fought.

Republicans currently control the House 231-201. The Democrats need to pick up just 15 seats to capture control. According to the Post, there are currently at least 25 competitive races and perhaps as many as 40. Indiana's two southern Indiana districts figure big in the equation for Democrats as the Post calls it:

Indiana is another place to watch as Republican Reps. Michael E. Sodrel and John N. Hostettler both face extremely competitive Democratic challenges in districts that favor GOPers on the presidential level. Sodrel faces a rematch against Baron Hill (D), the incumbent he narrowly ousted in 2004. Hostettler -- who makes little effort to raise money and forswears political consultants in favor of a local network of conservative activists -- is being challenged by Vanderburgh County Sheriff Brad Ellsworth (D).

Boehner Bombs In His Debut As Majority Leader

Newly- elected House Majority Leader John Boehner promised lobbying reforms, but he is already running backwards before he leaves the starting gates. House Speaker Dennis Hastert and Rep. David Dreier proposed ending lobbyist-paid travel as part of a lobbying reform package, which also barred former members who now lobby from having access to the House floor and the House gym. Boehner now says he is against banning lobbbyist-paid travel.

In a slap at Hastert's and Dreier's reform efforts, the Washington Post reports that they are now pulling back from their initial proposal: "'This is something we refer to as a false start,'" a senior aide said, acknowledging that Hastert and other leaders had backed the Republicans into a no-win situation. The leaders can either push forward with a plan most Republicans oppose, or they can scrap it and read that they backed off the toughest reform proposals."

In his debut performance on the Sunday morning talk shows, Boehner totally bombed. NBC Meet The Press host Tim Russert pointed out that Boehner had taken lobbyist-paid travel in excess of $157,000 in recent years to such places as Boca Raton, Florida, Edinburgh, Scotland and Monterrey, California, all popular golfing destinations. Boehner insisted the golfing had nothing to do with it; rather, that is where the sponsoring groups chose to hold their meetings.

Fox News Sunday host, Chris Wallace, asked Boehner how he manages to maintain a permanent tan year-round and if it was because he spent so much time on the golf course. He also asked him about a New York Times description of him:

Easygoing and well liked, with a perpetual tan, a low golf handicap and an ever-present Barclay cigarette between his fingers, Mr. Boehner, 56, looks like a throwback to the 1950's--Dean Martin comes to Congress.

Russert also confronted Boehner with the words of Indiana's Rep. Mark Souder in nominating Rep. John Shadegg for the position Boehner won. Sounder said, "Duke Cunningham, Jack Abramoff, and the ongoing and disgusting saga of abuse of power and public trust are not just made up by the Democrats." Boehner was not moved.

Instead of banning lobbyist-paid travel, Boehner wants members to be required to obtain advance approval from the House Ethics Committee, which totally misses the mark. Boehner, in defending his own travel, said he already seeks an okay from the committee before accepting any privately-funded trips. He also supports more disclosure of lobbyist expenditures on members.

As to those nasty earmarks, Boehner would like to see less of them but is against eliminating them. He prefers more disclosure, or "more transparency" as he likes to call it, in the budget process so members are more fully educated on what they are voting on.

Boehner also told the Washington Post this weekend that he has no intention of implementing new lobbying rules until he can "reach a broad consensus with House Republicans." Well, then he better enjoy being Majority Leader while it lasts, because it won't last for long.

Saturday, February 04, 2006

Indiana Equality Plans "Our Families Count" Rally At Statehouse



Indiana Equality is planning an "Our Families Count" rally for this Thursday, February 9, 2006 at the Indiana State House from 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. The rally has been prompted by the recent spate of legislation aimed at relegating Indiana's GLBT community to second-class status according to the group. A 2-hour crash course in lobbying the legislature as a constituent is also being offered from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. at the Christ Church Cathedral on Monument Circle. A $5 voluntary donation is being requested to cover the program's costs. For more information click here.

Senate Kills Young's Anti-Employee Bill; House Kills Anti-Immigrant Bill

When the General Assembly does the right thing and kills a very bad bill, we feel obliged to point it out. That can certainly be said of the Indiana Senate's 38-12 vote defeating SB 108, which was authored by Sen. Mike Young (R-Indianapolis).

As we previously described the bill, it was nothing short of a war on working people. Young wanted to wipe out the only hammer in Indiana law which employees and their attorneys can use to get employers to pay up wages they owe to their employees, and to give employers greater discretion to withhold wages from their employees for such things as uniforms, tools and tuition reimbursement.

The penalty provision of the law, which makes employers pay their employees up to double the amount of their unpaid wages as liquidated damages and their attorney's fees, would have been eliminated altogether. In its place, Young proposed a simple interest penalty of 18% per year, and he would have left it to the discretion of the court to award attorney's fees. As Sen. Tim Lanane (D-Anderson) observed, the bill would have effectively deprived employees of legal representation in wage dispute matters.

So bad was Young's proposal that not a single pro-employer organization advocated for its passage--a point made well by Senate President Pro Tem Bob Garton. The only surprise in the vote was that there were actually 12 senators who thought it a good idea. One of them was Sen. Brent Waltz (R-Greenwood), who during debate on the bill claimed that one of his successful start-up companies struggled with the reality that it could not effectively charge employees for their uniforms and had to turn down employment opportunities to those who couldn't front the pay for their uniforms. The struggles one must face in life when he inherits a fortune at the age of 18 as Waltz did.

On the House side, members took a strong stand against an anti-immigrant bill, HB 1383, which House Speaker Pro Tem Eric Turner (R-Gas City) proposed to deprive illegal aliens of certain government benefits enjoyed by all others, and to put state law enforcement in the business of immigration enforcement. The House voted HB 1383 down on a 74-19 vote.

Turner was criticized for seeking to write penalties in the law for illegal aliens while ignoring the employers who illegally hire them. Rep. John Aguilera (D-East Chicago) evened the score by proposing a killer second reading amendment to the bill which imposed stiff monetary penalties on Indiana employers who hire illegal aliens, which Turner opposed. Aguilera's amendment was adopted to the dismay of Turner on a vote of 55-43.

Rep. Mike Murphy (R-Indianapolis), who has been criticized by Advance Indiana for promoting an anti-gay agenda as Marion Co. GOP Chairman, even rose to oppose Rep. Turner's mean-spirited assault on the state's growing Hispanic population. Perhaps Murphy is beginning to take some of our past criticism of him to heart. One lone Democrat, Rep. Vern Tincher (D-Terre Haute) joined 18 Republicans in supporting this very bad legislation. Some of Advance America's favorite legislators were among that group of 18, including Rep. Woody Burton, Rep. Billy Bright, Rep. Eric Koch, Rep. Jeff Thompson and Rep. Troy Woodruff.

House Majority Leader John Boehner

The best that can be said of the decision of House Republicans in Congress selecting Rep. John Boehner (R-OH) over Rep. Roy Blunt (R-MO) to replace Tom DeLay as Majority Leader is that it was the lesser of two evils. In passing over Rep. John Shadegg (R-AZ), a real reformer, the GOP may have missed its last chance at saving its majority in this year's election.

Both Boehner and Blunt have serious ethical clouds hanging over their heads in an atomsphere of a corruption-plagued Congress. While Boehner was passing out campaign checks from the tobacco industry on the floor of the House to reward members for their votes, Blunt was providing legislative favors to the tobacco folks who were employing his wife and son to lobby on their behalf.

Shadegg managed to get just 40 votes, primarily from the House Republican Study Committee's ranks led by Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN), but that turned out to be more than enough to deny the ethically-challenged Blunt from getting the 117 votes he needed to win on a first ballot. Blunt fell 7 votes short of a majority, even though he claimed to have secured the support of a majority of the caucus for a couple of weeks ago. The Shadegg supporters chose Boehner over Blunt who failed to pick up any support on the second ballot.

Several media sources falsely reported on the circumstances which required that the first ballot be recast. While it was reported that more votes were cast than the number of members present for a vote, it was not widely reported that it was the result of the caucus forgotting that the delegate from Puerto Rico, who was present for the vote, was also permitted to cast a vote.

Indiana's Pence most assuredly will have the ear of the new leader. While his man didn't win, Boehner's majority would not have been possible without the support of the bloc of House members he leads. Let's hope he can get the leadership to support the complete overhaul of lobbying rules and reform the budget process. Though a lot of praying may be required that Boehner does not become ensnared in a probe of his own past misdeeds, landing the party right back where it was under the DeLay cloud.

Wednesday, February 01, 2006

Legality of Advance America's Payments To Miller's Law Firm Questioned


Last week in reporting on the defeat of a lobbying reform bill and Eric Miller’s role in its defeat, we alluded to the fact that Indianapolis Star reporter Brendan O’Shaughnessy has in his possession evidence which at least gives the appearance that Eric Miller and his Advance America organization are evading Indiana’s Lobby Law. For reasons that remain unclear the Star has chosen not to publish this bombshell story. Advance Indiana will now share with the public what the Star is not sharing with you.

This story can be traced back to a story we first ran last May in which we reported on the self-dealing in which Eric Miller had engaged as the head of the non-profit Advance America organization. Miller founded the organization back in the early 1980s and has run the organization uninterrupted except for a brief period when he ran unsuccessfully for the Republican nomination for Governor in 2004. We reported at that time that Miller had pocketed at least $1 million in the form of his salary and benefits and legal fees he had paid to his own law firm for the period of 1998 to 2003 according to tax returns filed by the organization with the IRS.

A short time after our report ran, Advance Indiana was contacted by the Star’s Brendan O’Shaughnessy, who had just recently joined the paper as a reporter assigned to cover the city beat. Because Miller’s organization had been actively involved in defeating the Human Rights Ordinance when it was voted on the first time by the Indianapolis city-county council in April, O’Shaughnessy was interested in learning more about the organization. O’Shaughnessy had earned a name for himself uncovering corruption at the Gary Urban Enterprise Association, a non-profit organization currently under investigation by federal authorities, in part, because of his reporting for another newspaper in northern Indiana.

Advance Indiana editor Gary R Welsh shared with O’Shaughnessy the publicly available tax returns he had obtained for the organization and other information he had obtained about the organization from its lobbyist registration reports it filed with the Indiana Lobby Registration Commission. Welsh specifically raised questions with the Star reporter about the large retainer payments the organization was paying to Miller’s law firm and the inherent conflict of interest of such an arrangement, as well as the fact that the organization and his law firm shared the same office space at 101 W. Ohio in downtown Indianapolis, a mere block from the State House. Welsh expressed concerns about whether the organization might be picking up expenses which rightfully should be paid for by Miller’s law firm.

Welsh also raised concerns about why such a small organization (with an annual budget well below $1 million) would have a need to spend as much as $116,500 in a single year on legal fees. Miller, as executive director, had been regularly paid a six-figure salary, well above the average pay for executives of similarly-sized non-profit groups during the period analyzed. In just a three-year period, the organization also paid Miller’s law firm, Millers, Waters, Martin & Hall, nearly $300,000. Welsh questioned whether the firm was performing lobbying activities for the organization which were not being reported as required by Indiana law. While Advance America is a registered employer lobbyist and Miller is registered compensated lobbyist, the firm and its other attorneys are not registered to lobby.

O’Shaughnessy contacted Welsh a few weeks after their initial meeting to report that he was pursuing the story further, and that he would be interviewing Miller to discuss some of the issues. A short time later O’Shaughnessy contacted Welsh and met with him in his office to discuss what Miller had told him during their interview.

O’Shaughnessy, with Miller’s permission, tape recorded the interview, a part of which the reporter shared with Welsh. At the beginning of the interview, Miller was asked by O’Shaughnessy to defend the relatively high salary he received as the group’s executive director relative to other organizations. Miller assured O’Shaughnessy that his salary had been independently set by the organization’s board of directors, an all male group of Christian right activists (mostly ministers) who are hand-picked by Miller. Miller seemed surprised when O’Shaughnessy shared with him statistics showing he was paid much more than other non-profit heads.

Next, O’Shaughnessy questioned Miller about the purpose of the six-figure fees paid annually to his law firm. Miller assured the reporter that the compensation was not for work he had performed; rather, it was to compensate other attorneys in his firm for the work they performed on behalf of the organization. Miller then described the work they performed. He described their work as being related to the organization’s legislative work. According to Miller, they helped research, draft, review and monitor legislation. Most importantly, he told the reporter that the other attorneys would field calls from legislators about legislative issues and assist them with questions they had pertaining to legislation.

This latter admission by Miller is critical. Under Indiana law (I.C. §2-7-1 et seq.), “lobbying” is defined to mean “communicating by any means, or paying others to communicate by any means, with any legislative official with the purpose of influencing any legislative action.” A “lobbyist” is defined to mean “any person who engages in lobbying, and in any registration year, receives or expends an aggregate of $500 in compensation or expenditures reportable under this article whether the compensation or expenditure is solely for lobbying or the lobbying is incidental to that individual's regular employment.”

By Miller’s own admission, other members of his firm were compensated by the organization to perform legislative-related work, which included communications with legislators. Miller might quibble over whether those communications were for the purpose of “influencing any legislative action”, but to an independent observer, it raises the appearance Miller, the other attorneys at his firm performing the work and Advance America knowingly and intentionally conspired to evade the registering and reporting requirements such activities trigger under Indiana’s Lobby Law.

Other organizations like Advance America often employ both in-house employees and outside consultants to perform lobbying work. But in each case you will find that the organization, its in-house employees and outside consultants will each register and file activity reports with the Lobby Registration Commission. In the case of the organization, it will register and report as an employer lobbyist, which will include the compensation it pays to others to perform lobbying on its behalf. The in-house employees, the outside consultant’s employer and the consultant’s compensated employees performing lobbying work for the group will each register and report their work on behalf of the organization as compensated lobbyists.

Any person who knowingly or intentionally violates the registration and reporting requirements imposed by the Lobby Law commits unlawful lobbying, which is a Class D felony. A person found guilty of committing unlawful lobbying may also be barred from lobbying for a period of up to 10 years. Indiana’s attorney general and county prosecutors are charged with prosecuting violations of the Lobby Law.

Since Miller and his organization have, by all appearances, dutifully complied with the annual registration and reporting requirements of the law, the question is why the organization would not register and report that Miller’s law firm is being compensated for lobbying activities, and why Miller’s law firm and its attorneys would not register and report their lobbying activities on behalf of the organization? The answer may well lie in Miller’s desire to protect the organization’s favored tax-exempt status. As a tax-exempt organization, IRS regulations prohibit the organization from engaging in excessive lobbying-related activities or partisan politics. We have raised questions in the past about the organization’s practices in both respects.

Between the years 2000 and 2005, our analysis of Advance America’s lobbyist reports showed that its annual lobbyist expenditures were as little as $3,855.67 in one year and no more than $38,397.82. During this same period, the group reported on its federal tax returns that it spent as little as $25,037 and no more than $52,175 in annual lobbying expenditures under the IRS’s broader definition of lobbying. The group disclosed the work done by the law firm as legal services; it did not mention any lobbying work.

As we reported just last week, Miller sent an e-mail alert to his members on January 20, 2006 in which he represented that [Advance America's] legislative expenses will exceed $160,000" in seeking more tax-deductible contributions for the group's work. That is far higher than the group has ever reported spending on lobbying. Ironically, Miller gloated to his members over the defeat of a lobbying reform bill which would have required his group to report its grassroots lobbying expenditures, as well as its direct lobbying expenditures. He described the bill as "an attempt to stop public involvement in the legislative process."

Curiously, since Advance Indiana began scrutinizing the group’s tax returns, it would appear it has sought extensions well beyond the deadline for filing its 2004 tax year returns. While the 2004 tax returns have been available for other tax-exempt organizations required to file Form 940s for many months, Advance America’s 2004 tax return has yet to appear.

Even without considering the payments to Miller’s law firm, the group's reported lobbying expenditures seem unrealistically low given the extent of the group’s lobbying activities. Miller's $160,000 figure he shares with his members is probably closer to the mark. If you factor in the payments to the law firm and allocate an appropriate percentage of those payments for lobbying, the group’s annual expenditures for lobbying dangerously approaches or exceeds what it may lawfully spend on lobbying-related purposes without losing its tax-exempt status. If Miller is not properly reporting these expenditures on the group’s federal tax returns, not only could the group lose its tax-exempt status, he could be personally slapped with fines and criminally prosecuted for federal tax law violations.

Welsh explained to O’Shaughnessy the legal implications of Miller’s potentially damaging admission, dutifully tape-recorded by the reporter. The incriminating recording would no doubt be of particular interest to government prosecutors once the reporter aired the story to the public in the Star. Running out of time, Welsh did not have the opportunity to listen to a large portion of the recording, and he and O’Shaughnessy agreed to discuss it in further detail later.

More than six months have past and the reporter has seemingly dropped the story. At one time he said he was too busy to work on the story; another time he told Welsh it was not part of his assignment at the Star to cover such matters.

So is the Star making this reporter sit on this story? Perhaps. Remember, Christian right lawyer John Price filed a lawsuit against the Star last year in which he alleged that the paper’s top management discriminated against two former reporters with the Star because of their Christianity. The Christian right has not been happy with the decidedly more moderate turn the paper’s editorial page has taken since the Gannett Company purchased it from the Eugene Pulliam family several years ago. It’s possible the paper doesn’t want to raise the ire of Miller’s supporters at a time it’s still fighting the religious freedom lawsuit pursued by Price for the former reporters.

Whatever the Star’s reasoning is for sitting on this bombshell story, the people of Indiana deserve to have this information aired publicly. As a tax-exempt organization, Advance America’s activities are being subsidized by the taxpayers. Without the assistance of government prosecutors, we have been able to uncover substantial evidence of at least the appearance of wrongdoing by Miller, his law firm and the organization. Evidence, we would argue, cry for a full and complete investigation by government prosecutors.

Advance Indiana calls on Marion County Prosecutor Carl Brizzi to investigate the organization, Miller and his law firm for potential violations of Indiana’s Lobby Law. Brizzi should coordinate his investigation with U.S. Attorney Susan Brooks to determine if federal tax laws have been violated as well.

Several years ago the Star relentlessly pursued charges that former Rep. Sam Turpin (R-Brownsburg) had violated Indiana’s Lobby Law on much shakier evidence of a violation until it eventually pressured former Marion County Prosecutor Scott Newman into indicting Turpin. Turpin eventually won a dismissal of the charges because of the vagueness of the lobbying law, which has since been amended. It is difficult to explain the Star’s unwillingness to pursue this story with at least an equal amount of vigor.

Miller and his organization are no doubt one of the most influential lobbying influences at the State House and at the local level in Indiana when it comes to matters affecting our state’s social policies. He is a public figure who has sought election to our state’s highest office, all the time using his tax-exempt organization to advance his own personal and political ambitions. If he is abusing his status and our laws, he must be held accountable. We expect the Star, as our state’s newspaper of record, to be a full participant in that process.

17 Down And 33 To Go

Washington state became the 17th state in the country to enact a civil rights law prohibiting the discrimination of persons based upon sexual orientation after Gov. Christine Gregoire signed a bill sent to her by the state legislature yesterday. Discrimination includes employment, housing, insurance and credit. Because the legislation also defines "sexual orientation" to include "gender identity," Washington also becomes the 7th state to prohibit discrimination based on gender identity as well.

The law is scheduled to take effect on June 1; however, an anti-gay Christian hate group is circulating petitions to hold a referendum this fall to repeal the newly enacted law. If the group obtains enough signatures to get it on the ballot, the law will not take effect unless the voter initiative is voted down in November.

While the legislation passed the House handily, it narrowly passed the Senate. One lone Republican switched his long-time opposition to the bill and gave supporters the extra vote they needed in passing it on a 25-23 vote. Just as was the case with the passage of Indianapolis' HRO last year, bipartisan support is critical if the GLBT is to be successful in bringing equality for everyone throughout the country.

There are now 33 states which allow the discrimination of persons based upon their sexual orientation, including Indiana. Will Indiana become the 18th state to outlaw such discrimination, or will it become the 47th? If the hate crimes legislation is any indication, it will likely be the latter since Indiana is just one of 4 states without a hate crimes law.