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#3
posted to alt.sailing.asa
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No wonder they stopped talking about the *culture of corruption*. PKB!
Cheers Ellen Please stop it-I don't do politics. "Gilligan" wrote in message . .. | REP. MARIO BIAGGI (D-NY): In 1988 he was convicted of obstructing justice, | tax evasion, conspiracy, extortion, and accepting bribes. | | CORRINNE BROWN (D-FL): Failed to pay unemployment taxes to the state of | Florida; sued by several airlines for unpaid bills and falsified travel | reports; failed to report sale of her Tallahassee travel agency; improperly | reported the sale of her Gainesville travel agency; sued by Whirlpool Corp. | for unpaid bills; pursued by the IRS for $14,228 in unpaid taxes; | investigations by the House Ethics Committee for possible acceptance of | bribes; refused to file reports in the House about potential conflicts of | interest while overseeing airlines she dealt with through her travel | agencies; charged with money laundering. | | REP. ALBERT BUSTAMANTE (D-TX): Convicted in 1993 of racketeering and | accepting an illegal gratuity. | | TONY COELHO (D-CA): Currently under investigation for fraud while serving as | U.S. Commissioner General of Expo '98 in Lisbon, Portugal.* He was Al Gore's | primary presidential campaign manager until he resigned citing health | reasons. | | REP. WES COOLEY (R-OR): Convicted of falsifying VA loan applications. Paid | $7,000 in fines plus court costs, and placed on probation. Subsequently | tried to gather support to get re-elected to Congress.* | | REP. JERRY COSTELLO (D-IL): | | REP. BOB DORNAN (R-CA): In 1983 attempted to leave Grenada with a stolen | AK-47. It was confiscated by the Army and destroyed. | | REP. WALTER FAUNTROY (D-DC): Financial disclosure misdemeanor (1995). | | REP. BARNEY FRANK (D-MA): Accessory to a male prostitute who ran a | whorehouse in their Washington townhouse. | | REP. NEWT GINGRICH (R-GA): | | STATE REP. ALCEE L. HASTINGS (D-FL): From the 1998 Almanac of American | Politics: "He was impeached by the House of Representatives by a vote of | 426-3 in 1988 and convicted and removed from office by the Senate by a vote | of 69-26. The impeachment arose from allegations that Hastings conspired | with a friend to accept $150,000 for giving two convicted swindlers a break | in sentencing. Hastings was acquitted in a criminal trial in 1983, but the | friend was convicted. In the House, the case for impeachment was made by | John Conyers, senior member of the Congressional Black Caucus. Removed from | the bench, Hastings was unapologetic." | | SEN. JESSE HELMS (R-NC): In 1990, the Helms campaign sent out 125,000 | postcards primarily to black North Carolina voters claiming that they might | not be able to vote, and would be prosecuted for vote fraud if they tried. | His campaign, the North Carolina Republican party, and four consulting and | marketing firms were charged with violations of the Voting Rights Act. The | Helms campaign signed an admission of guilt (claiming later that they didn't | have the money to fight it in court), but Helms and his staff were never | prosecuted. | | REP. CARROL HUBBARD (D-KY): Convicted in 1994 of misappropriation of funds. |