GOP Pays Legal Bills in Vote-Thwart
Case
Concord Monitor/AP
By JOHN SOLOMON
Associated Press Writer
August 12, 2005
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Republican Party says it still has a zero-tolerance
policy for tampering with voters even as it pays the legal bills for a former
Bush campaign official charged with conspiring to thwart Democrats from voting
in New Hampshire.
James Tobin, the president's 2004 campaign chairman for New England, is
charged in New Hampshire federal court with four felonies accusing him of
conspiring with a state GOP official and a GOP consultant in Virginia to jam
Democratic and labor union get-out-the-vote phone banks in November 2002.
The Republican National Committee already has spent more than $722,000 to
provide Tobin, who has pleaded innocent, a team of lawyers from the
high-powered Washington law firm of Williams & Connolly. The firm's other
clients have included former President Clinton and Sen. Hillary Clinton and
former Housing Secretary Henry Cisneros.
Republican Party officials said they don't ordinarily discuss specifics of
their legal work, but confirmed to The Associated Press they had agreed to
underwrite Tobin's defense because he was a longtime supporter and that he
assured them he had committed no crimes.
"Jim is a longtime friend who has served as both an employee and an
independent contractor for the RNC," a spokeswoman for the RNC, Tracey Schmitt,
said Wednesday. "This support is based on his assurance and our belief that Jim
has not engaged in any wrongdoing."
A telephone firm was paid to make repeated hang-up phone calls to overwhelm
the phone banks in New Hampshire and prevent them from getting Democratic
voters to the polls on Election Day 2002, prosecutors allege. Republican John
Sununu won a close race that day to be New Hampshire's newest senator.
At the time, Tobin was the RNC's New England regional director, before
moving to President Bush's 2004 re-election campaign.
A top New Hampshire Party official and a GOP consultant already have pleaded
guilty and cooperated with prosecutors. Tobin's indictment accuses him of
specifically calling the GOP consultant to get a telephone firm to help in the
scheme.
"The object of the conspiracy was to deprive inhabitants of New Hampshire
and more particularly qualified voters ... of their federally secured right to
vote," states the latest indictment issued by a federal grand jury on May
18.
The Republican Party has repeatedly and pointedly disavowed any tactics
aimed at keeping citizens from voting since allegations of voter suppression
surfaced during the Florida recount in 2000 that tipped the presidential race
to Bush.
Earlier this week, RNC chairman Ken Mehlman, the former White House
political director, reiterated a "zero-tolerance policy" for any GOP official
caught trying to block legitimate votes.
"The position of the Republican National Committee is simple: We will not
tolerate fraud; we will not tolerate intimidation; we will not tolerate
suppression. No employee, associate or any person representing the Republican
Party who engages in these kinds of acts will remain in that position," Mehlman
wrote Monday to a group that studied voter suppression tactics.
Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean on Thursday questioned Mehlman's
commitment to the policy. "This is just another example of his say one thing,
do another strategy. Ken Mehlman tells crowds his party is against voter fraud
and intimidation, while in the backrooms he supports Republican officials who
engage in these dirty tricks," Dean said.
Dennis Black and Dane Butswinkas, two Williams & Connolly lawyers for
Tobin, did not return calls seeking comment. Brian Tucker, a New Hampshire
lawyer on the team, declined comment.
Tobin's lawyers have attacked the prosecution, suggesting evidence was
improperly introduced to the grand jury, that their client originally had been
promised he wouldn't be indicted and that he was improperly charged under one
of the statutes.
Tobin stepped down from his Bush-Cheney post a couple of weeks before the
November 2004 election after Democrats suggested he was involved in the phone
bank scheme. He was charged a month after the election.
Paul Twomey, a volunteer lawyer for New Hampshire Democrats who are pursuing
a separate lawsuit involving the phone scheme, said he was surprised the RNC
was willing to pay Tobin's legal bills and that it suggested more people may be
involved.
The new development "really raises the questions of who are they protecting,
how high does this go and who was in on this," Twomey said.
Federal prosecutors have secured testimony from the two convicted
conspirators in the scheme directly implicating Tobin.
Charles McGee, the New Hampshire GOP official who pleaded guilty, told
prosecutors he informed Tobin of the plan and asked for Tobin's help in finding
a vendor who could make the calls that would flood the phone banks.
Allen Raymond, a former colleague of Tobin who operated a Virginia-based
telephone services firm, told prosecutors Tobin called him in October 2002,
explained the telephone plan and asked Raymond's company to help McGee
implement it.
Raymond's lawyer told the court that Tobin made the request for help in his
official capacity as the top RNC official for New England and his client
believed the RNC had sanctioned the activity.
On the Net:
The indictment in this is available at:
http://wid.ap.org/documents/tobinindictment.pdf
RNC Chairman Ken Mehlman's recent letter on voter suppression is available
at: http://wid.ap.org/documents/rncletter.pdf
The Republican National Committee: http://www.rnc.org
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