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When George Met Jack
Time
By ADAM ZAGORIN, MIKE ALLEN
January 22, 2006
As details poured out about the illegal and unseemly activities of
Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff, White House officials sought to portray the
scandal as a Capitol Hill affair with little relevance to them. Peppered for
days with questions about Abramoff's visits to the White House, press secretary
Scott McClellan said the now disgraced lobbyist had attended two huge holiday
receptions and a few "staff-level meetings" that were not worth describing
further. "The President does not know him, nor does the President recall ever
meeting him," McClellan said.
The President's memory may soon be unhappily refreshed. TIME has seen five
photographs of Abramoff and the President that suggest a level of contact
between them that Bush's aides have downplayed. While TIME's source refused to
provide the pictures for publication, they are likely to see the light of day
eventually because celebrity tabloids are on the prowl for them. And that has
been a fear of the Bush team's for the past several months: that a picture of
the President with the admitted felon could become the iconic image of direct
presidential involvement in a burgeoning corruption scandal like the shots of
President Bill Clinton at White House coffees for campaign contributors in the
mid-1990s.
In one shot that TIME saw, Bush appears with Abramoff, several unidentified
people and Raul Garza Sr., a Texan Abramoff represented who was then chairman
of the Kickapoo Indians, which owned a casino in southern Texas. Garza, who is
wearing jeans and a bolo tie in the picture, told TIME that Bush greeted him as
"Jefe," or "chief" in Spanish. Another photo shows Bush shaking hands with
Abramoff in front of a window and a blue drape. The shot bears Bush's
signature, perhaps made by a machine. Three other photos are of Bush, Abramoff
and, in each view, one of the lobbyist's sons (three of his five children are
boys). A sixth picture shows several Abramoff children with Bush and House
Speaker Dennis Hastert, who is now pushing to tighten lobbying laws after
declining to do so last year when the scandal was in its early stages.
Most of the pictures have the formal look of photos taken at presidential
receptions. The images of Bush, Abramoff and one of his sons appear to be the
rapid-fire shots--known in White House parlance as clicks-- that the President
snaps with top supporters before taking the podium at fund-raising receptions.
Over five years, Bush has posed for tens of thousands of such shots--many with
people he does not know. Last month 9,500 people attended holiday receptions at
the White House, and most went two by two through a line for a photo with the
President and the First Lady. The White House is generous about providing
copies--in some cases, signed by the President--that become centerpieces for
"walls of fame" throughout status-conscious Washington.
Abramoff knew the game. In a 2001 e-mail to a lawyer for tribal leader
Lovelin Poncho, he crows about an upcoming meeting at the White House that he
had arranged for Poncho and says it should be a priceless asset in his client's
upcoming re-election campaign as chief of Louisiana's Coushatta Indians. "By
all means mention [in the tribal newsletter] that the Chief is being asked to
confer with the President and is coming to Washington for this purpose in May,"
Abramoff writes. "We'll definitely have a photo from the opportunity, which he
can use." The lawyer had asked about attire, and Abramoff advises, "As to
dress, probably suit and tie would work best."
The e-mail, now part of a wide-ranging federal investigation into lobbying
practices and lobbyists' relationships with members of Congress, offers a
window into Abramoff's willingness to trade on ties to the White House and to
invoke Bush's name to impress clients who were spending tens of millions of
dollars on Abramoff's advice.
Abramoff was once in better graces at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, having
raised at least $100,000 for the President's re-election campaign. During 2001
and 2002, his support for Republicans and connections to the White House won
him invitations to Hanukkah receptions, each attended by 400 to 500 people.
McClellan has said Abramoff may have been present at "other widely attended"
events. He was also admitted to the White House complex for meetings with
several staff members, including one with presidential senior adviser Karl
Rove, one of the most coveted invitations in Washington.
Michael Scanlon, who is Abramoff's former partner and has pleaded guilty to
conspiring to bribe a Congressman, in 2001 told the New Times of Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., that Abramoff had "a relationship" with the President. "He
doesn't have a bat phone or anything, but if he wanted an appointment, he would
have one," Scanlon said. Nonsense, say others. A former White House official
familiar with some Abramoff requests to the White House said Abramoff had some
meetings with Administration officials in 2001 and 2002, but he was later
frozen out because aides became suspicious of his funding sources and annoyed
that the issues he raised did not mesh with their agenda. A top Republican
official said it was clear to him that Abramoff couldn't pick up the phone and
reach Bush aides because Abramoff had asked the official to serve as an
intermediary.
The White House describes the number of Abramoff's meetings with staff
members only as "a few," even though senior Bush aides have precise data about
them. McClellan will not give details, saying he doesn't "get into discussing
staff-level meetings." During a televised briefing, he added, "We're not going
to engage in a fishing expedition." Pressed for particulars about Abramoff's
White House contacts, McClellan said with brio, "People are insinuating things
based on no evidence whatsoever." But he said he cannot "say with absolute
certainty that [Abramoff] did not have any other visits" apart from those
disclosed. Another White House official said, "The decision was made don't put
out any additional information." That reticence has been eagerly seized upon by
some Democrats. Senate minority leader Harry Reid of Nevada wrote to Bush last
week to demand details, saying Abramoff "may have had undue and improper
influence within your Administration."
Garza, the bolo-wearing former chairman of the Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of
Texas, has fond memories of his session with Bush, which he said was held in
2001 in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, next to the White House.
According to e-mails in the hands of investigators, the meeting was arranged
with the help of Abramoff and Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax
Reform. In an April 18, 2001, e-mail to Abramoff, Norquist wrote that he would
be "honored" if Abramoff "could come to the White House meeting."
Garza--known in his native Kickapoo language as Makateonenodua, or black
buffalo--is under federal indictment for allegedly embezzling more than
$300,000 from his tribe. Through his spokesman, Garza said that during the
session, Bush talked about policy matters and thanked those present for
supporting his agenda, then took questions from the audience of about two dozen
people. Garza told TIME, "We were very happy that Jack Abramoff helped us to be
with the President. Bush was in a very good mood--very upbeat and positive." No
evidence has emerged that the Bush Administration has done anything for the
Kickapoo at Abramoff's behest.
Three attendees who spoke to TIME recall that Abramoff was present, and
three of them say that's where the picture of Bush, Abramoff and the former
Kickapoo chairman was taken. The White House has a different description of the
event Garza attended. "The President stopped by a meeting with 21 state
legislators and two tribal leaders," spokeswoman Erin Healy said. "Available
records show that Mr. Abramoff was not in attendance."
With reporting by With reporting by Massimo Calabresi/ Washington
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