FBI arrests former lobbyist in growing Abramoff case

Posted on Monday, September 08, 2008 1:32 PM ET
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By Jim Popkin, NBC News Senior Investigative Producer

The FBI today arrested Kevin Ring, a former lobbyist, for his alleged role in the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal. Justice Department officials said that the FBI arrested Ring this morning at his Maryland home. He is charged in a 10-count public-corruption indictment, the officials said. Ring is a former congressional staffer for Rep. John Doolittle (R-Ca.)

The indictment charges Ring with conspiring with Abramoff and others to corrupt congressional and executive-branch officials by providing things of value to several public officials "to induce or reward those who took official actions benefiting Ring and his clients."

As reported by the Associated Press, Ring is a one-time congressional aide who went on to
work with jailed lobbyist Jack Abramoff. Ring, 37, pleaded not guilty to a 10-count federal
indictment that accuses him of conspiring with Abramoff to win assistance from congressional and executive-branch officials by giving them things of value, and helping them skirt requirements to report those gifts.

He appeared in federal court unshaven, his hair rumpled, wearing shorts and a T-shirt and occasionally fighting back tears as he exchanged glances with his wife.

Ring's lawyer said that despite cooperating voluntarily for two years, Ring was not allowed to surrender himself.  "The prosecutors orchestrated the spectacle of arresting Mr.
Ring in front of his wife and children this morning," attorney Richard Hibey said in a statement.

"While Mr. Ring had been cooperating with officials for over two years, he simply could not plead guilty to crimes he did not commit. From that point he was deemed uncooperative."

The indictment accuses Ring of obstructing justice by attempting to thwart a grand jury and congressional investigation, and of engaging in a scheme to deprive citizens of the honest services of their elected officials.

It's the latest development in the long-running Abramoff investigation, which has netted 13 guilty pleas from former lobbyists and government officials and one former congressman, GOP Rep. Bob Ney of Ohio. Abramoff was sentenced to four years in prison just last week.

Prior to working as a lobbyist with Abramoff from 1999-2004, Ring worked for more than four years as a top aide to Doolittle. Doolittle has not been charged but remains under investigation, and is retiring from Congress at the end of this year partly as a result of the probe. He has repeatedly maintained he is innocent.

The 46-page indictment lists a long list of favors that Ring did for aides to Doolittle and for Doolittle himself, who is referred to not by name but as "Representative 5." These included tickets to sports games and concerts, free meals and fundraising help.

 Abramoff also put Doolittle's wife, Julie, on his payroll to help with a fundraiser, and continued paying her even after the fundraiser she was hired to plan got canceled. Doolittle, in turn, helped out Ring and Abramoff, including by writing letters to the Interior Department to help their tribal clients and by seeking support from his colleagues for legislation they were pushing.

At one point in 2000, Doolittle's then-chief of staff told Ring in an e-mail that Doolittle had said he felt like a "subsidiary" of Abramoff's firm, the indictment says.

Doolittle's attorney, David Barger, defended the congressman in a statement Monday. "It is clear that portions of the Kevin Ring indictment were designed to make gratuitous references to the congressman and his wife. This appears to have been done to titillate the public, with
the foreseeable and therefore intended consequence of attempting to embarrass and pressure the congressman," the statement said.

"Not once in this document does the Department of Justice allege any sort of illegal agreement between Congressman Doolittle, on the one hand, and Kevin Ring or Jack Abramoff, on the other. To the extent the indictment can be read to imply such an agreement,
the congressman continues to steadfastly maintain there was none and that he is innocent."

The indictment also details numerous favors exchanged between Ring and John Albaugh, a one-time top aide to former Oklahoma Rep. Ernest Istook. Albaugh pleaded guilty in June to a conspiracy to defraud the House. Istook is referenced in the indictment as "Representative 4" and is described getting help from Ring including fundraising dinners for which he failed to make the proper reimbursement.

Istook has not been charged. In June he said he was cooperating with the FBI, but had been told he's not a target of the investigation.

In a press release, the Justice Department said:

"On September 5, 2008, a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C. returned a ten-count public-corruption indictment against Kevin A. Ring, age 37, a former lobbyist who worked with Jack A. Abramoff, announced Stuart M. Goldberg, Acting United States Attorney for the District of Maryland, and Acting Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Rita M. Glavin of the Criminal Division. The indictment was unsealed today after Ring was arrested. Ring is scheduled to have his initial appearance at 1:45 p.m. today in federal court in the District of Columbia.

The indictment charges Ring with conspiring with Abramoff and others to corrupt congressional and executive-branch officials by providing things of value to several public officials to induce or reward those who took official actions benefiting Ring and his clients. The indictment also charges Ring with paying a gratuity to a public official and with several counts of engaging in a scheme to deprive the U.S. citizens of their right to the honest services of certain public officials. Finally, the indictment charges Ring with two counts of obstructing justice, stemming from his efforts to thwart a grand jury and congressional investigation by preventing the reporting of his criminal conduct to federal authorities.
 
According to the indictment, as a lobbyist for a Washington D.C. law and lobbying firm, Ring solicited and obtained business throughout the United States, including with Native American tribal governments operating and interested in operating gambling casinos. Ring allegedly sought to further his clients' interests by lobbying public officials in the legislative and executive branches of the federal government.

According to the indictment, Ring and his coconspirators identified public officials who would perform official actions that would assist Ring and his clients, then groomed those public officials by providing things of value with the intent of making those public officials more receptive to requests on behalf of their clients in the future. Ring and his coconspirators allegedly provided things of value as a means of influencing, inducing and rewarding official actions, and in exchange for official actions. These things of value included all-expenses-paid domestic and international travel, fundraising assistance, meals, drinks, golf, tickets to professional sporting events, concerts and other events, and employment opportunities to spouses of congressional members and staff. According to the indictment these things of value were often billed to Ring's and Abramoff's clients.

The indictment alleges that Ring and his coconspirators engaged in this conduct with the former chief of staff for a U.S. Representative identified as Representative 4; employees of a current U.S. Representative, identified as Representative 5; former U.S. Representative Robert Ney and his employees; officials at the Department of Justice and the Department of Interior, and other congressional offices and executive branch entities.

The indictment further charges that Ring and his coconspirators attempted to conceal their practice of influencing and securing official actions and rewarding those actions by providing things of value to certain public officials. Ring and his coconspirators allegedly understood that the public officials to whom they provided things of value were failing to report those gifts as required and were filling out false financial disclosure forms, because to fill out the forms truthfully would reveal that they had accepted gifts in violation of ethical rules and federal law.
According to the indictment, once Abramoff's and Ring's employer, identified as Firm B in the indictment, learned about potential misconduct by Abramoff, Firm B launched an internal investigation by hiring outside counsel.

The indictment charges that Ring made a number of materially false statements in order to prevent the communication of information concerning possible federal criminal offenses to law enforcement and to obstruct known grand jury and congressional investigations, including false statements about: (1) his knowledge of Abramoff's financial relationship with lobbyist Michael Scanlon; (2) his own receipt of a $135,000 kickback; and (3) his knowledge of how Abramoff obtained a job for the wife of Representative 5.

If convicted Ring faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison for conspiracy; three years in prison for payment of a gratuity; 20 years in prison for each of six counts of honest services wire fraud; and 10 years in prison for each of two counts of obstruction of justice. Ring could also be ordered to pay a fine of up to $250,000.

To date, the ongoing Abramoff investigation has resulted in 13 guilty pleas by various lobbyists and public officials, including former lobbyist Michael Scanlon, who pleaded guilty in November 2005 to conspiracy to commit bribery and honest services fraud. Former lobbyist and congressional staffer Tony C. Rudy pleaded guilty in March 2006 to conspiring with Abramoff, Scanlon and others to commit honest services fraud, mail and wire fraud, and a violation of conflict of interest post-employment restrictions. In April 2007, Mark D. Zachares, a former high-ranking aide to the U.S. House of Representatives Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit honest services wire fraud and in June 2008, John C. Albaugh, a former chief of staff to a former member of the U.S. House of Representatives pleaded guilty to the same charge. In April 2008, Robert Coughlin, a former Department of Justice employee, pleaded guilty to a conflict of interest. Scanlon, Rudy, Albaugh, Coughlin and Zachares are all cooperating and awaiting sentencing.

In addition, Ohio Congressman Robert Ney pleaded guilty in September 2006 to conspiracy to commit multiple offenses, including honest services fraud, making false statements in violation of his former chief of staff's one-year lobbying ban, and making false statements to the U.S. House of Representatives. Ney was sentenced to 30 months in prison. Neil Volz, former lobbyist and chief of staff to Congressman Ney, pleaded guilty in May 2006 to honest services fraud and violating the one-year lobbying ban and William Heaton, former chief of staff for Congressman Ney, pleaded guilty on February 26, 2007, to conspiracy to commit honest services wire fraud. Volz and Heaton cooperated in the government's investigation and were each sentenced to two years probation and ordered to pay a $2,000 and $5,000 fine, respectively.

On June 8, 2007, Italia Federici, president of the Council of Republicans for Environmental Advocacy, pleaded guilty to tax evasion and obstruction of the U.S. Senate's investigation into the Abramoff scandal. Federici cooperated in the government's investigation and was sentenced in December 2007 to four years probation and ordered to pay $74,000 in restitution. On March 23, 2007, James Steven Griles, the former Deputy Secretary of the Department of the Interior, pleaded guilty to obstructing the U.S. Senate's investigation into the corruption allegations surrounding Abramoff and was sentenced to 10 months in prison on June 26, 2007.

An indictment is merely an accusation and the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty at trial beyond a reasonable doubt."

--Updated with reporting by the Associated Press

Comments

This was supposed to be over.

Now the FAT LADY is singing

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ELvawdX04LI



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Deep Background is NBC News’ investigative blog. It covers national security, terrorism, spies, Iraq, and politics, as well as government waste, fraud and abuse. It is edited by NBC News Senior Investigative Producer Jim Popkin.

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