FBI Follows Money in Tribe's Beltway Success
The Mashpee gave tens of thousands to lobbyist Jack Abramoff and California Rep. Pombo.
By Richard A. Serrano and Judy Pasternak, Times Staff Writers
MASHPEE, Mass. â€" Everybody got something.
The Mashpee Wampanoags, famed for greeting the Pilgrims at
Plymouth, will be named a nationally recognized tribe
â€" a designation they sought for 30 years so
that they could benefit from federal aid programs.
Jack Abramoff, the lobbyist embroiled in a Washington
corruption scandal, and his firm championed the Indians'
cause and pocketed tens of thousands of dollars in tribal
money.
And Rep. Richard W. Pombo (R-Tracy), chairman of the
influential House Resources Committee, landed a lucrative
source of political donations: the small group of Native
Americans whose ancestral lands are about as far from his
Northern California district as one can get in the United
States.
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"OUR FRIEND": The Mashpee have given tens of thousands
of dollars to PACs controlled by Pombo, pictured this
fall, foreground.
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The trifecta of money, politics and power that quietly came
together over the last several years has attracted the
attention of a federal law enforcement task force
investigating the burgeoning Abramoff scandal.
FBI officials have visited the tribal offices here to
obtain financial documents, and other task force
investigators in Washington are reviewing what role
political leaders and others played in the Mashpee's
success.
Where the investigation will lead is unknown. But several
people close to Abramoff have pleaded guilty in other
aspects of the wide-ranging scandal. And in recent days,
several Capitol Hill lawmakers, including Pombo, have
returned donations from Abramoff or turned the money over
to charity.
Officials do know that the flow of cash from the Mashpee to
Abramoff and Pombo is a textbook example of the kind of
cases of alleged influence-buying that the task force is
assembling.
But what investigators want to determine is whether the
Mashpee episode crossed the line into criminal behavior, as
other Abramoff ventures allegedly did.
Those involved say no laws were broken and instead tell the
story of one of America's most fabled Native American
tribes and how the Mashpee have petitioned for government
recognition for three decades.
Unlike other tribes that hired Abramoff, the Mashpee
weren't in the casino business; gambling is illegal in
Massachusetts. The tribe sought official recognition to
qualify for a raft of federal benefits.
After years of languishing on a long list of tribes seeking
Interior Department designations, the Mashpee Tribal
Council concluded that its efforts were going nowhere.
So three years ago, the tribe began spreading tens of
thousands of dollars around Washington.
It appeared to work. On Oct. 1, in a settlement of a
lawsuit against Interior Secretary Gale A. Norton, the
tribe was placed on "active" consideration status for
recognition.
After a final round of reviews, the Mashpee will probably
be officially recognized by March 30, 2007.
The settlement would permit the Mashpee to seek a casino
license if Massachusetts legalizes gambling.
Tribal Council President Glenn Marshall and tribal chief
Vernon Lopez acknowledged in separate interviews that their
unconventional strategy had paid off. "Sometimes," Lopez
said, "it's necessary to go out of your way to get some of
the things you need."
Pombo, whose congressional district straddles California's
Central Valley, was clearly their biggest champion.
Now in his seventh term, he went to Washington on the cusp
of the GOP revolution in Congress and soon hitched himself
to Rep. Tom DeLay, the Texas Republican who became House
majority leader.
Their friendship was born of a shared conservative
ideology. Like DeLay, Pombo has worked to reduce government
regulations and to cut taxes and spending. And he has
strongly advocated private property rights, sometimes to
the chagrin of environmentalists.
DeLay sponsored Pombo's successful 2003 drive to become
chairman of the Resources Committee, which oversees Native
American affairs. The post was seen as a coup for Pombo.
One disgruntled rival for the chairmanship publicly
attributed Pombo's rise to his fundraising prowess.
But the Capitol Hill landscape has sharply altered since.
DeLay is fighting money-laundering charges in Texas and has
had to leave his House leadership post. Abramoff reportedly
is near a plea agreement with federal prosecutors. And
Pombo, through his work on behalf of the Mashpee, has
attracted investigators' attention as well.
Pombo, 44, did not reply to several requests for interviews
this week.
His Resources Committee spokesman, Brian Kennedy, said the
chairman had simply been trying to draw attention to "the
poster tribe on the need for reforming the recognition
process."
Kennedy said Pombo first learned of the Mashpee when the
son of Pombo's chief of staff learned during a school
project that the tribe that greeted the Pilgrims had been
trying since 1975 to win federal recognition. "That's sort
of how the chairman got engaged," Kennedy said.
The Mashpee also were getting to know Pombo.
According to tribal spokesman Scott Ferson, half a dozen
tribal leaders attended several Pombo fundraisers and
eventually wrote $2,000 personal checks to the lawmaker's
Rich Political Action Committee.
In all, at least $20,000 in Mashpee money flowed into
Pombo's coffers soon after a September 2003 meeting the
congressman had with Norton and R. Lee Fleming, who
oversees the Native American recognition program.
The two-week run of donations accounted for about 5% of
Rich PAC's roughly $400,000 in revenue for the 2003-04
election cycle, according to two databases of political
contributions.
Said Ferson: "Contributions to political candidates are
perfectly legal … and Pombo became our
friend."
According to two people familiar with the 2003 meeting
â€" one who requested anonymity because of the
investigation â€" Pombo was forceful in asking
whether the government was "holding things up
unnecessarily" against the Mashpee.
The other person, Robert E. Jordan III, the Washington
lawyer representing the Mashpee, said Pombo "was pressing
his views."
"My impression was he was genuinely aghast at the glacial
pace of the whole recognition process and thought something
ought to be done," Jordan said.
Norton's office said it could not recall the meeting, and
Fleming did not return phone calls.
But Fleming has publicly defended the way his office
handles the often-cumbersome recognition process. He has
said his staff is too small to handle all the petitions
from various tribes, and that some requests entail up to
30,000 pages of documents for review.
The federal recognition process traditionally has been a
lengthy one. The government reviews a tribe's history and
ancestry as well as the genealogy of its members to
determine whether it is a bona fide Native American tribe.
A federally acknowledged tribe is eligible for special
housing, education, healthcare and other federal
programs.
In his advocacy for the Mashpee, Pombo led a special
committee hearing in 2004. He was seeking support for a
bill he sponsored allowing tribes that had petitioned for
recognition before 1988 â€" the year of an
explosion of Indian casinos and of tribes' petitions for
federal recognition â€" to be moved to the head
of the line. The still-pending bill would apply to about a
dozen tribes, including at least two from California,
according to Interior Department records.
Pombo called it "unconscionable" that the Mashpee had not
already gotten what they wanted. He added: "The tribe is
being told it may have to wait 10 or more years for a
decision. The tribe could wait a half-century before
obtaining a final determination."
At the 2004 hearing, Pombo called Tribal Council President
Marshall as his first witness.
"We loaned the Pilgrims the moorings to land their boats,
and we have been paying for it ever since," Marshall
testified. He added: "It has taken me a long time to
understand the workings of the government."
This spring, Marshall and other tribal members made more
payments, including at least $20,000 to two political
committees controlled by Pombo.
The congressman has come under fire in recent months from a
fellow Californian on the House Resources Committee, George
Miller (D-Martinez), who has strongly urged the chairman to
hold hearings and investigate Abramoff's alleged lobbying
improprieties on behalf of other Native American tribes
seeking help for casinos.
In the latest in a series of letters, Miller told Pombo
this month: "The American people need to know, and deserve
to know, the impact that lobbyists and their allies within
Congress and the administration have had on public policy
and the public interest."
But Pombo has largely deflected Miller's concerns. Instead
of opening his own investigation into Abramoff, he
forwarded Miller's letters to federal prosecutors. "Any
allegations of criminal matters of this sort are best
addressed by the Department of Justice," he told
Miller.
Abramoff and his colleagues also were working behind the
scenes for the Mashpee.
Ferson said tribal leaders contacted Abramoff and his
associates because "we knew he was the go-to firm." The
tribe paid the lobbyists $40,000, much of it from Detroit
casino developer Herbert J. Strather.
Ferson said Strather knew when making the donation that
gambling was illegal in Massachusetts. Strather did not
return repeated phone calls.
Documents released by the Senate Indian Affairs Committee
show Abramoff at work for the Mashpee. In a December 2002
e-mail, Michael D. Smith, one of Abramoff's associates,
advised his boss that the government had "unfairly held
them up" for recognition â€" mirroring the
questions Pombo would later pose in his meeting with
Norton.
Three months later, Abramoff e-mailed one of Norton's
former political aides, advising that "this regards the
tribe in Massachusetts, and is quite
urgent…. Let me know if you think this
is something we can raise urgently" with officials at
Interior.
The strategy to spend money on politicians and lobbyists
has troubled some tribal members.
"I think it's disgusting," Stephanie Tobey-Roderick said.
Abramoff and Pombo "were obviously taking money for their
own political gain. It's all crooked. It's all messy."
When the tribe filed its petition for recognition in 1975,
it wanted federal housing, education and healthcare
assistance.
Though the Mashpee effort predated the casino boom, their
lawyer said they "would probably be interested" in a gaming
license if the state law was ever lifted.
Times staff writer Walter F. Roche Jr. contributed to this
report.
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