Light from the Right – by Bob Adelmann
The seemingly impervious Teflon-proof senior Senator from Nevada, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, has been forced to respond to charges made in a two-part investigation into his self-dealings at RealClearPolitics published last week. The initial investigation was filled with corruption charges and responses from Reid’s PR people in a failed attempt to deflect them. In the past such charges were simply ignored and passed off. Reid was willing to let time pass and memories fade. Not this time, apparently.
Adam 0’Neal led off with a relatively innocuous charge that in 2012 and 2013 Reid’s campaign staff had spent some $30,000 buying appreciation gifts for his donors from a store owned by his granddaughter. It was a small thing – the amount spent by his staff was seven times more than the staff spent elsewhere, combined – but Reid’s staff said to avoid the appearance of impropriety, Reid will pay those bills out of his own pocket. He tried to ingratiate himself at the time saying that he was glad he could afford to write the check.
He certainly could.
Arriving in Washington in 1983 as Nevada’s only representative, Reid declared a net worth of about $1 million. At the latest count he estimates his net worth at ten times that, if not more. Since much of his portfolio is inreal estate, estimates may vary with circumstances and timing and political maneuvering.
O’Neal pointed out that over the years – especially since Reid became Senate Majority Leader in 2007 – he has built “a dizzying network of mutually beneficial political, personal and business alliances. These associations benefit Reid, his family, his close friends and, very often, the state….”
Reid has a veritable coterie of investigative journalists making a good living following Reid around and recording and writing about that network. One of them is David Damore, a professor at University of Nevada, Las Vegas, who put it more succinctly:
I’m going to put this politely. Their personal interests, they seem to see, represent the common good. They don’t differentiate those two.
Translation: what’s good for Reid is – or may be – good for Nevada. What’s good for Reid is always good for his donors and his family.
In part one of his report, O’Neal asked rhetorically:
How did Reid manage to grow his net worth so significantly while raising a large family, on a public official’s salary and incurring the expenses associated with maintaining two residences on opposite sides of the country?
O’Neal’s answers illustrate just how much influence Nevada’s senior senator has among his donors who are only too happy to invite him to participate in their ventures. For example, in 1998 Reid joined partner Jay Brown in investing $400,000 in some dirt located on the outskirts of Las Vegas. By 2004, the property just happened to be rezoned for a shopping center and Reid cashed in for $1.1 million.
In 2002 Reid invested $10,000 into an investment fund by another good friend, Clair Haycock. The fund bought some land in Bullhead City, Arizona for which, according to the Los Angeles Times, it paid just 10 percent of its estimated value. Reid sponsored an $18 million earmark for a bridge that would – again, conveniently – connect Bullhead City with Laughlin, Nevada, greatly increasing the value of his land. Reid now carries that investment on his financial statement as worth between $250,000 and $500,000.
He’s also used his insider knowledge to great personal benefit. In 2005 he invested between $50,000 and $100,000 in the Dow Jones U.S.Energy Sector Fund, paying $29 a share. Three years later he sold out at $42 a share. Two months later, according to O’Neal, Reid supported legislation that would cost energy companies millions in new taxes and regulatory fees. The fund dropped to half its value, but by then Reid was long gone.
O’Neal’s report is only the latest in a series of juicy exposures of Reid’s corruption. The Los Angeles Times ran a series of articles between 2003 and 2006 outlining in great and glorious detail how Reid managed to spread the wealth around among his family and friends. Wrote the Times:
So pervasive are the ties that Reid, members of his family [his four sons are attorneys] and Nevada’s leading industries and institutions that it’s difficult to find a significant field in which such a relationship does not exist.
The corruption isn’t limited to Reid himself, either. While running for governor in 2010, son Rory “obscured” the source of some $900,000 in campaign donations through the use of shell companies, costing him $25,000 in fines. Senior Reid was reportedly surprised to learn about his son’s corruption in the papers while Rory himself “pulled a Reid” by claiming that his illegal behavior was not intentional but instead was meant to point out that the system “was unclear” in many ways, and the poor guy just got confused about what he could get away with and what he couldn’t.
Reid’s ability to remain clean while swimming in the swamp of Nevada politics is uncanny. For example, in 2007 Reid met with one of his closest friends and supporters, one Harvey Whittemore, who promised Reid he would raise $150,000 for his upcoming reelection campaign. But he failed to do so by the deadline and so, illegally it turns out, returned the contributions he had raised to the donors. Reid wrote him a letter of thanks for trying anyway, he appreciated his efforts:
I appreciate the Whittemore family. Over the years they have helped me and I appreciate it very much.
When Whittemore was charged with making campaign contributions in the name of another person, making excessive personal contributions and lying to the FBI and the Federal Election Commission, he was convicted and sent to jail for two years and fined $100,000. Reid’s response: his office told O’Neal that Reid was “no longer in contact” with Whittemore.
Reid’s efforts to clear the way for a Chinese company to build and operate a solar panel power plant, impacting directly one Mr. Clive Bundy, have been reviewed carefully elsewhere by writers at The New American. Wrote Warren Mass: “motivations are not always easy to prove, but in this case, Senator Reid’s hand has shown up more than once.” Added Mass:
The BLM’s principal deputy director, Neil Kornze, previously served as Senator Reid’s senior policy advisor. And we have noted Rory Reid’s role as the chief representative for China’s ENN Energy Group which sought to develop solar energy in Nevada.
There is the current probe of Reid’s campaign financing shenanigans which is being stalled, not surprisingly, by the Department of Justice, headed by another corruptocrat, Eric Holder. The investigation being conducted by the FBI and Utah officials includes more than 100,000 bank records, emails and other documents, plus more than 200 personal interviews, in what now appears to be an elaborate scam to skirt campaign finance rules by using, once again, shell companies.
Jeremy Johnson, an official at a St. George, Utah, bank, contends that he has been arranging for tens of thousands of campaign contributions to flow to Reid using “straw donors” who were then reimbursed from special “poker” accounts at the bank. At the moment, Johnson is awaiting trial on 86 counts of internet fraud in which he allegedly scammed consumers out of millions of dollars. So Reid knows how to pick ‘em.
There’s a reason why Judicial Watch has had Reid on its “Ten Most Wanted Corrupt Politicians” list for years. Providing more background on son Rory’s connection with ENN, Judicial Watch quoted Reuters which noted in August, 2012:
Reid has been one of [ENN’s] most prominent advocates, helping recruit the company during a 2011 trip to China and applying his political muscle on behalf of the project in Nevada. His son, a lawyer with a prominent Las Vegas firm that is representing ENN, helped it locate a 9,000-acre desert site that it is buying well below appraised value from Clark County, where Rory Reid formerly chaired the county commission.
“Well below appraised value” is a considerable understatement. The deal Rory Reid put together for the firm his dad brought to town saw ENN purchase the site for just $4.5 million – a mere fraction of separate appraisals that valued the property at $29.6 million and $38.6 million. Even with all of that, however, the project has failed to move forward as rapidly as Harry and Rory Reid would like – for the simple reason that there is currently no market in Nevada for the green energy ENN claims it could produce….
Needless to say, the well-entrenched Sen. Reid has been a repeat Top Ten offender.
Reid, who will turn 75 in December, plans to run for reelection in 2016. His reelection is assured, thanks for his extensive and powerfully entrenched political machine. After that, whether he is removed from the Senate on a gurney or in handcuffs remains to be seen.
Well if you want to be a career criminal, being a Senator is even better than being a cop, and I’m sure these latest investigations aren’t even scratching the surface.
When we get the real dirt on this sleaze-bag there’s no telling what the angry mobs might do to him. I just hope they don’t do it too quickly.
“TRESON HARRY, ARE YOU GOING TO SWING”
Hang that douch!
Not that WE needed confirmation, mind you.