Abramoff Says He Met Bush 'Almost
A Dozen' Times
Reuters / Andy Sullivan | February 11 2006
Jack Abramoff said in correspondence made public
on Thursday that President Bush met him "almost a dozen" times,
disputing White House claims Bush did not know the former lobbyist at
the center of a corruption scandal.
"The guy saw me in almost a dozen settings, and joked with me about
a bunch of things, including details of my kids. Perhaps he has forgotten
everything, who knows," Abramoff wrote in an e-mail to Kim Eisler,
national editor for the Washingtonian magazine.
Abramoff added that Bush also once invited him to his Texas ranch.
The messages were made public by the American Progress Action Fund,
a liberal activist group. Eisler confirmed their accuracy to Reuters
but said he did not intend them to become public.
"They reflect the feeling of frustration he has not just with Bush
but with all these guys claiming they didn't know him," said Eisler,
who knew Abramoff through a book he wrote about the Pequot Indian tribe.
Abramoff pleaded guilty to fraud charges in early January and is cooperating
with prosecutors in a corruption probe that could implicate lawmakers
and officials across Washington.
Bush has said he never had a discussion with Abramoff and does not remember
having his picture taken with him.
The White House has said Abramoff attended three Hanukkah receptions
at the White House.
Eisler said he had seen five photographs of Abramoff with Bush, none
taken at Hanukkah parties.
White House spokesman Scott McClellan said on Thursday that the revelations
did not prove Bush knew him well.
"I think as the president also indicated, he's taken at least five
photos with many people in this room at the annual holiday reception.
And so I think you need to put this in context," McClellan said.
Abramoff spokesman Andrew Blum declined to comment.
Abramoff raised more than $100,000 for Bush's 2004 re-election campaign,
a feat that won him an invitation to Bush's ranch in August 2003, the
National Journal reported at the time.
"I was invited during the 2004 campaign," Abramoff told Eisler.
Abramoff said he did not make the trip because as an Orthodox Jew he
cannot travel on Saturdays.
In the wake of Abramoff's indictment, the Bush-Cheney campaign said
it would donate to charity $6,000 in contributions made by Abramoff
or his clients, but not the money he helped raise.
The White House has acknowledged he participated in a few staff-level
meetings at the White House.
Although the Abramoff scandal has mostly focused attention so far on
prominent House Republicans, including former Majority Leader Tom DeLay
of Texas, at least two Bush administration officials have been implicated.
David Safavian, a former White House budget official, has been charged
with lying and obstructing investigations into his 2002 golf outing
to Scotland with Abramoff.
Stephen Griles, the former No. 2 official at the Interior Department,
has come under scrutiny after allegations he tried to block a casino
at Abramoff's request.
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