CunningScam
News and articles related to the scandal involved California Represenative Randy "Duke" Cunningham
4/10/2007
3/23/2006
USATODAY.com - Corrupt congressman's loot auctioned off for nearly $95,000
RANCHO DOMINGUEZ, Calif. (AP) — The silver-plated candelabras went for $2,000. An armoire with beveled mirrors pulled in $4,000. And a marble-topped night stand sold for $1,250.
Piece by piece, the furniture, rugs and other high-end home furnishings that former Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham accepted as bribes were auctioned off by the government Thursday, bringing in $94,625. (Related video: Spoils of scheme for sale)
Cunningham, a Republican, was sentenced earlier this month to more than eight years in federal prison for tax evasion and conspiracy, the longest term meted out to a congressman in decades. Prosecutors said he collected $2.4 million in bribes from defense contractors in exchange for steering government contracts and other favors their way.
The auction took place in a cavernous warehouse near Los Angeles. The money will be split by the Internal Revenue Service and the FBI.
An elaborately patterned, Oriental-style rug from Cunningham's former mansion sold for the highest price, $10,000. A second one was purchased for $9,000. A French Provincial walnut armoire, with carved feet, fetched $7,100.
But some furnishing came cheaper. A wash stand was sold for $400. A leaded-glass lamp went for $850.
Cunningham was also ordered to pay $1.8 million in restitution for back taxes and to forfeit an additional $1.85 million for cash bribes he received, plus hundreds of thousands from sale of the mansion.
The former congressman sold a Rolls-Royce — one of the bribes — before he was indicted. He also transferred ownership of a yacht, another illegal gift from contractors.
3/22/2006
Ex - Congressman's Loot to Be Auctioned - New York Times
RANCHO DOMINGUEZ, Calif. (AP) -- Silver-plated candelabras. A cedar-lined lingerie cabinet. Persian rugs. An oak hutch carved with lions' heads, tree limbs and acorns.
The spoils from former Rep. Randy ''Duke'' Cunningham's bribery scheme -- a household of valuable antiques, rugs and home furnishings -- will be auctioned off by the government Thursday to help cover the back taxes and restitution he owes.
The public was given a preview Tuesday of the loot, which was laid out in orderly rows in a warehouse near Los Angeles.
Cunningham, who was sentenced earlier this month to more than eight years in prison for taking $2.4 million in bribes, received the items from defense contractors in exchange for helping them win government contracts.
''Lavish,'' said Jim Sudomir, a retiree from Fallbrook, summing up Cunningham's lifestyle as he looked over the display. ''If he was going to be a crook he should have been a smarter one. He thought he was above all that. ... Look where he's at now. He's in jail.''
The inventory reveals that the contractors spared little expense to appease Cunningham's collector's tastes.
There is a leather sofa. A solid cherry sleigh bed. Nearly a dozen rugs. Marble-topped nightstands, armoires and sideboards, many featuring stained glass, brass fittings and intricate carvings.
''There's a real mix of different styles -- Art Deco, French provincial, American pioneer,'' said Britney Sheehan, who works for the company that will auction the goods.
Sheehan said she could not disclose how much the items are expected to fetch, since officials do not want to influence potential bidders. Some of the rugs have previously been valued at as much as $40,000.
Anyone but Cunningham can bid.
Cunningham's prison term was described by attorneys for both sides as the longest prison sentence ever given to a member of Congress. The scale of the corruption scheme is unmatched in the annals of Congress.
The former congressman was ordered to pay $1.8 million in back taxes and forfeit an additional $1.85 million for cash bribes received, plus the proceeds from the sale of his mansion in Rancho Santa Fe, one of America's wealthiest communities. The furnishings came from the home.
Cunningham sold a Rolls-Royce -- one of the bribes -- before he was indicted. He also transferred ownership of a yacht, another illegal gift from contractors.
3/08/2006
Watchdogs say House muzzling staffers North County Times - North San Diego and Southwest Riverside County News
By: WILLIAM FINN BENNETT - Staff Writer
Two congressional watchdog groups are accusing House leaders of trying to minimize the ethics scandals plaguing Washington Republicans by muzzling staffers who worked for former U.S. Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham, who resigned after admitting he took millions in bribes.
When the North County Times requested interviews last week with two of Cunningham's former staffers, the workers said they were under orders from the House clerk's office not to speak to reporters.
"I am not allowed to talk to the press; because of the clerk, I can't give interviews," Cunningham's former chief of staff Harmony Allen said last week when questioned about how the scandal has affected the lives of the fallen congressman's former staff members.
A House policy prohibits staff members in a vacated office from speaking with the press without approval from the clerk, said Jon Brandt, a spokesman for the Committee on House Administration. He later e-mailed a copy of that policy to the North County Times.
Brandt said that because interviews with former Cunningham staffers could touch on areas relating to the business of the 50th Congressional District office at the time it was under Cunningham's command, "the decision has been made that no" interviews will be allowed, he said.
Brandt said the rule has existed since before Republicans become the majority in the House in 1995.
"We are not trying to be (uncooperative), it's just standard operating procedure," Brandt said.
He said that once a replacement takes office in the 50th District, staffers would be free to speak to the press.
A spokesman for Washington-based congressional watchdog group Public Citizen said he believed House Republican leaders were inappropriately restricting access to the press and thus cheating the public of learning more about Cunningham's conduct in office.
"This is a self-serving political gag order and designed to protect the image of the House and specifically Republican members," said Craig Holman of the group, described as a nonprofit organization that "advocates" for consumers.
After Cunningham resigned from office late last year and pleaded guilty in federal court to bribery and tax evasion, most of his staff members continued to work at the 50th District office, which represents a stretch of North County from Escondido to Del Mar.
But once Cunningham, a Vietnam War ace, stepped down, the House of Representatives' office of the clerk took over the management of his office. Former Cunningham staffers may continue to work in that office until a temporary replacement is elected this spring to serve out the remainder of the term, which is up in December.
Brandt said that those who ignore orders not to speak with the press would have to face the consequences.
"If they violate (the) policy, that is their decision and they will have to answer to the clerk's office," Brandt said.
Holman said that before Cunningham's guilty pleas it clearly was appropriate to prevent staffers from speaking with the press on the ground that the criminal investigation might be jeopardized.
But once Cunningham entered guilty pleas, everything changed, Holman said.
On Monday, a spokeswoman for another Washington watchdog group echoed Holman's statements.
"By denying transparency, which is a purported goal of this Congress, through restricted access to (former U.S.) Rep. Cunningham's staff, the committee has eliminated any chance for insight into the inner workings of Cunningham's office of corruption," said Naomi Steiner, a spokeswoman for Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a group that uses the legal system to go after politicians they label as corrupt. The group is led by a former federal prosecutor who worked for several Democratic House members prior to joining the U.S. attorney's office in Washington, D.C.
Cheney Mum About GOP Senate Candidate - CBS News
(CBS/AP) When Vice President Dick Cheney went campaigning in Florida on Monday, there were two words conspicuous by their absence: Katherine Harris.
"As vice president, I look forward to the opportunity to swear in a new Republican senator to serve next to Mel Martinez in the United States Senate," Cheney said during a re-election luncheon for Rep. Clay Shaw in Boca Raton. He didn't mention Harris, a Florida Congresswoman who's regarded as the front-runner in the race for the Republican nomination to run against incumbent Democrat Bill Nelson in November.
Later Monday, speaking to a crowd of Collier County Republicans in Naples — and with Harris in the audience — Cheney again avoided mentioning her.
Cheney's failing to name Harris specifically as that "new senator" at a pair of events is triggering questions about the condition of Harris' campaign.
Last week, Harris responded to claims that she had accepted campaign funds in 2004 that were illegally donated through embroiled defense contractor Mitchell Wade. On March 2, Harris released a statement saying she was unaware that accepting contributions associated with Wade, who pleaded guilty to bribery in the Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham, R-Calif., case, was illegal.
Wade said that at a 2005 dinner with Harris, the two discussed a possible fundraiser for her as well as obtaining funding for a Navy counterintelligence program involving his company. The plan also called for a location in Harris' district.
Harris explained that she "requested a $10 million appropriation for the U.S Naval Criminal Investigative Services project" because she thought "it would bring new jobs to Sarasota.
"I never requested funding for this project in exchange for any contributions, but rather to bring more high-skill, high-wage jobs to the region," she insisted.
In an apparent effort to scale back her public appearances during the controversy, Harris canceled a number of campaign stops, the Sarasota Herald-Tribune reported. GOP consultant David Johnson told the paper that, "It looks like her campaign is circling the wagons."
But spokesperson Morgan Dobbs denies that Harris is slowing down or plans to leave the race, telling CBSNews.com that Harris "remains undaunted in her quest to represent the people and issues she cares about most in the United States Senate."
In a Quinnipiac University poll released in late February, Harris trailed Nelson by 53 percent to 31 percent.
It's not certain whether Cheney's failure to mention Harris by name was a deliberate attempt to distance himself and the GOP from her as she is entangled in scandal, or simply an unintentional oversight
"Cheney is not the most skilled campaigner when it comes to retail politics," Hotline senior editor John Mercurio says, adding that the non-mention of Harris "doesn't necessarily reflect Republican sentiments" toward her.
However, Mercurio points out, "things couldn't possibly be going worse" for Harris, and there may be "reluctance on the part of the White House to say Katherine Harris will be the next senator because her campaign is in disarray."
The fact that Cheney left Harris out of his speech is "in and of itself not significant," Mercurio explains, but the perception of it seems to be.
When asked how Harris reacted to being omitted from Cheney's comments, Dobbs noted that Harris was at the Naples event with the Vice President and that she rode back to Washington with him on Air Force 2. "It is always an honor to be invited to appear with the Vice President of the United States," Dobbs added.
NBCSandiego.com - News - Cunningham's Life About To Change Again
SAN DIEGO -- Life for Randy "Duke" Cunningham has changed, of course, and it is about to change again.
The corrupt former congressman, who was sentenced to eight years and four months in prison for bribery, is currently staying at San Diego's Metropolitan Correctional Facility.
There are modest amenities provided to Cunningham at the facility, but he is not able to move around, and he has only the basics available to him in his cell.
"Toilet and a bed," attorney Knut Johnson told NBC 7/39. "There'll be other prisoners in that little quad, and sometimes they'll communicate by shouting back and forth to each other."
Because Cunningham's meals are brought to him, he does not go to a common dining area. He has already had a medical checkup and talked with a psychologist.
The disgraced congressman's stay in San Diego will be over soon. At some point in the next three days, he will be sent to a federal facility for a medical evaluation, and when those results are determined, he will be sent to a federal prison, possibly one in Taft, Calif..
If that destination is Taft, which his attorneys requested, he will be incarcerated with people who have been convicted of -- among other things -- fraud and possibly alien smuggling. Some prisoners at Taft have been transferred from higher-security prisons because of good behavior.
Johnson has provided advice and information to people headed to federal prison.
"You have to take a breath and relax, and understand that -- particularly someone in Duke Cunningham's position -- they're not going into a prison with a lot of violent and dangerous prisoners," said Johnson.
With good behavior, Cunningham could be out of custody in seven years and one month.
3/03/2006
Former Congressman Gets Eight-Plus Years - Yahoo! News
Former Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham, who collected $2.4 million in homes, yachts, antique furnishings and other bribes on a scale unparalleled in the history of Congress, was sentenced Friday to eight years and four months in prison, the longest term meted out to a congressman in decades.
Cunningham, who resigned from Congress in disgrace last year, was spared the 10-year maximum by U.S. District Judge Larry Burns but was immediately taken into custody. He also was ordered to pay $1.8 million in restitution for back taxes.
Cunningham accepted money and gifts including a Rolls-Royce, a yacht and $40,000 Persian rugs from defense contractors and others in exchange for steering government contracts their way and other favors.
Federal prosecutors sought the maximum and his attorneys asked for mercy, but Cunningham, choking up as he addressed the judge, focused on accepting blame. "Your honor I have ripped my life to shreds due to my actions, my actions that I did to myself," he said.
"I made a very wrong turn. I rationalized decisions I knew were wrong. I did that, sir," Cunningham said.
Much thinner than when he pleaded guilty in November — he said he has gone from 265 pounds to 175 pounds since June — Cunningham had asked to see his 91-year-old mother one last time before going to prison, but was denied.
The judge, while crediting Cunningham for his military service and for taking responsibility, questioned why he felt compelled to betray his constituents and his colleagues for luxuries.
"You weren't wet. You weren't cold. You weren't hungry and yet you did these things," Burns said. "I think what you've done is you've undermined the opportunity that honest politicians have to do a good job."
The staggering details of Cunningham's wrongdoing surpass anything in the history of Congress, Senate and House historians have said. "In the sheer dollar amount, he is the most corrupt," said Deputy House Historian Fred W. Beuttler.
The longest term meted out to congressmen in the past four decades had been eight years, handed to former Rep. James Traficant, D-Ohio, in 2002 for taking payoffs, and to former Rep. Mario Biaggi, D-N.Y., in 1988 for extorting nearly $2 million from a defense contractor.
Prosecutor Phil Halpern told the judge that while Cunningham was living the good life "he was squandering precious tax dollars for, among other things, systems the military didn't ask for, didn't need and frequently didn't use."
Cunningham's attorney Lee Blalack asked for six years for the former Navy "Top Gun" flight instructor and Vietnam War flying ace.
Cunningham, 64 and a congressman for 15 years, rubbed away tears while Blalack addressed the court. He appeared to be crying quietly when Blalack referred to his wartime service.
"There are men in this courtroom who are walking around and breathing because Duke Cunningham put his life at risk," Blalack said. "There is no doubt that all of the good that he did in those many years will be washed away."
The courtroom, which seats about 100, was packed. Among those in the gallery was Rep. Duncan Hunter (news, bio, voting record), R-Calif., chairman of House Armed Services Committee, whose district, like Cunningham's, is in the San Diego area.
Blalack said that given Cunningham's age and history of prostate cancer, "there is a significant likelihood" he would not survive a 10-year sentence, and that he already has suffered greatly.
"This man has been humiliated beyond belief by his own hand. He is estranged from those he loves most and cares most about," Blalack said. "All his worldly possessions are gone. He will carry a crushing tax debt until the day he dies. He will go to jail until he's 70 years old."
Prosecutor Jason A. Forge said Cunningham should not get a break for committing crimes late in life, and doubted his apparent remorse, pointing out that after the allegations emerged he spent months falsely denying them.
"The fact of the matter is Mr. Cunningham went down kicking and screaming. He did not plead guilty until his indictment was imminent," Forge said.
Cunningham pleaded guilty Nov. 28 to tax evasion and a conspiracy involving four others. The plea came amid a series of GOP scandals: Rep. Tom DeLay of Texas had to step down as majority leader after he was indicted in a campaign finance case; a stock sale by Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist is being looked at by regulators; and Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff was indicted in the CIA leak case.
The case against Cunningham began when authorities started investigating his sale of his Del Mar house to defense contractor Mitchell Wade for $1,675,000, a price inflated by $700,000.
Wade admitted giving Cunningham more than $1 million in gifts, including a yacht, cash, cars, antiques and meals. He pleaded guilty last month to conspiring with Cunningham, among four corruption charges that carry a maximum prison term of 20 years.