Author Topic: Democratic Congresswoman Accused of Fraud Blames Conspiracy  (Read 642 times)

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rangerrebew

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Democratic Congresswoman Accused of Fraud Blames Conspiracy
« on: March 27, 2016, 12:45:58 pm »
Democratic Congresswoman Accused of Fraud Blames Conspiracy
March 26, 2016
Daniel Greenfield
 
http://www.frontpagemag.com/point/262289/democratic-congresswoman-accused-fraud-blames-daniel-greenfield
 

Congresswoman Corrine Brown has been in Congress since the early 90s. She's a ten-termer in a gerrymandered district, which may be getting ungerrymandered. Also she's being investigated. Yet again.

    Brown is accused of conspiring with others to commit fraud, using campaign funds for personal purposes and improperly soliciting charitable donations as well as other allegations.

    The announcement comes three weeks after the director of a charity tied to Brown, Carla Wiley, pleaded guilty to fraud and agreed to cooperate with federal prosecutors.

    Federal court records show Wiley's Virginia-based charity "One Door For Education" promised scholarships, but since 2012, only wrote one student a check for $1,000.

    Records show Wiley solicited $800,000 in donations, but never filed a federal tax return or obtained a tax-exempt status.

    Prosecutors said Wiley transferred more than $140,000 of donations into her own personal bank account. They also said she gave more than $150,000 to cover costs associated with events for an unnamed public official only referred to as "Person A."

    Prosecutors said "One Door for Education" hosted a golf tournament with "Person A" in July 2013 at the TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, promising to benefit the Jacksonville Chapter Scholarship Fund.

    WESH 2 Investigates uncovered a flier advertising the "Corrine Brown Invitational Golf Tournament" hosted that same month, at the same location, sponsored by "One Door For Education."

Corrine Brown is obviously blaming a conspiracy out to get her.

    The goal is to take me out. I realize that. That is a good example," Brown told News4Jax when asked about the latest investigation.

    "They're all together. The goal is to get rid of Corrine Brown," she said.

It's not Brown's first rodeo.

    During her 1996 reelection campaign, which was endorsed by the Democratic Socialists of America's Political Action Committee, Brown accepted a $10,000 contribution—far more than the $1,000 individual donation limit—from a secret Wisconsin bank account that Henry Lyons, who was eventually convicted of racketeering and grand theft, allegedly used for money laundering. Brown did not report the money on either her financial disclosure statements or her campaign contribution reports. Nor could her office produce any bank records or receipts showing how the money had been spent.

    The Federal Election Commission has admonished Brown several times for her inaccurate campaign-spending reports. Her own campaign treasurer quit his post in the mid-Nineties after learning that his name had been forged on some of those reports. Yet the staffer responsible for the forgery went on to become Brown's chief of staff.

    In 1993 Brown used taxpayer dollars to pay Florida minister Fred Demps, a close business partner of Henry Lyons, to do “community outreach” for her. Demps had previously helpedLyons defraud several corporations.

    Also in 1993, Brown's congressional office reserved several airline tickets for Lyons at a special discounted rate that was supposed to be reserved exclusively for government employees traveling on official business.

    That same year, Brown paid a $5,000 fine to the Florida Ethics Commission, which found that she had inappropriately used legislative staff members as employees in a travel agency she owned.

    During her 1992 congressional run, Brown sparked controversy when she paid $5,000 in campaign funds to a St. Petersburg company bearing the same address as the church headed by her longtime political ally, National Baptist Convention USA president Henry Lyons. Brown claimed that the payment was for the purchase of a computer from Lyons’s company, but in fact that entity had been dissolved six years earlier. Lyons, who had a long track record of financial malfeasance, had knowingly pledged fake credit-union-share certificates as collateral to obtain an $85,000 bank loan in 1988.

    On June 9, 1998, the Congressional Accountability Project voted to conduct a formal inquiry regarding Brown. The Project called for the U.S. House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct to determine if Brown had violated House Rule 10. One of the complaints was that Brown's adult daughter, Shantrel Brown, had received a luxury automobile as a gift from an agent of a Gambian millionaire named Foutanga Sissoko. Sissoko, a friend of Congresswoman Brown, had been imprisoned in Miami after pleading guilty to charges of bribing a customs officer. Brown had worked to secure his release, pressuring U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno to deport Sissoko back to his homeland as an alternative to continued incarceration. The Project held this violated the House gift rule, but Brown denied she had acted improperly.

    In June 2007, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington released a report listing Brown's daughter Shantrel Brown-Fields as a congressional lobbyist; the organization maintains that Congressional relatives working as lobbyists for special interests are a conflict of interest for lawmakers. Brown-Fields is employed by Alcalde & Fayte, with clients including ITERA, Miami-Dade County Commission, and Edward Waters College. In 2006, Brown's campaign committee paid her daughter's husband, Tyree Fields, $5,500 for political consulting work. Rep. Brown has earmarked millions of dollars in federal funding for her daughter's client Edward Waters College. In 2010, she again received criticism for requesting earmarks for an organization her daughter lobbies for.

So Brown is a typical Democrat and CBC member. A dirty racist.

    At a congressional hearing in 2004, Brown described President Bush's policy towards Haiti as “racist” and derided the hearing's administration officials as “a bunch of white men.” When Assistant Secretary of State Roger Noriega, a Mexican-American, objected to being called “white” and “racist,” Brown snapped, “You all look alike to me.”

Here's to ten more terms. Ten more terms of this.
« Last Edit: March 27, 2016, 12:46:43 pm by rangerrebew »

Offline andy58-in-nh

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Re: Democratic Congresswoman Accused of Fraud Blames Conspiracy
« Reply #1 on: March 27, 2016, 12:53:58 pm »
Ms. Brown is hardly the first of her kind to settle on extra-legal self-enrichment as a form of "reparations".
"The most terrifying force of death, comes from the hands of Men who wanted to be left Alone. They try, so very hard, to mind their own business and provide for themselves and those they love. They resist every impulse to fight back, knowing the forced and permanent change of life that will come from it. They know, that the moment they fight back, their lives as they have lived them, are over. -Alexander Solzhenitsyn