The Bush Administration US GSA Chief Procurement Officer David Hossein Safavian On September 19, 2005,
David Safavian, who was serving as the head of the federal procurement policy at the
Office of Management and Budget, was the first person arrested in the Abramoff scandal. Safavian was charged with lying to investigators and obstructing the federal inquiry of Abramoff. Safavian knew Abramoff from the three years, 1995–1997, when he was part of
Abramoff's lobbying team at
Preston Gates & Ellis.
Deputy United States Secretary of the Interior J. Steven Griles Abramoff claimed in emails sent in 2002 that
Deputy United States Secretary of the Interior Griles had pledged to block an Indian casino that would compete with one of his clients. Abramoff later told two people that he was trying to hire Griles. Mr. Griles pled guilty to a felony charge of lying to the Senate Indian Affairs Committee about his ties to Jack Abramoff. In March 2007, he was sentenced to a five-month jail term and another five months in a halfway house or home confinement.
Campaign contributions from Abramoff and his clients Abramoff also personally donated $14,000 over the period 1999–2004 to the congressional campaign of Representative
John Doolittle (R-CA) According to
The Washington Post, Doolittle "was particularly close to Abramoff." Doolittle said he always thought of Abramoff as "a friend" for a single reason: "I liked him, frankly, because he was a
partisan, conservative Republican activist." Unlike many lawmakers, Doolittle has refused to give away or return any of the Abramoff money.
Fund raising by Abramoff for Doolittle An "ardent opponent of casino gambling," Doolittle held a fundraiser at Jack Abramoff's skybox at the MCI Center in February 1999. Abramoff, who rented the boxes himself, billed Indian tribes lobbying fees to cover his cost. These tribes had hired Abramoff to represent their casino interests. Under federal campaign finance law, Doolittle was required to pay Abramoff for use of the box, or to report the use as an "in-kind" contribution from Abramoff to his campaign. Doolittle initially failed to report the use of the sky-boxes in his
Federal Election Committee filings. In late 2004, his spokesperson, Laura Blackman, said "It was an
in-kind contribution, and it was an oversight that it wasn't reported, but we are taking steps to correct that." In January 2005, Doolittle reported that his campaign fund had sent a check for $1,040 to one of Abramoff's former employers, the
Preston Gates lobbying firm, to pay for the skybox. The lobbying firm returned the check because it had never owned the skybox. In May 2005, Doolittle campaign-fund spokesman Richard Robinson acknowledged that the rejection of the check should have been reported to the FEC and said a corrected accounting would be filed. Robinson said Doolittle's fund is determined to rectify the six-year lapse in paying for the box. "If we find out that Jack Abramoff paid for the suite, then we'll reimburse Jack Abramoff, because we want to reimburse the person or entity who paid for the box," Robinson said. "We thought we were doing that in January."
Payments to Doolittle's wife by Abramoff From August 2002 through February 2004, Abramoff's lobbying firm,
Greenberg Traurig paid Julie Doolittle $66,000. Initially her work was to help plan a fundraiser for Abramoff's
Capital Athletic Foundation, called the Spy Game Gala, which was to be MC'ed by
Tony Snow. The event never happened because it coincided with the beginning of the
2003 invasion of Iraq in March 2003. According to the initial statement by her attorney, the $66,000 in payments from Abramoff were because she "primarily performed public relations and other event planning services for the Spy Museum event." She was paid a total of $27,000 through February 2003, when payments stopped. In July 2003, Abramoff (via Greenberg Traurig) began paying her again, at the rate of $5,000 per month. This continued through mid-February 2004, when the first story on what would become the Abramoff scandal was published. In a statement in June 2006, her attorney, William Stauffer, said that "Sierra Dominion, a small business owned by Julie Doolittle, provided marketing, event planning, and related services to the Greenberg Traurig law firm, and its partner, Jack Abramoff, from August 2002 through March 2004." "Sierra Dominion had a retainer arrangement with Greenberg Traurig under which it provided services concerning the Spy Museum event and also the Signatures and Stacks restaurants". (The two restaurants were owned by Abramoff.) Julie Doolittle's records in connection with her work for Abramoff have been subpoenaed by the
United States Department of Justice. The DOJ has not filed any charges in either case. No explanation has been given as to why Greenberg Taurig made the payments to Julie Doolittle, rather than the foundation (for whom the charity event was planned) or the restaurants or Abramoff personally (as restaurant owner).
Doolittle's actions on behalf of the Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI) One of Abramoff's major clients was the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands government. Doolittle visited the islands in February 1999 as part of a congressional delegation. In April 2000 and April 2001, he met with CNMI House Speaker
Benigno R. Fitial in Washington D.C. On May 25, 2001, the
Saipan Tribune printed a letter from Doolittle to Fitial, which noted a recent $150,000 earmark, mentioned two possible Army Corps of Engineers projects on the islands, and said "I will urge the Energy and Water Appropriations Subcommittee to include funding for the feasibility study for both projects in the FY 2002 appropriations bill." In August 2001, he backed Fitial's candidacy for governor. Doolittle was successful in securing $400,000 in Corps study funds in 2001, his first year on the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development. In the governor's election in early 2002, Fitial lost. The new governor,
Juan N. Babauta, cancelled the contract with Greenberg Traurig.
Justice Department actions and hiring of lawyer Since then, "The congressman has not been subpoenaed or questioned by the Justice Department," as of December, 2005. On January 27, 2006, three weeks after Abramoff pleaded guilty to three federal felonies, Doolittle retained the legal services of the
Virginia law firm of Williams Mullen. Doolittle's chief of staff, Richard Robinson, said the attorney handling Doolittle's inquiry is
David Barger. Barger is the former president of the
Virginia Bar Association's criminal law section and a former assistant US attorney who later was an associate of special prosecutor
Kenneth Starr in the
Whitewater investigation during the Clinton administration. Robinson said the campaign (which paid a $10,000 retainer) has hired Barger to address Doolittle's concerns about how he should respond to questions from the press as he contemplated having to talk about the scandal as part of his campaign for re-election. "The congressman has not retained an attorney to respond to any Justice Department inquiries as there have been none," Robinson said. Payments to Julie Doolittle during the period were done via a company called Sierra Dominion Financial Solutions. and located at the ASG headquarters. KORUSEC is also connected to Kevin Ring, one of Doolittle's former assistants.
Maryland – Edward B. Miller In 2005, a federal grand jury issued a subpoena in 2005 to
Edward B Miller, the deputy chief of staff of the Republican governor of Maryland,
Robert L. Ehrlich, because of Miller's connection to
Grassroots Interactive. ==In popular culture==