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WV’s Mollohan Subject of Federal Investigation; He’s Top Democrat on House Ethics Committee
Huntington News ^ | April 9, 2006 | HNN Staff

Posted on 04/09/2006 9:26:43 AM PDT by Ooh-Ah

Fairmont, WV (HNN) – The Wall Street Journal broke the story on the front page of the Friday, April 7, 2006 edition. The New York Times followed on Saturday, April 8, 2006. By today, everybody will have a story on the federal probe into the financial affairs of U.S. Rep. Alan Mollohan, D-WV, representing the Mountain State’s first congressional district.

Caught flat-footed by the Wall Street Journal scoop, The Washington Post on Saturday, April 8, reported with a second-day lede that Republican leaders called on Mollohan, 62, to step down from his ranking position of the House Ethics Committee because of allegations that he provided legislative “earmarks benefiting companies and individuals who helped make him a millionaire.”

The Post reported that “Mollohan called the charges ‘spurious’ and said both the accusations and the calls for him to step down are politically motivated.”

Mollohan, a native of Fairmont, was first elected to the 98th Congress in 1982 and has been re-elected ever since. The current salary for rank-and-file members of the House and Senate is $165,200 per year.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday, April 7 that federal prosecutors have opened an investigation of Mollohan's personal financial disclosures. The article also raised questions about earmarks – special provisions included in federal spending bills -- that he has steered to nonprofits in West Virginia in the past five years.

According to The Journal, Mollohan, a member of both the ethics and appropriations committees, has not been accused of any wrongdoing. He acknowledged in an interview making real estate investments with the head of a nonprofit company that received federal money from earmarks Mollohan backed. But, he contended, he is fully "at risk" in the investments and received no special favors in either financing or locating the investments. GOP House leaders, stung by the Tom DeLay and Duke Cunningham scandals, affecting a Texas and a California House member, respectively, called for action against the veteran West Virginia congressman.

"I believe it would be prudent at this point for Mr. Mollohan to resign from the ethics committee until this investigation is completed," said Rep. Thomas M. Reynolds (R-N.Y.), chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee. House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) called on House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) to press Mollohan to step down.

Pelosi, born Nancy D’Alesandro in Baltimore, the daughter of a mayor of Baltimore who later became a U.S. Congressman (Thomas D’Alesandro Jr.), shot back, according to the Post: "Speaker Hastert and his Republican cohorts are responsible for the most corrupt Congress in history, and the American people are paying the price at the gas pump, at the pharmacy and with record-high deficits. The speaker should join me in directing the ethics committee to get to work, and not cast aspersions on the independent and distinguished ranking member."

In addition to the Wall Street Journal article, a commentary in the National Journal and the lengthy New York Times story, the conservative National Legal and Policy Center announced it filed a complaint against Mollohan on Feb. 28, 2006 with the U.S. attorney in Washington, the Washington Post reported.

The National Journal, distinguishing between the Abramoff-DeLay nexus and the Cunningham bribery case, opined that “The danger for Dems in the Mollohan case is that they may not be able to make the argument …. that this is merely an isolated incident. The actions taken by Mollohan – and we must remind that he has not been charged with wrongdoing – have nothing to do with a ‘culture of corruption’ or a ‘K St. Project.’ Instead, they are representative of how some in Congress do business and how, in particular, those who sit on the Approps committee are, how shall we put it, uniquely situated to do that business. In other words, it says that the whole system is rotten and it ain't just one side of the aisle that milks it.”

The New York Times story, by Jodi Rudoren, reported that Mollohan has been accused of “exploiting his powerful perch on the House Appropriations Committee to funnel $250 million into five nonprofit organizations that he set up.”

The most ambitious effort by Mollohan, The Times reported, is a “glistening glass-and-steel structure in Fairmont … thanks to $103 million of taxpayer money he garnered through special spending allocations known as earmarks. The building is likely to sit largely empty because the Mollohan-created organization that it was built for, the Institute for Scientific Research, is in disarray, its chief having resigned under criticism about his $500,000 annual compensation, also paid for with earmarked federal money.”

Rudoren wrote that “Mollohan has recruited many of the nonprofits' top employees and board members, including longtime friends or former aides, who in turn provide him with steady campaign contributions.”

In addition to the Institute for Scientific Research in Fairmont, the Wall Street Journal cited:

* $31 million for the West Virginia High Technology Consortium Foundation;

* $28 million for the Vandalia Heritage Foundation;

* $6 million for the MountainMade Foundation. The Thomas, WV (Tucker County) facility is housed in buildings restored with funds from the Vandalia Heritage Foundation, according to the MountainMade web site.

Among the real estate holdings of Mollohan and his wife Barbara are a half interest in a 52-unit condo project in Washington called The Remington. Barbara Mollohan manages rentals in the project and the couple have a half-interest in 27 of the units, The Journal reported. They co-own them with a relative, Joseph L. Jarvis, a retired businessman who received subcontracts from an Energy Department facility in Mollohan’s district. The Journal also reported that the Mollohans own – in partnership with a former staffer, Laura Kuhns, who heads the Vandalia Heritage Foundation, five properties on exclusive Bald Head Island, N.C., valued in local real estate records at $2 million, but undoubtedly worth much more in today’s superheated real estate market.

The Journal article, by John R. Wilke, added that the Mollohans recently purchased a $1.45 million oceanfront house on Bald Head Island, next door to a house owned by Laura Kuhns and her husband. The weekly rental on the Mollohan house: $8,555.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; US: West Virginia
KEYWORDS: 109th; congress; corruption; earmark; ethics; mollohan; probe
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To: hedgetrimmer

WV is not CA.

Look at how long Byrd has been there.


21 posted on 04/10/2006 11:21:49 AM PDT by hattend (I have a pig list. Do you want on it?)
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To: hattend

It does take some old-fashioned precinct walking, which is a dying artform in this country today.


22 posted on 04/10/2006 12:06:42 PM PDT by hedgetrimmer ("I'm a millionaire thanks to the WTO and "free trade" system--Hu Jintao top 10 worst dictators)
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To: NRA2BFree

You're absolutely right! Both sides of the aisle are corrupt to the core.
Politician; a four letter word spelled with ten letters.


23 posted on 04/10/2006 12:46:08 PM PDT by Roccus
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To: hattend

LOL! ....and when I'm wrong I'm usually very wrong! :o)


24 posted on 04/10/2006 1:04:33 PM PDT by asp1
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To: Ooh-Ah
Simple West Virginia folk.

Pretty hard to imagine more country-club types in real life than Mollahan and Rockefeller.

Byrd has sometimes had redeeming qualities - not excluding unintentional comic relief.
25 posted on 04/10/2006 1:58:58 PM PDT by mtntop3 ("He who must know before he believes will never come to full knowledge.")
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To: Roccus
Both sides of the aisle are corrupt to the core. Politician; a four letter word spelled with ten letters.

Some famous people have agreed with you and could not have said it better: Hitler, Mussolini, Hirohito, Stalin, Mao, Castro, Ortega, Chavez, bin Laden.

26 posted on 04/10/2006 2:07:21 PM PDT by mtntop3 ("He who must know before he believes will never come to full knowledge.")
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To: Ooh-Ah; smoothsailing; Liz; Howlin; ALOHA RONNIE; RonDog; MurryMom

The top RAT on the House Ethics Committee has ethics problems? WHAT ARE THE ODDS?


27 posted on 04/10/2006 4:59:45 PM PDT by Libloather (You say Dubai, and I say hello...)
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To: Libloather
WHAT ARE THE ODDS?

You want the over or under? BWAHAHA!

28 posted on 04/10/2006 5:08:12 PM PDT by smoothsailing (NEVER FORGET-Don't be Murtha'd again)
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To: mtntop3

Cute! But doesn't mean I'm wrong. Nothing like attacking the messenger.


29 posted on 04/12/2006 7:29:03 AM PDT by Roccus
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To: Ooh-Ah

In Fairmont all buildings are named after either Byrd, or this Schmuck... poor folks down there don't have a chance.


30 posted on 04/12/2006 7:30:14 AM PDT by HamiltonJay
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To: HamiltonJay

I live right here in Fairmont and have been doing much investigative research (although I didn't know these other groups were doing the same). I can answer any questions that may arise.

I can confirm that we do indeed have the $25,000,000 High-Level / Mollohan Bridge (technically named after the Congressman's father who served in Congress in the 1950's), and there is the ($14,000,000+) Alan Mollohan Innovation Center office buildings, and on and on.

Interestingly, the High-Level Bridge was completed during the term of Republican Governor Cecil Underwood, and I don't believe it was his idea to later rename it.

Also of interest is the fact that the building named for former Republican Governor Arch Moore has been renamed to a neutral State Office Building -kind of name.

So namings are reversible and changeable...



31 posted on 04/13/2006 6:55:46 AM PDT by wildandcrazyrussian (Islam is no more a "religion of peace" than communism was an "economic system of peace".)
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