CREW FILES SENATE ETHICS COMPLAINT AGAINST SENATOR LANDRIEU

READING BETWEEN THE LINES

1 January 1970 // Source: Sharyl Attkisson // CBS News

Reading Between The Lines

26 January 2008 // Source: Sharyl Attkisson // CBS News



Hundreds of programs claim to help kids read, and dozens of companies make money selling them.

This controversy is over how one of them got special favor and millions of your tax dollars from Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La.

The reading program is called Voyager. Its founder: politically-connected businessman Randy Best. Best and Landrieu have had a mutually beneficial relationship for years - one that's now hounding her as she runs for re-election, CBS News investigative correspondent Sharyl Attkisson reports for Follow the Money.

They first linked up in 2001. Landrieu was a major player in deciding funding for Washington, D.C. Best was lobbying to put Voyager in D.C. schools. The senator gave him what he wanted - a generous $2 million earmark - a grant of money without the normal public review.

"The real reason I did it is because I want to help children learn how to read," Landrieu said.

It probably didn't hurt that after Landrieu agreed to get Best his money, he held a fundraiser for her - and there was a sudden flurry of donations from his Voyager employees to Landrieu in 2001, totaling more than $30,000.

Ethics watchdog Melanie Sloan of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington says it boils down to Landrieu using earmarks of your tax dollars to attract campaign donations for herself.

"Mary Landrieu suddenly is getting campaign contributions from folks who had never before given her any money; at the same time she's putting in a $2 million earmark for this company," said Sloan.

"There was no quid pro quo here over this particular earmark," Landrieu said.

What does she think is the reason that Randy Best and the Voyager folks held a fundraiser for her if not because of the earmark?

"I think that what he sees in me is an advocate for the public education," Landrieu said. "A person willing to think outside the box, a person willing to try new things."

Attkisson asked: "A person willing to try his company?"

"Well, and to try his approach," Landrieu said.

Landrieu then earmarked $700,000 more tax dollars to put Voyager in New Orleans schools. And Best threw her more fundraisers - and continued as a loyal donor.

He wouldn't agree to an interview,but told CBS News the contributions "were always completely proper and fully disclosed."

Does she have any idea how much in total contributions she's gotten from people connected to Voyager?

"I don't know the exact number," Landrieu said.

Attkisson said: "Does $80,000 sound right?"

"I don't know if that's a right number or not," Landrieu said.

There are mixed reviews on how well the Voyager reading program works. But Landrieu's critics say there's no question taxpayers got a real education - on how Washington works.

Landrieu Opens Files on Schools Earmark

SOURCE: James V. Grimaldi // The Washington Post Blog

22 Jan 2008 // A $2 million earmark for the D.C. schools from Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) has become an issue in her campaign for re-election after an ethics watchdog group called for federal and congressional investigations, reports The Post's James V. Grimaldi.

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Melanie Sloan discusses CREW's complaints against Sen. Landrieu

10 January 2008 // Source: Jeff Crouere // WGSO - Ringside Politics With A Punch

Landrieu subject of complaints

SOURCE: Gerald Shields // The Advocate

10 Jan 2008 // A government watchdog group filed complaints Tuesday with the Justice Department and Senate Ethics Committee against U.S. Sen. Mary Landrieu, claiming she steered a $2 million schools contract to a campaign contributor six years ago.

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Landrieu accused of taking bribe

SOURCE: S.A. Miller // The Washington Times

9 Jan 2008 // A Washington watchdog group yesterday accused Sen. Mary L. Landrieu of taking a bribe.

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Landrieu Responds to CREW Complaint, Post Story

SOURCE: Paul Kiel // TPMmuckraker

9 Jan 2008 // Yesterday, the D.C. watchdog Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington filed a criminal complaint against Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-LA), calling for an investigation of whether she'd been bribed to deliver a $2 million earmark. The basic facts, as laid out in a December 20th Washington Post piece, I said, "weren't pretty."

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Landrieu fights back against bribery charge

SOURCE: Manu Raju // The Hill

9 Jan 2008 // Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.), a top target for national Republicans in November, is battling with a government watchdog group that is alleging the senator may have violated federal bribery laws by earmarking funds to a campaign contributor.

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Landrieu Denies Ethics Allegation by Watchdog Group

SOURCE: Kathleen Hunter // Congressional Quarterly

9 Jan 2008 // Aides to Sen. Mary L. Landrieu, D-La., adamantly deny that the two-term senator violated ethics rules by steering funds to a Texas-based company that they contend only later contributed funds to her campaign.

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Landrieu's ethics questioned over 2001 earmark for Texas company

SOURCE: Cain Burdeau // Associated Press

9 Jan 2008 // Louisiana Sen. Mary Landrieu is facing questions over a $2 million education earmark she authored in 2001 that benefited a Texas company whose executives and associates gave the Democratic senator $30,000 in campaign contributions.

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