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  • Turkey's influence over lawmakers surfaces in Ohio hearing

    http://realtime.sunlightprojects.org/2009/09/10/tu rkeys-influence-over-lawmakers-surfaces-in-ohio-he aring/

    Real Time Investigations Tracking private influence on public policy

    Turkey's influence over lawmakers surfaces in Ohio hearing
    By Luke Rosiak on 09/10/09 @ 7:27 am | 1 Comment

    Labeling the killing of 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and 1923,
    many at the hands of Ottoman government, an act of genocide has been a
    controversial issue in Turkey, among some historians, in the
    U.S. Congress, and now in the unlikely venue of the Ohio Board of
    Elections, where recent hearings indirectly considered the government
    of Turkey's connection, if any, to Turkish advocacy groups in
    Washington.

    Backed by lawyers from the Turkish American Legal Defense Fund,
    Rep. Jean Schmidt, R-Ohio, filed a false claims complaint against
    David Krikorian, who ran against her in 2008 as an independent and
    garnered 18 percent of the vote. Schmidt's complaint stems from
    campaign literature in which Krikorian claimed she `has taken $30,000
    in blood money from Turkish sponsored political action committees to
    deny the slaughter of 1.5 million Armenian men, women and children by
    the Ottoman Turkish government during World War I.'

    Though Jean Schmidt doesn't sit on the subcommittee responsible for
    the Armenian Genocide legislation, it's clear that she's a favorite of
    the Turkish community. With $18,450 in contributions from three
    Turkish-focused PACs since 2007, the second-term House member has
    received far more than even influential senior members, and nearly
    twice as much as the second-highest recipient, Virginia Foxx, whose
    son-in-law is Turkish. A list of fundraisers compiled by the Turkish
    Coalition USA PAC shows that the group held several events for
    Schmidt, raising thousands more. And four individuals who gave to
    Turkish PACs also donated a combined $8,700 directly to Schmidt's
    campaign.

    At issue before the Ohio Board of Elections is whether Krikorian's
    language holds up - whether it was accurate to describe three
    Turkey-focused political action committees as `Turkish sponsored.' The
    false claims complaint against Krikorian comes after the board
    censured Schmidt for a `reckless disregard for truth' in her own
    campaign literature.

    Lobbyists for the government of Turkey, including former congressmen
    Bob Livingston, made more than 2,260 contacts with officials in an
    unparalleled push to quash a resolution in Congress that would deem
    the events genocide. But political action committees favored by
    Turkish Americans have, on paper, no direct connection with the state.

    In a deposition, Schmidt repeatedly told Krikorian's attorneys that
    she could not recall details about her fundraising and legislative
    discussions. She said she had never heard of the Armenian massacres
    until Krikorian - who is of Armenian heritage - raised the issue, and
    that she still hasn't decided how she would vote on a resolution that
    would condemn the act as genocide, should it reach the House floor.

    But materials put out by the Turkish Coalition of America and authored
    by a lawyer, Bruce Fein, who now represents Schmidt in the complaint,
    say that `Congresswoman Schmidt has on numerous occasions voiced her
    opposition to such resolutions and maintains that the historical
    question is not appropriate for Congress to legislate. The
    congresswoman, based on her independent research, does not believe the
    tragic events=85 constitute genocide.'

    Schmidt acknowledged reading a book on the killings by Guenter Lewy, a
    college professor, which figures in a controversy of its own. The
    Southern Poverty Law Center claimed that the government of Turkey paid
    Lewy to pen the book, `The Armenian Massacres in Ottoman Turkey: A
    Disputed Genocide,' in a manner favorable to the country. In December,
    Lewy, represented by two lawyers from the Turkish American Defense
    Fund who also hold positions at the Turkish Coalition of America -
    Bruce Fein and David Saltzman-sued the Southern Poverty Law Center and
    the report's author, on the grounds that the article claimed that Lewy
    was an unregistered foreign agent, which he says is false. The
    government of Turkey has funded academic programs, including the
    Institute for Turkish Studies at Georgetown University, and endowed
    professorships.

    As Krikorian's counsel questioned Schmidt about whether the PACs were
    indeed `sponsored' by the state of Turkey, he repeatedly tried to nail
    down Schmidt's view of the 1915 events. Schmidt sought some
    wiggle-room by saying that genocides were, by definition,
    state-sponsored, and that no trial or tribunal had concluded that the
    massacre was directly linked to the government at the time.

    In June, while President Barack Obama visited Turkey, an essay
    appeared in a Turkish newspaper under Schmidt's byline opining that
    the United States should not investigate the killings. `What happened
    in 1915 must never be forgotten,' the article said, but in her
    deposition, Schmidt was squishy about just what happened.

    A fundraising e-mail from a Turkish PAC says she is `willing to stand
    up to the Armenian lobby, and it is important for the Turkish
    community to support her.' But Schmidt, who says her campaign was run
    by her husband, her chief of staff and interns, claimed to have no
    role in setting up the fundraisers, no inkling of why Turkish donors
    had become a surprising part of her fundraising base and no
    recollection of meeting top donors, including one who chauffeured her
    around Turkey. (In May, Schmidt took a $10,000 trip to Turkey,
    sponsored by the Turkish Coalition of America.)

    It's not the first time Schmidt has declined to take a clear position
    or found herself making statements contradicted by her record. This
    week, video surfaced of her telling a woman who claimed that Obama may
    not have been born in the United States that she agrees with her,
    despite having previously issued a statement saying he is `indeed a
    citizen of this country.'

    Schmidt expressed little familiarity with the workings of her campaign
    as well as the complex ties between Turkish groups, including the
    Turkish American Legal Defense Fund, whose lawyers, she says, are
    being paid in campaign funds. (The latest expense reports don't reveal
    the amount.)

    `What is the Turkish American Legal Defense Fund?' she is asked.

    `It's a U.S. organization that has a PAC,' she answers.

    `The Legal Defense Fund does?'

    `I don't know. I don't know. I guess it doesn't. I don't know. I don't
    know what it is.'
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