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  • Schmidt-Krikorian battle heating up again

    Georgetown News Democrat
    July 31 2010


    Schmidt-Krikorian battle heating up again


    Political dispute between Congresswoman and former foe continues

    By MICHAEL ARTHUR
    Associate editor


    The ongoing discord between Second District Congresswoman Jean Schmidt
    and former candidate David Krikorian has heated up in recent weeks.

    Schmidt has announced her plans to establish a Legal Defense Fund
    related to a civil lawsuit filed against Krikorian in Clermont County,
    while Krikorian has asked the Office of Congressional Ethics to launch
    an official investigation into what he believes to be hundreds of
    thousands of dollars in legal services that he says Schmidt improperly
    accepted and failed to disclose.

    The new developments mark the latest chapters in an ongoing feud
    between Schmidt and Krikorian that dates back at least two elections
    cycles, and both developments have ties to an Ohio Elections
    Commission investigation of Krikorian that was initiated in 2009 at
    Schmidt's request.

    In the lawsuit filed in July in Clermont County Court of Common Pleas,
    Schmidt contends that Krikorian wrongly and unfairly accused her of
    accepting money from Turkish-American lobbying interests in exchange
    for her denial of the "Armenian Genocide," when more than 1 million
    Christian Armenians were killed by Muslim Turks in the early 1900s.

    In his request for an official congressional ethics investigation,
    Krikorian accuses Schmidt of accepting legal services valued at
    several hundred thousand dollars from Turkish-American lobbying
    interests during hearings held by the Ohio Elections Commission and
    three other legal actions. Krikorian says Schmidt not only accepted
    the services without obtaining permission from the House Ethics
    Committee, as is required for high-value contributions to candidates,
    but also that she failed to include her acceptance of the services on
    mandatory financial disclosure documents.

    Krikorian is hoping the House Ethics Committee will investigate and
    admonish Schmidt and force her to repay the Turkish American Coalition
    for the legal services its attorneys and central members provider her.

    Schmidt is asking the court for $6.8 million in damages in the
    defamation suit against Krikorian in which she claims he made
    knowingly false statements about her.

    Although Ohio's Second Congressional District has a relatively small
    amount of Armenian-American or Turkish-American populations, Armenian
    and Turkish issues have been at the forefront of the dispute between
    Krikorian and Schmidt.

    Krikorian is of Armenian decent and said grandparents on both sides of
    his family are Armenian Genocide Providers. In his request for an
    investigator, Krikorian claims that Schmidt's legal fees and expenses
    in the OEC action against him were provided by at least two attorneys
    who are instrumental members of the Turkish-American Coalition and the
    Turkish American Legal defense Fund.

    Those organizations, the TCA and the TALDF, are strong advocates for
    advancing the positions of the Turkish government, including opposing
    the Armenian Genocide Resolution, Krikorian said.

    "I believe the total fees and expenses associated with the OEC Action
    exceeded $200,000 and may have ranged up to $500,000," Krikorian said
    in letters to David Skaggs and Porter J. Goss, co-chairmen of the
    Office of Congressional Ethics.

    Krikorian said that, for a congressional representative to accept
    gifts greater than $350, special permission from the House Ethics
    Committee is required. Additionally, he said that a special "waiver of
    disclosure" is required for a congressional representative to omit
    such gifts from disclosure statements.

    Although special permission from the House Ethics Commission is not
    necessarily made public, Krikorian said he sincerely doubts that the
    Ethics Committee approved of such a large gift from a lobbying group.
    He additionally said that disclosure waivers are also kept secret,
    although he said House rules require that the actual request be made
    public, citing House Rule 25, clause 5 that states: "a request for
    waiver of the disclosure requirement is required by law to be made
    publicly available."

    Krikorian added that depositions of former Chief of Staff Barry
    Bennett show that special permission for the gifts was not sought by
    or provided to Schmidt.

    Schmidt's camp, on the other hand, contends that the congresswoman has
    not ethically compromised herself. In a telephone interview with The
    News Democrat, Bruce Pfaff said Schmidt and her legal team have
    consulted with the appropriate ethical watchdog agencies, including
    the House Ethics Committee, as the appropriate course regarding the
    legal actions.

    In fact, the Legal defense Fund Schmidt is creating requires approval
    of the House Ethics Committee to be established.

    Pfaff noted that the Legal Defense Fund will accept contributions only
    from American individuals and organizations, and not from foreign
    entities. Contributions to the fund will be limited to $5,000 per
    person.

    Krikorian said he believes Schmidt only initiated the Legal Defense
    Fund after she got word of his plans to request an ethics
    investigation. He thinks she will try to use the fund to retroactively
    pay for the services of the TAC lawyers in an attempt to avoid the
    ethical conflict.

    In the civil suit Schmidt goes after assertions made by Krikorian
    during the 2008 election, including his claim that she accepted "blood
    money" from Turkish interests.

    Krikorian said he still stands behind that characterization of
    Schmidt's involvement with Turkish interests.

    "It was just my choice of words," said Krikorian. "I feel that is what it is."

    Pfaff notes that Krikorian was found by the OEC to have knowingly made
    false statements with reckless disregard for the truth. Krikorian
    counters that several of Schmidt's ethics allegations were dropped at
    the hearing for lack of evidence, and that the OEC action would not
    have been pursued would it not have been for the influence of the TAC
    and TALDF.

    Pfaff said Schmidt is currently focused on important legislative
    issues before congress breaks, and will be turning her attention to
    the November election.

    Schmidt handily defeated three contenders in the March Primary
    election and faces Democrat Surya Yalamanchili in the Nov. 2 general
    election.

    Krikorian was a candidate in the Democrat primary for the seat. He
    says his loss to Yalamanchili was due to a last minute attack he
    believes was coordinated by Schmidt and leaders of some local
    Democratic clubs.

    In the final week of the primary, Krikorian was accused of making
    insensitive remarks about Yalamanchili's name while speaking at a VFW
    Hall in Clermont County. He denies making the statement, pointing to
    his own unusual surname as evidence that "I would never make an issue
    of somebody's last name."

    If an ethics investigation against Schmidt is approved, the process
    could take up to a year or more to complete, Krikorian said. He added
    that there is a blackout period for 75 days surrounding the general
    election pertaining to ethics complaints.

    If Schmidt does not win the general election this year, the
    investigation will be moot.

    http://newsdemocrat.com/main.asp?SectionID=1&SubSectionID=1&ArticleID=131393




    From: A. Papazian
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