Federal Prosecutors last week indicted former U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert for:
1) lying to the FBI on why he had withdrawn nearly $1.7 million from various banks in the last four years, and
2) evading the reporting requirements of banks for large cash transactions.
Each count carries a maximum penalty of 5 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
The indictment charges that in 2010 Hastert secretly met one of his
former students and agreed to pay him $3.5 million to secure his silence
for “past misconduct,” when he was a wrestling coach at the Yorkville
High School in Illinois from 1965-81. Since that meeting, Hastert, 73,
paid him $1.7 million by initially withdrawing $50,000 at a time from
several banks; after being questioned by bank officials, he reduced each
withdrawal to just under $10,000, to evade the banks’ reporting
requirements.
In December 2014, when asked by the FBI as to why he had made such
large cash withdrawals, Hastert made “materially false, fictitious, and
fraudulent statements,” the federal prosecutors said. Hastert was making
these payments to his former student to conceal sexually abusing him
decades ago, according to various news reports.
Hastert’s indictment is of particular interest to the
Armenian-American community because of past accusations that he had
received large bribes from Turkish entities to quash pending Armenian
Genocide Resolutions, while serving as Speaker of the House of
Representatives from 1999 to 2007. These claims were never fully
investigated by the U.S. government. After retiring from Congress,
Hastert worked for Dickstein Shapiro LLP in Washington, D.C., as a
lobbyist for Turkey and other clients.
Ironically, at the start of his political career, Hastert strongly
supported recognition of the Armenian Genocide. He spoke on the House
floor on April 19, 1984, in favor of a congressional resolution
acknowledging the genocide. On June 5, 1996, he voted for an amendment
to cut U.S. aid to Turkey until that country recognized the Armenian
Genocide. Furthermore, in August 2000, Speaker Hastert met with Armenian
community leaders in Glendale, pledging to bring the pending Armenian
Genocide Resolution to a vote, despite then-President Clinton’s vehement
objections.
However, moments before the genocide resolution was to be voted upon
on Oct. 19, 2000, Hastert yanked the bill from consideration, using the
excuse that Clinton had sent him a letter raising “grave national
security concerns.” How is it that the Republican House Speaker, who
fiercely opposed a Democrat president on almost every issue and
supported his impeachment, suddenly decided to agree with him on
rejecting the Armenian Genocide Resolution? Four days later, the Turkish
Sabah newspaper reported that Hastert had agreed to block the
resolution on condition that Clinton made such a request in writing.
Could there have been a sinister reason why Speaker Hastert had a sudden change of heart on the Armenian Genocide issue?
Vanity Fair magazine revealed in its September 2005 issue that former
FBI translator Sibel Edmonds had reviewed wiretaps of Turkish phone
calls claiming that Hastert’s price to withdraw the Armenian Genocide
Resolution would be at least $500,000. The FBI overheard Turkish
speakers boasting that they have “arranged for tens of thousands of
dollars to be paid to Hastert’s campaign funds in small checks” because
contributions less than $200 do not have to be itemized in public
filings. In fact, Vanity Fair’s examination of Hastert’s federal filings
from 1996 to 2002 showed that his campaign had received close to
$500,000 in un-itemized payments.
Shockingly, rather than investigate Edmonds’ credible accusations,
the FBI fired her, and the U.S. government did not allow her to testify
in Congress or in court, using the “state-secrets privilege” as a cover.
Not surprisingly, Speaker Hastert’s visits to Turkey in 2002 and 2004
were funded by the Turkish-U.S. Business Council. Consequently, in July
2004, Hastert issued a blunt statement vowing to block all future
Armenian Genocide Resolutions—a pledge he kept until his departure from
the House in November 2007!
Interestingly, Hastert’s personal wealth went from $270,000 to up to
$17 million during his 2 decades of service in Congress, at a time when
his congressional salary was $175,000 a year! Where did his millions
come from?
Six months after leaving the House, Hastert began to reap the
benefits of serving Turkish interests in Congress by joining the firm
Dickstein Shapiro as a lobbyist representing the Turkish government,
among other clients. He worked jointly with former House Majority Leader
Dick Gephardt, sometimes traveling together to Turkey, and splitting
millions of dollars in lucrative lobbying fees. Last week, immediately
after the federal indictment was issued, Hastert resigned from the
lobbying firm.
A full investigation should now be conducted of all allegations
against Hastert that have been ignored for far too long. The American
public needs to know if he was being bribed, or even worse, blackmailed,
by Turkish entities during his tenure as speaker, the third most
powerful office in Washington after the president and vice president!
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