Charity Begins at Home

It isn’t surprising to find out that John Murtha has found some creative ways of avoiding FEC regulations. It isn’t even surprising that he’s tried establishing a slush fund for his campaigns using his defense contractor cronies. While these things aren’t surprising, they are disgusting. Thanks to the bloggers at Redstate, we now know about the slush fund known as PAID (Pennsylvania Association for Individuals with Disabilities). Here’s what’s happening:

GuideStar, an organization that tracks charitable organizations, reported the group’s accomplishments were “construct(ing) a new Website to accommodate diverse client needs in conducting a search for employment,” and “recruit(ing) new employer partners committed to interviewing and hiring individuals with disabilities.”

But neither PAID, GuideStar, nor any other organization tracking charitable organizations has reported on what appears to be a major part of PAID’s mission: voter registration.

As a tax-exempt charitable organization, PAID is required to file an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Form 990, “which provides the public with financial information about a given organization, and is often the only source of such information. It is also used by government agencies to prevent organizations from abusing their tax-exempt status.”

PAID’s tax documents report the organization spent a total of $600,138 between 2003 and 2005 for “training and securing employment for disabled individuals,” as well as “assisting disabled individuals with voter registration.”

It isn’t surprising to find out that that’s just the tip of a very big iceberg:

According to a report in Roll Call earlier this week, PAID has had questionable success as a job training and placement organization. Disability advocates in Pennsylvania told the paper they had never heard of PAID.

“Since its creation, PAID claims to have helped 237 people with disabilities obtain permanent jobs,” they reported. “But the organization has never been mentioned in a local newspaper and it does not appear to have ever been awarded any of the myriad citations given by agencies that employ people with disabilities.”

In other words, it’s useless in doing what it reportedly is supposed to do. It isn’t a stretch to think that this is essentially a shell company used to funnel defense contractors’ money into voter registration drives in John Murtha’s district. This is at least as sleazy as Murtha’s Abscam folly. Here’s how it works:

An invitation obtained by majorityap.com reports that the Pennsylvania Association for Individuals with Disabilities (PAID) will sponsor a charity golf tournament priced at upwards of $10,000 on September 24, 2007, at the Argyle Country Club in Silver Springs, MD.

The group first came under fire in December, 2006, after the Washington Post reported “PAID has become a gathering point for defense contractors and lobbyists with business before Murtha’s defense appropriations subcommittee, and for Pennsylvania businesses and universities that have thrived on federal money obtained by Murtha.”

In other words, a ‘charity’ funded by John Murtha’s defense contractor cronies pays for regularly scheduled voter registration drives in John Murtha’s district. What’s worse is that, because the money is going into a ‘charity’, that ‘charity’ doesn’t have to report who’s giving how much to the charity. Here’s some more PAID funny business:

As late as June 25, 2007, PAID’s website named Murtha as its Honorary Chairman. His name has since been removed from the group’s Internet homepage.

PAID’s stated claim of representing60 million persons with disabilitieswas questioned by Roll Call’s Paul Singer, who reported that well-established organizations aiding Pennsylvania’s disabled “had never heard of or worked with PAID.”

A study by the U.S. Census Bureau found that roughly 50 million Americans reported some level of disability; meaning that if PAID’s claims were accurate, they represented more than the entire nationwide population of the disabled.

It’s time to shut PAID down. It’s time the people of PA-12 dumped this serial ethics violator. There’s a reason why even Soros-funded CREW (Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington) put him on their list. It’s because it’s difficult to find proof that there’s even a single ethical bone in Rep. Murtha’s body.

Frankly, this reeks of the type of cronyism that Dan Rostenkowski built up during the time he chaired the House Ways and Means Committee. Rostenkowski didn’t even bother hiding it. In fact, he bragged about his golf trips with lobbyists, possibly because he thought of those trips as a status symbol. The only difference I see between Murtha’s ‘charity’ golf tournament and Rostenkowski’s lobbyist-paid golf trips is that Murtha is attempting to hide his involvement in this unethical game.

I strongly recommend you read both of MajorityAP’s reports on Murtha’s latest scandal.

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Cross-posted at LetFreedomRingBlog

3 Responses to “Charity Begins at Home”

  1. Rocky Says:

    Well, as long as we’re looking at scandals, let’s take a look at the most recent republican congressman caught up in a brou-ha-ha:

    I’ve been looking at Patrick McHenry’s recent U.S. House of Representatives Financial Disclosure Statement on the internet. It’s a form that he’s required to file each year by May 15, and he signed and filed this year’s document on May 7.
    The Center for Responsive Politics (opensecrets.org) posts these disclosures, which cover the previous year. One form really isn’t so revealing by itself, because it reports income, net worth, assets, etc. in so-called “brackets.” You know, “at least” as much as one number, but “less than” a second, higher figure.
    If you look at two or three of these reports, you get a rather disturbing picture. Our representative has done real well since entering Congress.
    McHenry’s financial reports show, for instance, that he went from owning virtually nothing—he said—when he ran for Congress in 2004 to having a net worth in the bracket of “$720,000-$1.2 million.”
    Wow! Where did that kind of net worth come from in just three years? If any other 30-year-old had done that, he’d be on the cover of Fortune Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, etc.—or there would be a federal investigation. Maybe there should be one here, too!
    Who is the financial advisor for this brilliant young public servant? McHenry has a degree from Belmont Abby College and a real estate license, but nothing in his background that would bolt him to a million dollars so fast!
    Doesn’t his story sound a lot like Hillary Clinton’s little trick in the 1980s of turning a $1,000 investment in cattle futures into a nest egg of more than 100 times that amount?
    When McHenry first entered Congress, according to his filing, the Gastonia whiz kid reported “$68,009-$281,000” in net worth. That ranked 337th out of 435 members of Congress; in other words, only 98 members of Congress actually were “poorer” than he was.
    But in the reports since, the august representative of the 10th District has seen his net worth skyrocket to the “$301,018-$877,000” bracket—on its way to “$720,000-$1.2 million.” By any measure, on paper, he’s become a wealthy young man very quickly.
    Not just wealthy, but every young adult’s financial dream—having a net worth of over a million dollars by your early 30s!
    Would it be too much to ask the enterprising and wildly successful congressman to address publicly what has gone so terribly right in his financial life since he first ran for Congress in 2004 as “the only small businessman in this race”?
    That year, the owner of McHenry Real Estate of Cherryville listed zero assets in his business—same as he does now. Could it be that “McHenry Real Estate” never really was a serious “business” three years ago, as his opponents claimed?
    But the disclosure forms apparently, don’t tell the whole McHenry financial story.
    According to the Catawba County Geospatial Information Services (GIS) system, there’s a condo on Lake Hickory at 2200 6th St. NW (#2), Hickory, for which McHenry is listed as the owner since April 27, 2005. If you know the area, it’s located between the former sites of the old Rock House and the old Moose Club on “the lake road.”
    This residence is not listed among his apparent real estate rental properties in Gastonia, Cherryville and Charlotte on Schedule III—Assets and “Unearned” Income that he reported on May 7. And yet, there it is, big as day in Deed Book 2658, Page 496, Parcel ID 3704170122320002, showing Patrick T. McHenry as the owner.
    Is it barely possible that this young public servant, who likes to have his friends register and vote illegally in places where they don’t actually live, is hiding some of his assets from the public? Maybe he thinks we might object to his amassing too much of a fortune too fast?
    So, for sure, something is amiss. Both the deed for 2200 6th St. NW (#2) and the House ethics reports bear McHenry’s signature. What gives here, Congressman? Can he explain this?

  2. Mitch the Bitch Says:

    An ACORN democrap calling out the republicans over voter fraud…

    The difference is Cocky, that WE run the liars, freaks and thiefs out of Congress and sometimes right into prison where THEY ALL belong. The democraps on the other hand give these same criminals chairmanships…

    Rocky you are a sad puke….

  3. Carlos Says:

    Maybe the feds are just waiting until they can find $90,000 in cold cash in Murtha’s possession.

    No, wait, that was another donkey. All they have on Murtha is enough to convict anyone else, on tape. Multiple times!

    And I haven’t heard too much about Feinstein’s military largess bounty in the last couple of years.

    Or any of the other donkeys who’ve been caught with cookie crumbs falling off their greedy hands.

    Mitch is correct: the Republicans go after their own when they’re doing wrong. The donkeys just cover their ears, close their eyes and sing louder. Pretty much like the agenda media does.

    And if one wants a lesson in voter fraud, take lessons from the guvneress of Washington. Her theft of an election should go down in the annuls of voter fraud.

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