Griles punished for lying about Jack Abramoff
Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Filed Under:
Abramoff Scandal
Citing his abuse of the public trust, a federal judge on Tuesday sentenced J. Steven Griles, the former deputy secretary at the
Interior Department, to 10 months in prison for his role in the Jack Abramoff scandal.
Griles broke into tears as he apologized for lying about his relationship with the convicted lobbyist. He pleaded guilty to one count of obstructing the
Senate Indian Affairs Committee, which investigated Abramoff's bilking of wealthy tribal clients.
"This has been the most difficult time in my life," Griles said as he struggled to complete his words. "My guilty plea has brought me great shame and embarrassment."
Judge Ellen Huvelle was not moved by the emotional display in a courtroom packed with spectators. She said Griles failed to accept responsibility for giving "untrue" testimony to Congress.
"Even now you continue to try to minimize and to excuse your conduct," she told him. "You consistently mischaracterized the nature and extent of your relationship with Abramoff," she added.
Huvelle expressed disbelief that Griles did not know that Abramoff's tribal clients were the main donors to an organization that was run by his former girlfriend. Italia Federici, whose Council of Republicans for Environmental Advocacy took in $500,000 from tribes, has pleaded guilty for her role in the scandal and has yet to be sentenced
"I did not know who funded CREA," Griles said in response to one of Huvelle's questions.
Huvelle was equally dismayed by two letters that Griles' attorney sent to
Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona), who led the Abramoff investigation. Claims that Abramoff did not enjoy special access at Interior
were "highly misleading," the judge said earlier in the hearing.
"Your Honor, it was the best I could recall," Griles said of the letters that were sent after he testified before the Senate panel. "We were never given any documents to refresh my memory."
Griles also denied allegations that he vouched for a binder that showed up on his desk and
contained information about a Louisiana tribe's land-into-trust application that one of Abramoff's clients opposed. A former aide to then-Interior secretary Gale Norton questioned the origin of the documents.
"We speculated that it came from Jack Abramoff," he said of the mysterious binder that raised during his Senate testimony. "The government says I knew it did and I did not."
The statements weren't enough to convince Huvelle that Griles should not go to prison for his crime. His attorneys argued for three months of home confinement, 500 hours of community service and a "reasonable" fine.
Huvelle did not agree with the
Department of Justice that Griles should "split" his sentence between jail and home confinement either. She instead imposed a full 10 months in prison plus three years of supervised released and a $30,000 fine, to be paid in $1,000 monthly installments.
"You are not above the law," she told the former Bush administration official.
Many supporters of Griles attended the nearly two-hour hearing yesterday afternoon. They included his new wife, Sue Ellen Wooldridge, former Interior and Justice official whom he married shortly after pleading guilty in March;
Special Trustee Ross Swimmer, the former
chief of the
Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma who urged leniency for Griles in a letter to the court; and John Berrey, the chairman of the
Quapaw Tribe of
Oklahoma.
Before the hearing, Berrey told Indianz.Com that Griles personally asked him to speak.
"He's done a lot for me," Berrey said.
Berrey, who has been working as a lobbyist in Washington, D.C., in addition to his elected tribal position, worked on trust reform issues during Griles' tenure and filed a trust mismanagement suit that was settled under Griles' watch. Once Griles left Interior, the tribe hired him as its lobbyist.
But after sifting through more than 90 letters in defense of Griles, Huvelle indicated during the hearing that Berrey's account was not necessary. Griles' attorneys chose not to call Berrey, who had prepared a statement in defense of the former official.
Following the hearing, Berrey said he wasn't upset that he wasn't able to address the court though he called the entire affair "sad."
Griles has 10 days to file a notice of appeal to his sentence. Huvelle agreed to recommend that he serve his time at the federal facility in
Petersburg, Virginia, but said it would up to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons to make a final decision.
DOJ Documents:
Press Release (June 26, 2007) |
Criminal
Information (March 23, 2007)
Selected Letters:
Elouise Cobell
|
Bill Anoatubby |
Jim Cason |
Donald Hodel |
Neal McCaleb |
Christine Norris |
Gale Norton |
Ross Swimmer
More Letters:
Exhibit
Volume 1 (PDF 266 pages)
Griles Calendars:
July 2001 -
February 2002 |
February 2002 -
July 2002 |
July 2002 - December
2002 |
December 2002 - July
2003
Senate Indian Affairs Committee Abramoff Report:
“GIMME
FIVE”— INVESTIGATION OF TRIBAL LOBBYING MATTERS (June 2006)
Exhibits:
Pre-2001 |
2001 |
2002 |
2003 |
2004 |
Undated |
Finance
Related Stories:
Griles to be sentenced for lying about Abramoff
(6/26)
Letters urge judge against
leniency for Griles (6/22)
Cobell calls
attention to Griles' lack of candor (6/21)
Gaming not on Griles radar at Interior (6/20)
Griles denies hiding Abramoff ties from
investigation (6/20)
Ex-DOJ official who
backed Griles up for Senate (6/20)
Opinion: Griles did the crime but not the time
(6/20)
Norton gave Griles credit for
trust reform task force (6/19)
Neal
McCaleb defends former DOI colleague (6/18)
Griles set for sentencing in Abramoff scandal
(6/18)
Italia Federici set for guilty
plea for Abramoff (06/08)
Abramoff
investigators want dirt on Norton (06/07)
Italia Federici to plead guilty in Abramoff
probe (06/06)
Griles marries former DOJ
official after guilty plea (04/20)
Griles' seat on federal commission goes unfilled
(4/9)
Norton associate faces charges in
Abramoff scandal (4/5)
Former girlfriend
of Griles a target of investigation (4/3)
House hearing on Lumbee, Virginia recognition
(4/2)
Editorial: Griles deserves tougher
prison sentence (4/2)
The downfall of J.
Steven Griles (3/26)
J. Steven Griles
pleads guilty for lying about Abramoff (3/23)
Griles shares two homes with former DOJ
official (02/15)
Legal Times: Griles hid
romance from investigators (2/6)
Abramoff's old law firm defending Griles (1/25)
Facing charges, Griles resigns from lobbying
firm (1/18)
Facing charges, Griles steps
down from federal panel (1/16)
Griles
told of likely prosecution over Abramoff (1/11)
Griles a target of Abramoff investigation
(1/10)
Griles said to be under scrutiny
in Abramoff probe (11/15)
Abramoff to
report to prison as probe gets hotter (11/14)
Abramoff scandal leaves reforms to tribes, not
Congress (6/23)
Norton protected Griles
after $1M investigation (09/14)
Wayne
Smith fingers Griles as Abramoff 'point man' (6/22)
Abramoff White House visit coincides with Griles
meeting (05/11)
Tribes, states weigh
lawsuits against oil companies (5/8)
Norton denies fraud or major problem with trust
(3/29)
GAO report warns of billions in
lost oil, gas royalties (3/29)
Norton
denies Abramoff played a role in resignation (03/13)
Tribes, states object to Interior's lack of
audits (03/01)
Pombo starts
investigation of DOI royalty program (2/16)
Bush, Democrats oppose $7B royalty giveaway
(2/15)
Interior to give away $7B in oil
and gas royalties (2/14)
Oil companies
fall behind on royalty payments (2/10)
Griles trying hard to avoid Abramoff indictment
(02/08)
Griles arranged for Norton photo
with Abramoff (01/30)
Griles denies
doing favors for Abramoff, tribes (01/09)
In the Loop: Griles attended DOI's Christmas
party (12/16)
Norton refutes alleged
influence of Abramoff (12/15)
Watchdog
group sues DOI over Abramoff documents (12/07)
McCain expects 'lots' of indictments in Abramoff
case (12/05)
Dorgan vows to continue
Abramoff lobbying probe (11/29)
Griles
intervened in Coushatta leadership dispute (11/29)
Inside the BIA, according to Jack Abramoff
(11/23)
Plea deal cites members of Congress
and another tribe (11/22)
Scanlon free
after guilty plea in tribal lobbying scheme (11/22)
Charges laid against Scanlon in tribal lobbying
probe (11/21)
Senate committee to
continue Abramoff investigation (11/18)
Salon: Italia Federici a 'minor' Republican
player (11/18)
Campbell denies
relationship with Italia Federici (11/18)
Audio: Italia Federici testifies before Senate
panel (11/17)
Opinion: Something creepy
about Federici's CREA (11/16)
Opinion:
Griles' role in lobbying scandal still a mystery (11/14)
C-SPAN Moment: Putting the screws to Steve
Griles (11/11)
Senate panel sets hearing
for Italia Federici (11/09)
Column:
Where in the world is Italia Federici? (11/07)
Editorial: Steve Griles and the revolving door
(11/04)
Griles, Rossetti to testify on
Coushatta Tribe (11/02)
Griles called to
testify on Abramoff scandal (11/01)
Norton associate to testify at Abramoff hearing
(10/28)
Interior drawn into Senate
committee's lobbying probe (10/26)
Abramoff tried to hire Griles at lobbying firm
(08/29)
Gaming leads to new concerns about
lobbyists (05/26)
Meskwakis gave $50K to
group founded by Norton (04/22)
Griles
fought casino opposed by Abramoff's clients (03/14)
Tribe gave $75K to group founded by Norton
(03/14)
DOI investigates contacts with group
started by Norton (03/03)
Report: Former
Norton organization subpoenaed (3/1)
Tribes gave $175K to group founded by Norton
(2/28)
Bush nominates replacement for
Griles at Interior (02/09)
In the Loop:
Griles forms new lobbying partnership (01/31)
Editorial: Good riddance to J. Steven Griles
(12/20)
Norton to remain on job for second
Bush term (12/10)
Top Interior official
resigns from Bush administration (12/08)
Griles blames controversies on Bush opponents
(12/08)
Report blames lax culture for Griles
ethical 'train wreck' (03/17)
Copyright © Indianz.Com