DeLay returns money

Here’s something you don’t see every day: Tom DeLay returning campaign contributions.

House Majority Leader Tom DeLay’s legal expense fund accepted improper contributions from two registered lobbyists in 2001 and this week returned the checks, totaling $3,500, fund trustee Brent Perry said Tuesday.

House rules prohibit lobbyists from making contributions to a member’s legal defense fund. The Tom DeLay Legal Expense Trust has raised more than $900,000 since its creation in 2000, said Perry, a Houston attorney.

The reimbursement was prompted by Public Citizen, a Washington-based watchdog group, which combed through DeLay’s fund and identified the improper contributions.

[…]

Perry said he returned a $1,000 check from Vin Weber, a former Republican congressman from Minnesota. In 2001, Weber’s clients included the government of Greece and Microsoft, according to Public Citizen. Also returned were $2,500 from Locke, Liddell & Sapp, Perry said. The Texas law firm was registered to lobby Congress in 2001.

I initially read the second sentence in the last paragraph as “the governments of Greece and Microsoft”, which almost makes a strange kind of sense. Still, I’m glad that was a misreading.

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One Response to DeLay returns money

  1. Linkmeister says:

    Funny, I read that the same way. Bill Gates, World Potentate.

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