Kerry to Return Cash From Arrested Korean
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, June 21, 2004
WASHINGTON Stung during the 1990s Democrat fund-raising
controversy, John Kerry is returning a $2,000 check from the son of
South Korea's disgraced ex-president after learning the donor was
charged with tax evasion.
Kerry's presidential campaign also acknowledges that some of its
fund-raisers met with a South Korean government official who was
trying to organize a Korean-American political group. That official
has been sent home amid questions he was involving himself in
American politics.
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Kerry's campaign said it did not know about the $2,000
donation from Chun Jae-yong or his background until informed by The
Associated Press. "We are sending the check back," spokesman
Michael Meehan said.
Chun Jae-yong was arrested in February by South Korean
authorities on charges of evading taxes on $14 million in
inheritance money. His father, former president Chun Dooh-hwan, was
convicted in 1997 on bribery charges.
Chun Jae-yong was a business partner with Rick Yi, one of
Kerry's major fund-raisers in the Asian-American community. Yi
acknowledged soliciting the donation from Chun last summer before
learning of his legal problems.
'Probably Would Not Have Taken the Money'
"I didn't think anything wrong of it," said Yi, who has raised
more than $500,000 for Kerry and Democrat causes and is listed as
one of the campaign's fund-raising vice chairmen. "If I had known
who he was at the time I probably would not have taken the money."
Yi, a former military attache in the Clinton White House, said
he and Chun were business partners for about six months last year
in a Duluth, Ga., company called OR Solutions Inc. When making his
donation Aug. 11, Chun listed himself as the company's president
and chief operating officer.
The same day, Yi also made a $2,000 contribution to Kerry,
listing himself as chairman and chief executive of OR Solutions. Yi
said Chun had asked him to help set up the company and that he
ended his affiliation late last fall.
Yi said Chun showed him a Social Security card before making the
donation to prove he was a legal U.S. resident allowed to donate to
political campaigns. By law, the maximum individual donation is
$2,000.
Yi confirmed that while on Kerry fund-raising trips to
California, he met at least three times with Chung Byung-man, the
South Korean government's vice consul in Los Angeles and that they
discussed forming a political group to organize influential
Korean-Americans that would be called The Korean-American
Leadership Council.
"It generically was being called a political action committee
for the Korean-American community," Yi told The Associated Press.
"He [Chung] asked me to spearhead this council. I rejected his
proposal. I don't have time."
South Korean-U.S. relations have been strained over North
Korea's nuclear weapons program and the Bush administration's
decision to reduce the number of U.S. troops in South Korea.
Yi said his conversations with Chung never centered on fund
raising and that many of the people the counsel was suggesting for
the group were Republicans. He said, however, he found it odd that
a South Korean diplomat was trying to organize an American
political group.
'Appropriate for a Diplomat?'
"I asked him that, 'Is this appropriate for a diplomat to do?'
He said he was only starting this up because there was no
Korean-Americans to do it. Once two or three candidates were
identified, he would hand it over."
Yi said that he and Chung never discussed using the group to help
Kerry and that he never solicited donations for the candidate in
Chung's presence. But he acknowledged that Chung introduced him to
some in California as one of Kerry's main fund-raisers.
"I don't doubt somewhere down the line, Chung said, 'This is
Rick Yi; he is one of the persons helping John Kerry.' That is
normal in their culture, but that never led to Chung or I asking
for money."
Yi wasn't the only Kerry fund-raiser approached by Chung.
California lawyer David K. Lee said he was asked to dinner by
one of Yi's fund-raising deputies and was surprised when Chung
showed up. He said Chung talked to him and others present about
creating a group modeled after the Group 100, which has become a
strong political voice for Chinese-Americans.
"Whatever agenda that he had, whether it was political or
personal or governmental, I really don't know," Lee said. "I just
thought the most basic assumption for me was that he was doing
something good for the community."
The South Korean government said Friday that Chung returned home
on May 16 as part of a regular rotation.
The Los Angeles consulate has heard "speculation" that Chung
was supporting the Democratic Party and Kerry but hasn't
investigated and doesn't believe Chung violated a prohibition
against foreign involvement in politics or any U.S. law, spokesman
Min Ryu said.
So Sensitive
Lee said there is heightened sensitivity in the Asian-American
community after the 1996 fund-raising scandal involving it and the
Clinton White House.
"I think the people who are experienced in this field know the
repercussions and the impact that that had on the Chinese-American
community and overall on the Asian-American community, and they
don't want to repeat that mistake," Lee said.
Bruce Lee, a top Democratic National Committee fund-raiser who
helped organize a major Asian-American fund-raising event Friday
night for Kerry, said he, too, began to hear concerns in the
community, looked into them and concluded nothing wrong had
occurred.
Bruce Lee dismissed the allegations as rumors among rival camps
of fund-raisers. "I treated it as gossip. And I didn't think much
more of it," he said.
Renting the Lincoln Bedroom
The Democratic Party markedly increased its vetting of
fund-raisers and donors in the late 1990s after the fund-raising
scandal centered mostly on Asian-Americans. More than a dozen
Democrat fund-raisers or donors were convicted of federal crimes,
and then-President Bill Clinton and his wife, Hillary, acknowledged they used
White House coffees and overnight stays in the Lincoln bedroom as
rewards to lure large donations.
Kerry has been raising record amounts of money for his
presidential campaign as he tries to level the playing field with
President Bush, who has collected an unprecedented $218 million for
his re-election. Kerry's campaign checks the backgrounds of all
fund-raisers and requires non-citizens to show proof they are legal
residents allowed to donate.
The U.S. senator has been forced on several occasions
to answer questions or return donations after news reports that
he accepted money from donors with unsavory backgrounds.
For instance, Kerry received $10,000 in donations in the 1990s
through Democrat fund-raiser Johnny Chung after his Senate office
arranged a tour for Chung at the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
Chung later pleaded guilty to making illegal donations,
including some to Kerry.
Editor's note:
The REAL Story on John Kerry: A Special Investigation – Click Here
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