[House Prints, 111th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]



111th Congress                                         Review No.
 1st Session             HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES       09-2567
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                    OFFICE OF CONGRESSIONAL ETHICS
                       UNITED STATES HOUSE OF
                           REPRESENTATIVES

                             --------


                            Report and Findings

                            Transmitted to the
                Committee on Standards of Official Conduct
                               on June 8, 2009
            and released publicly pursuant to H. Res. 895 of the
                           110th Congress as amended



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                                  June 2009



111th Congress                                         Review No.
 1st Session             HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES       09-2567
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                    OFFICE OF CONGRESSIONAL ETHICS
                       UNITED STATES HOUSE OF
                           REPRESENTATIVES

                             --------


                            Report and Findings

                            Transmitted to the
                Committee on Standards of Official Conduct
                               on June 8, 2009
            and released publicly pursuant to H. Res. 895 of the
                           110th Congress as amended


            
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                                June 2009


                     U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
54-330                       WASHINGTON : 2009



                               OFFICE OF
                        CONGRESSIONAL ETHICS
                                BOARD

                    UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
                          ONE HUNDRED ELEVENTH CONGRESS

DAVID SKAGGS, Chair
PORTER GOSS, Co-Chair
YVONNE BURKE
KAREN ENGLISH
ALLISON HAYWARD
JAY EAGEN
WILLIAM FRENZEL
ABNER MIKVA
                                   ---------

Leo J. Wise, Chief Counsel & Staff Director
Omar Ashmawy, Investigative Counsel
Elizabeth Horton, Investigative Counsel


                                 REPORT

                           Review No. 09-2567

    The Board of the Office of Congressional Ethics, by a vote 
of no less than four members, on May 29, 2009 adopted the 
following report and ordered it to be transmitted to the 
Committee on Standards of Official Conduct of the U.S. House of 
Representatives.
    SUBJECT: Representative Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick
    NATURE OF THE ALLEGED VIOLATION: There is substantial 
reason to believe that Congresswoman Carolyn Cheeks 
Kilpatrick's participation in the 13th Annual 
Caribbean Multi-National Business Conference in St. Maarten, 
N.A. from November 6-9, 2008, her acceptance of reimbursement 
of expenses to attend that conference and the Member Post 
Travel Disclosure Form she filed violated various provisions of 
House Rule XXV Section 5(b).
    RECOMMENDATION: The Board of the Office of Congressional 
Ethics recommends that the Committee on Standards of Official 
Conduct further review the above described allegations 
concerning Congresswoman Kilpatrick.
    VOTES IN THE AFFIRMATIVE: 6
    VOTES IN THE NEGATIVE: 0
    MEMBER OF THE BOARD OR STAFF DESIGNATED TO PRESENT THIS 
REPORT TO THE STANDARDS COMMITTEE: Leo Wise, Staff Director & 
Chief Counsel.
                           TABLE OF CONTENTS

  I. INTRODUCTION.....................................................5
          A. Summary of Allegation...............................     5
          B. A Note on Culpability...............................     6
          C. Jurisdictional Statement............................     7
          D. Procedural History..................................     7
 II. MULTIPLE ENTITIES, INCLUDING CARIB NEWS (THE NEWSPAPER), THE 
     GOVERNMENT OF ST. MAARTEN AND SEVERAL CORPORATIONS, SPONSORED 
     REPRESENTATIVE KILPATRICK'S TRIP.................................8
          A. Representative Kilpatrick's Knowledge of The 
              Involvement of These Corporations in the Conference     9
          B. CARIB NEWS also Sponsored Congresswoman Kilpatrick's 
              Travel.............................................    14
          C. Corporate Donations Were Earmarked for the 
              Conference.........................................    14
          D. Because Entities that Employ or Retain Lobbyists 
              Sponsored the Event, Congresswoman Kilpatrick's 
              Involvement Should Have Been Limited to One Day....    20
          E. The Government of St. Maarten Made In-Kind Donations 
              to the 2008 Conference and Played a Significant 
              Role in Planning, Organizing and Conducting the 
              2008 Conference....................................    21
III. ROLE OF THE CHAIR'S COUNSEL IN THE APPROVAL OF THE 12TH ANNUAL 
     CARIBBEAN MULTI-NATIONAL BUSINESS CONFERENCE IN 2007............24
 IV. THE VALUE OF THE TRIP REPORTED ON THE MEMBER'S POST-TRAVEL 
     DISCLOSURE FORM................................................ 42
          A. Representatives from Carib News Foundation..........    43
          B. Information Required from the Congressional Traveler    45
  V. MORE THAN ONE FAMILY MEMBER ACCOMPANIED CONGRESSWOMAN KILPATRICK 
     ON THE TRIP.....................................................47
 VI. CARIB NEWS FOUNDATION, AS A PRIVATE FOUNDATION, WAS PROHIBITED 
     FROM PAYING FOR CONGRESSWOMAN KILPATRICK'S TRAVEL...............48
                 FINDINGS OF FACT AND CITATIONS TO LAW

                           Review No. 09-2567

     On May 29, 2009 the Board of the Office of Congressional 
Ethics (hereafter the ``Board'' ) adopted the following 
findings of fact and accompanying citations to law, 
regulations, rules and standards of conduct (in italics ). The 
Board notes that these findings do not constitute a 
determination of whether or not a violation actually occurred.

                             I. INTRODUCTON

    1. Congresswoman Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick attended the 
13th Annual Caribbean Multi-National Business 
Conference in St. Maarten, N.A., from November 6-9, 2008. 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick received funds from a private source 
to participate in the conference.

                       A. SUMMARY OF ALLEGATIONS

    2. There is substantial reason to believe that 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick violated the requirement that she 
identify the ``true, correct and accurate'' sponsor of her 
travel ``to the best of her knowledge'' on her Member Post 
Travel Disclosure Form. While forms submitted to her office and 
the Standards Committee before the conference identified one 
entity as the sponsor--the Carib News Foundation--once at the 
conference, Congresswoman Kilpatrick was presented with 
indications that other corporations--including Citigroup, IBM, 
AT&T, Pfizer, Macy's and Verizon Foundation--were also 
sponsors. In fact, Representative Kilpatrick, in remarks at one 
of the conference sessions, personally thanked ``the sponsors'' 
after the corporations were identified as such. Those 
indications proved to be true--the corporations were in fact 
sponsors of Congresswoman Kilpatrick's travel according to 
House travel rules because the corporations had donated funds 
specifically for the conference (i.e. earmarked funds). 
Further, events that occurred in 2007 affected the Standards 
Committee's ability to determine whether the corporations were 
sponsors in 2008:
        a. In 2007, the House of Representatives changed the 
        rules governing travel. Those changes placed 
        limitations on the number of days Members of Congress 
        could participate in events (such as conferences) when 
        their travel was sponsored by an entity that employs or 
        retains a lobbyist. These changes affected the annual 
        Caribbean Multi-National Business Conference. In 2007, 
        the Carib News Foundation continued to identify the 
        corporations as sponsors on the conference agenda and 
        on a draft version of the Private Sponsor Travel 
        Certification Form prepared for submission to the 
        Standards Committee for approval. However, after 
        interacting with the counsel to the then-Chair of the 
        Standards Committee, and apparently without the 
        knowledge of the staff attorney reviewing the trip, the 
        documents identifying the corporations as ``sponsors'' 
        were changed and their sponsorship was not disclosed.
        b. The 2007 conduct and attendant misrepresentations 
        appear to have directly influenced what occurred in 
        2008. When the Carib News Foundation submitted 
        materials to the Standards Committee for their approval 
        of the 2008 conference, the Carib News Foundation took 
        the same approach and did not disclose the role of the 
        corporate sponsors on the forms they submitted to the 
        Standards Committee.
    3. There is substantial reason to believe that 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick violated House Rule 25, clause 
5(b)(1)(C) by accepting trip-related reimbursements from 
entities that employ or retain lobbyists for participating in 
an event for more than one day.
    4. There is substantial reason to believe that 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick violated House Rule 25 clause 
5(h)(i)(1)(B) by underreporting the value of the travel 
reimbursements she received to attend the 13th Annual Caribbean 
Multi-National Business Conference.
    5. There is substantial reason to believe that 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick violated the limitation that a Member 
may only bring one family member with them on privately 
sponsored travel, described in the House Ethics Manual at page 
101, by bringing both her daughter and granddaughter to the 
conference. The Board further notes that Congresswoman 
Kilpatrick failed to disclose that her daughter and 
granddaughter were accompanying her on the trip.
    6. There is substantial reason to believe that the Carib 
News Foundation's payment of travel expenses for Representative 
Kilpatrick and her acceptance of payment violated the Internal 
Revenue Code. As stated above, Carib News Charities, the name 
previously held by the 501(c) organization now known as the 
Carib News Foundation, is listed as a private foundation in the 
Internal Revenue's cumulative list of charitable organizations, 
Publication 78. Therefore, the Standards Committee should not 
have approved the trip because the funds came from a prohibited 
source.

                        B. A NOTE ON CULPABILITY

    7. These findings fall into four categories: (1) the 
sponsor or sponsors, as the case appears to be, of the 
conference; (2) the intervention of the counsel to the former 
Chair of the Standards Committee in the Standards Committee's 
review process of the conference in 2007 and how it affected 
the information before the Standards Committee in 2008; (3) the 
accuracy of the value of the reimbursement submitted by 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick and (4) whether, because of its tax 
status, the Carib News Foundation could lawfully pay for 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick's conference-related expenses.
    8. While all these topics are relevant, the Board notes 
that they do not all involve conduct by Congresswoman 
Kilpatrick to the same degree.
        a. As to topic 1, determining the identity of the true 
        sponsor or sponsors implicates the conduct of both 
        Congresswoman Kilpatrick and the Standards Committee. 
        Congresswoman Kilpatrick told the OCE she relied on the 
        Standards Committee to make that determination. It is 
        the Board's view that the Member's approach is 
        reasonable to a point. Once Congresswoman Kilpatrick 
        arrived at the conference, however, she was confronted 
        with information that other corporations were co-
        sponsors. That information, at least in 2008, does not 
        appear to have been before the Standards Committee when 
        they initially approved the 2008 travel.
        b. As to topic 2, the intervention of the counsel to 
        the former Chair of the Standards Committee in the 
        Standards Committee's review of the 2007 conference did 
        not involve Congresswoman Kilpatrick. Nonetheless, it 
        directly bears on whether and to what extent the 
        Standards Committee could determine the true sponsor of 
        the conference in 2008.
        c. As to topic 3, the accuracy of the information 
        Congresswoman Kilpatrick provided as to the value of 
        the reimbursement of her conference-related expenses 
        most directly implicates her conduct. The post-travel 
        disclosure form that all Members must file when they 
        accept privately sponsored travel is signed and 
        certified by Members. The form puts the obligation on 
        Members, not staff, not the Standards Committee and not 
        sponsors, to certify that the information on the form 
        is ``true, accurate and complete'' to the ``best of the 
        Member's knowledge.'' Congresswoman Kilpatrick saw the 
        value of her travel and retained copies of documents 
        that showed its true value in her office files. 
        Nonetheless, she certified inaccurate information on 
        the post-travel disclosure form.
        d. As to topic 4, limitations on Carib News 
        Foundation's ability to pay for overseas travel of 
        government officials, Congresswoman Kilpatrick told the 
        OCE she was unaware of any such limitations. The Board 
        finds this statement to be credible. Nonetheless, the 
        law prohibits such payments. Therefore, the Board feels 
        compelled to include a discussion of this issue in this 
        referral.

                      C. JURISDICTIONAL STATEMENT

    9. The allegations that are the subject of this review 
concern Representative Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick, a Member of 
the United States House of Representatives from the 
13th District of Michigan. The Resolution the United 
States House of Representatives adopted creating the Office of 
Congressional Ethics directs that, ``[n]o review shall be 
undertaken . . . by the board of any alleged violation that 
occurred before the date of adoption of this resolution.\1\ The 
House adopted this Resolution on March 11, 2008. Because the 
conduct under review occurred or relates to actions taken after 
March 11, 2008, review by the Office of Congressional Ethics is 
in accordance with the Resolution.
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    \1\  House Resolution 895 of the 110th Congress, Section 1(e).
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                         D. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

    10. The OCE received a written request for a preliminary 
review in this matter signed by at least two members of the 
Board on March 6, 2009. The preliminary review commenced on 
this date.\2\ The preliminary review was scheduled to end on 
April 5, 2009.
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    \2\  A preliminary review is ``requested'' in writing by members of 
the Board of the OCE. The request for a preliminary review is 
``received'' by the OCE on a date certain. According to H. Res. 895 of 
the 110th Congress (hereafter ``the Resolution''), the timeframe for 
conducting a preliminary review is 30 days from the date of receipt of 
the Board's request.
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    11. At least three members of the Board voted to initiate a 
second-phase review in this matter on March 27, 2009. The 
second-phase review commenced on April 6, 2009.\3\ The second-
phase review was scheduled to end on May 21, 2009.
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    \3\  According to the Resolution, the Board must vote on whether to 
conduct a second-phase review in a matter before the expiration of the 
30-day preliminary review. If the Board votes for a second-phase, the 
second-phase begins when the preliminary review ends. The second-phase 
review does not begin on the date of the Board vote.
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    12. The Board voted to extend the 45-day second-phase 
review by an additional 14 days, as provided for under the 
Resolution, on April 24, 2009. Following the extension, the 
second-phase review was scheduled to end on June 5, 2009.
    13. The second-phase review ended on May 26, 2009.
    14. The Board voted to refer the matter to the Standards 
Committee for further review on May 29, 2009.
    15. The OCE requested documents from and interviews with 
representatives of:
        (1) Representative Sheila Jackson-Lee's Congressional 
        office;
        (2) the Verizon Foundation;
        (3) Citibank;
        (4) American Airlines;
        (5) IBM;
        (6) Macy's, Inc;
        (7) Pfizer;
        (8) AT&T
        (9) Representative Kilpatrick's Congressional office;
        (10) Representative Payne's Congressional office;
        (11) Representative Rangel's Congressional office;
        (12) Representative Thompson's Congressional office;
        (13) Delegate Christensen's Congressional office;
        (14) The Carib News; and
        (15) The Carib News Foundation

   II. Multiple Entities, Including CARIB NEWS (the Newspaper), the 
     Government of St. Maarten and Several Corporations, Sponsored 
                    Representative Kilpatrick's Trip

    16. Under House Rule 25 clause 5(d), Members are required 
to obtain prior approval of the Standards Committee for trips 
where the Member's travel expenses will be reimbursed by a 
private source. The Standards Committee has adopted 
regulations, pursuant to House Rule 25 clause 5(h)(i)(1)(B) \4\ 
that requires Members to identify the ``sponsor(s),'' i.e. the 
party reimbursing travel expenses, for any trip where the payor 
is a private entity.
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    \4\ House Rule 25(5)(h)(i)(1)(B) directs the Standards Committee to 
establish, ``regulations describing the information it will require 
individuals subject to this clause to submit to the committee in order 
to obtain the prior approval of the committee for any travel covered by 
this clause . . .'' On February 20, 2007, the Committee issued 
guidelines and regulations concerning the travel restrictions and 
requirements.
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    17. There is substantial reason to believe that 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick violated the requirement that she 
identify the ``true, correct and accurate'' sponsor of her 
travel ``to the best of her knowledge'' on her Member Post 
Travel Disclosure Form. While forms submitted to her and the 
Standards Committee before the conference identified one 
sponsor--the Carib News Foundation--once at the conference, 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick was presented with evidence that other 
corporations were sponsors. As will be discussed below, those 
indications proved to be true--the corporations were in fact 
sponsors of Congresswoman Kilpatrick's travel according to 
House travel rules because the corporations had donated funds 
specifically for the conference (i.e. earmarked funds).

 A. REPRESENTATIVE KILPATRICK'S KNOWLEDGE OF THE INVOLVEMENT OF THESE 
                     CORPORATIONS IN THE CONFERENCE

    18. On her Member Post-Travel Disclosure Form, 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick listed Carib News Foundation as the 
only sponsor of her travel to and participation in the 
13th Annual Caribbean Multi-National Business 
Conference in St. Maarten, N.A. (hereafter ``the trip'' or 
``conference'' \5\) in November 2008.\6\
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    \5\  The ``Member/Officer Post-Travel Disclosure Form'' asks the 
filer at question 5, ``Sponsor(s) (who paid for the trip).'' This in 
turn raises the question, is a conference a ``trip'' or is a trip 
limited to the travel expenses associated with attending the trip, 
e.g., transportation, lodging and meal expenses' The House Ethics 
manual and the relevant forms use the terms ``travel'' and ``trip'' 
interchangeably. For example, the relevant form is called a Member/
Officer Post-Travel Disclosure Form'' (emphasis added). The 
introductory paragraph on the form provides, ``[t]his form is for 
disclosing the receipt of travel expenses from a private source for 
meetings, speaking engagements, fact-finding trips or similar events in 
connection with official duties'' (emphasis added). However, question 9 
on the form asks the filer to detail, ``TRIP EXPENSES'' and uses as an 
example, ``registration fees.'' Registration fees are not ``travel'' 
expenses unless one defines travel (or a trip) to include participating 
in a conference. The Board uses the term ``trip'' to include the 
conference. The Board also notes that the Standards Committee treated 
the conference as the ``trip'' in its letter of October 21, 2008 pre-
approving Congresswoman Kilpatrick's trip.
    \6\  Member/Officer Post-Travel Disclosure Form signed by 
Representative Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (Nov. 20, 2008) (Exhibit 1 at 
09-2567 0002).

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    19. Congresswoman Kilpatrick certified that this 
information was ``true, correct and complete'' to the ``best of 
[her] knowledge.'' \7\
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    \7\ Id. at 09-2567 0003.

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    20. In an interview with the OCE, Representative Kilpatrick 
confirmed it was her signature on this document.\8\
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    \8\ Memorandum of Interview of Representative Carolyn Kilpatrick 
(May 14, 2009) (Exhibit 2 at 09-2567 0034).
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    21. Prior to the conference, Karl Rodney, the CEO of the 
Carib News Foundation, submitted a Private Sponsor Travel 
Certification Form to Congresswoman Kilpatrick, which she in 
turn submitted to the Standards Committee, which identified the 
Carib News Foundation as the sponsor of the trip.\9\
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    \9\ Private Sponsor Travel Certification Form signed by Karl Rodney 
(Oct. 3, 2008) (Exhibit 1 at 09-2567 0012).

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    22. Later, on that same form, Mr. Rodney represented that 
``the trip sponsor(s) [had] not accept from any other source 
funds earmarked directly or indirectly to finance any aspect of 
the trip.'' \10\
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    \10\  Id.

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    23. Rodney also certified that the information was ``true, 
complete, and correct.''\11\
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    \11\ Id. at 09-2567 0014.

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    24. Prior to the conference, the Standards Committee 
approved reimbursement of Congresswoman Kilpatrick's expenses 
by the Carib News Foundation.\12\
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    \12\ Letter from the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct to 
Representative Carolyn C. Kilpatrick (Oct. 21, 2008) (Exhibit 1 at 09-
2567 0007).

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    25. At the conference, several corporations, including 
Citibank, IBM, AT&T, and others, were identified as 
``sponsors.'' \13\
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    \13\ Photographs taken at the 13th Annual Caribbean Multi-National 
Business Conference (Exhibit 5 at 09-2567 0068-0077) (The Board notes 
that the source of this information may have a bias, interest, or 
motive in this matter.).
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    26. On November 7, 2008, the conference's organizer, Karl 
Rodney, began the first morning program by thanking Citigroup, 
Pfizer, Macy's, IBM, AT&T, the Verizon Foundation and American 
Airlines, as well as their executives in attendance at the 
conference by name.\14\ This morning session was recorded by an 
individual attending the conference and the recording was 
subsequently transcribed. The OCE obtained a copy of the 
transcript. Mr. Rodney described AT&T as ``support[ing] the 
Conference all 13 years'' (this was the thirteenth annual 
conference).\15\
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    \14\ Transcript of Recording of November 7, 2008 AM Session of the 
13th Annual Caribbean Multi-National Business Conference (Exhibit 3 at 
09-2567 0036-37). (The Board notes that the source of this information 
may have a bias, interest, or motive in this matter.).
    \15\ Id. at 09-2567 0036.
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    27. Michael Flanigan, an executive from Citibank, spoke 
immediately after Mr. Rodney and described Citibank as the 
``lead sponsor of the premier event.''\16\
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    \16\ Id. at 09-2567 0038.
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    28. Following Mr. Flanigan's remarks, and the remarks of 
several other speakers, Representative Kilpatrick spoke. At the 
end of her remarks she stated, ``[a]nd to the sponsors, by the 
way, all of you, we couldn't do this, be with you, help Karl if 
you weren't here with us so we say thank you very much, you are 
so important. To all of the sponsors, thank you very much.'' 
\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \17\ Id. at 09-2567 0053.
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    29. In an interview with the OCE, Representative Kilpatrick 
confirmed that she spoke at this session and thanked corporate 
entities identified at the conference as ``sponsors.'' \18\
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    \18\ Memorandum of Interview of Representative Carolyn Kilpatrick 
(May 14, 2009) (Exhibit 2 at 09-2567 0032-0033).
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    30. In addition to these comments, signs for the conference 
displayed these corporations' logos, including signs hung 
behind the speaker's podium where Representative Kilpatrick 
spoke.\19\
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    \19\ Photographs taken at the 13th Annual Caribbean Multi-National 
Business Conference (Exhibit 5 at 09-2567 0069).

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    31. After she spoke but at the same morning session, 
Representative Kilpatrick participated in a ``ribbon cutting'' 
ceremony in which she and representatives from these 
corporations and the Leader of Government of St. Maarten, 
Commissioner Sarah Wescott-Williams, stood for photographs.\20\
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    \20\ Id. at 09-2567 0070.


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    32. In an interview with the OCE, Congresswoman Kilpatrick 
stated that she relied on the entity that invited her to the 
conference, the Carib News Foundation, to identify the sponsor 
of her trip and, further, that she relied on the Standards 
Committee, who pre-approved her trip, to determine if that 
information was accurate.\21\ As a result, Congresswoman 
Kilpatrick told the OCE that the involvement of these 
corporations in the conference did not raise questions in her 
mind about whether the Carib News Foundation was the sole 
sponsor of the conference.\22\
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    \21\ Memorandum of Interview of Representative Carolyn Kilpatrick 
(May 14, 2009) (Exhibit 2 at 09-2567 0034).
    \22\ Id. at 09-2567 0033.
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    33. The Board notes that the practice of relying entirely 
on the Standards Committee to determine the sponsor of a 
Member's travel carries with it a degree of risk. Further, 
while Members are required to receive pre-approval from the 
Standards Committee before they travel, it is the Member, and 
not the Standards Committee, that is ultimately accepting the 
travel from a private sponsor. The Board reads the pre-
clearance process as a free-standing requirement the House 
adopted in 2007. There is no indication that the House intended 
it to supplant, or certainly completely supplant, Members' 
responsibility to abide by the travel rules when they accept 
privately sponsored travel. As a result, it is the Board's view 
that a reasonable reading of the travel rules places 
responsibility for identifying the sponsor with both the Member 
and the Standards Committee and not the Standards Committee 
alone. This shared responsibility also reflects the practical 
reality that, because the Member actually takes the trip, and 
the Standards Committee does not, the Member may, in certain 
circumstances, have access to information about the trip not 
available to the Standards Committee. In this instance, the 
Members had information about the sponsors of the conference 
not available to the Standards Committee, namely that numerous 
corporations were identified as sponsors of the conference at 
the conference.
    34. Further, as described below, these other entities were, 
in fact, sponsors of the conference.

     B. CARIB NEWS ALSO SPONSORED CONGRESSWOMAN KILPATRICK'S TRAVEL

    35. Karl Rodney is the publisher of the CARIB NEWS, a 
weekly newspaper published in New York. He also identified 
himself as the CEO of the Carib News Foundation on the Private 
Sponsor Travel Certification described above.\23\
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    \23\ Private Sponsor Travel Certification Form signed by Karl 
Rodney (Oct. 3, 2008) (Exhibit 1 at 09-2567 0012).
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    36. According to Mr. Rodney, ``general funds'' of CARIB 
NEWS were ``pooled'' with payments from corporate sponsors, 
made both to CARIB NEWS and the Carib News Foundation and fees 
from attendees at the conference to pay conference expenses 
including ``travel'' and ``hotel payments.'' \24\
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    \24\ Letter from Joel Cohen, Counsel for Karl Rodney (May 18, 2009) 
(Exhibit 6 at 09-2567 0080).
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    37. Therefore, CARIB NEWS was also effectively a sponsor of 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick's trip.

        C. CORPORATE DONATIONS WERE EARMARKED FOR THE CONFERENCE

    38. According to the House Ethics Manual:
        The rule and implementing regulations are concerned 
        with the organization(s) or individual(s) that actually 
        pay for travel. Thus, for example, when a nonprofit 
        organization pays for travel with donations that were 
        earmarked, either formally or informally, for the trip, 
        each such donor is deemed a--private source for the 
        trip and (1) must be publicly disclosed as a trip 
        sponsor on the applicable travel forms and (2) must 
        itself be required to satisfy the above standards on 
        proper sources of travel expenses.
    39. In the course of conducting its review, the OCE has 
learned that the Carib News Foundation solicited earmarked 
funds for the conference. For example, Carib News Foundation 
sent a solicitation letter to Citigroup, Inc.\25\
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    \25\ Letter from Carib News Foundation to Mr. Eric Eve, Citigroup, 
Inc. (Apr. 4, 2008) (Exhibit 7 at 09-2567 0084-0085) (a nearly 
identical letter was sent to IBM, AT&T, Pfizer, Verizon Foundation and 
others).

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    40. Attached to this solicitation letter was a PowerPoint 
presentation.\26\ The presentation solicits money only for the 
conference and not for any other purpose, outlining the 
benefits of each level of sponsorship--Platinum, Gold, and 
Silver, along with lesser levels of sponsorship--in terms of 
the conference.\27\ In each instance, the sponsorship covers 
travel related expenses such as gala events and meals.
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    \26\ Id. at 09-2567 0086-0101.
    \27\ Id. at 09-2567 0094-0097.

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The OCE also learned that at least four of the corporations 
identified at the conference did in fact make payments to the 
Carib News Foundation and CARIB NEWS (the newspaper) earmarked 
for the conference. The Carib News Foundation itself appears to 
be nothing more than a conduit in this case, and a partial one 
at that, for payments from corporations to support the 
conference. There is no evidence that the organization has 
filed a tax return with the IRS, under either Carib News 
Foundation or Carib News Charities, since 2005.\28\ On that 
form, the Carib News Foundation is shown as having no assets, 
no income and no expenses.\29\ Not a single witness from a 
sponsor interviewed by the OCE knew of any other work of the 
Foundation. Indeed one witness, from IBM, was not aware that 
the Foundation played a role in the conference.\30\
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    \28\  Letter from IRS to OCE (April 17, 2009) (Exhibit 8 at 09-2567 
0106-0118).
    \29\  Id. at 09-2567 0106-0108.
    \30\  Memorandum of Interview of Representative of IBM (May 8, 
2009) (Exhibit 9 at 09-2567 0122).
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    41. Citigroup. Citigroup made a $75,000 payment to the 
CARIB NEWS for the conference.\31\
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    \31\ Documents submitted to the OCE by Citigroup (Exhibit 7 at 09-
2567 0083).
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    42. Verizon Foundation. Verizon Foundation made a $35,000 
payment to the Carib News Charities \32\ or the conference.\33\
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    \32\  Mr. Rodney accepted corporate payments under the names of 
three entities: The Carib News, the Carib News Foundation, and the 
Carib News Charities. According to the Secretary of State for the State 
of New York, the organization that currently operates as the Carib News 
Foundation originally operated under the name the CaribNews Charities.
    \33\  Documents Submitted to the OCE by the Verizon Foundation 
(Exhibit 10 at 09-2567 0127).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    43. Representative 1 of the Verizon Foundation said the 
Verizon Foundation funded the Carib News Foundation for the 
first time in 2008 and that the grant was issued to provide 
funding for the 13th Annual Caribbean Multi-National 
Business Conference.\34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \34\ Memorandum of Interview of Representative 1 of Verizon 
Foundation (Mar. 23, 2009) (Exhibit 11 at 09-2567 0133).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    44. IBM. IBM made a $20,000 payment to Carib News 
Foundation for the conference as indicated on the invoice that 
CARIB NEWS, INC. (not Carib News Foundation) sent IBM.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \35\ Documents submitted by IBM to the OCE (Exhibit 13 at 09-2567 
0150).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    45. Macy's. Macy's made a $35,000 payment to CARIB NEWS for 
the conference.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \36\ Memorandum of Interview of Representative 1 from Macy's 
(Exhibit 20 at 09-2567 0217).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    46. Pfizer. Pfizer made a $25,000 payment to CARIB NEWS for 
the conference\37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \37\ Interview with Investigative Counsel on May 22, 2009. 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    47. Only American Airlines explicitly limited their 
sponsorship of the conference to individuals who were not 
elected officials, prohibiting CARIB NEWS from using any part 
of their sponsorship on Members of Congress and other 
government officials and their staff.\38\ No other sponsor with 
whom we spoke placed restrictions on how or on whom their 
contribution could be spent. The only expectation was that the 
contribution would be used for expenses associated with the 
conference.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \38\ Documents submitted by American Airlines to the OCE (Exhibit 
14 at 09-2567 0151.2) and OCE Investigative Counsel interview with 
American Airlines Representative (Mar. 5, 2009) (American Airlines 
provided an in-kind contribution in the form of ten roundtrip tickets 
to be used by Carib News in any manner they chose with the exception 
that no ticket could be used for an elected official or the official's 
staff or family. The estimated value of their contribution was between 
$6,200 and $7,500).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

   D. BECAUSE ENTITIES THAT EMPLOY OR RETAIN LOBBYISTS SPONSORED THE 
EVENT, CONGRESSWOMAN KILPATRICK'S INVOLVEMENT SHOULD HAVE BEEN LIMITED 
                               TO ONE DAY

    48. According to the House Ethics Manual: One-Day Event 
Trip. The sole exception to the general prohibition on 
accepting officially-connected travel from a private source 
that retains or employs lobbyists or agents of a foreign 
principal is for trips involving attendance at or participation 
in one-day event (exclusive of travel time and an overnight 
stay).
        Under the rule, it is permissible for a Member or staff 
        person to accept and meals related to a single night's 
        lodging and meals related to the trip, if offered by 
        the trip sponsor. Members and staff must limit their 
        involvement in connection with the event to a single 
        calendar day, exclusive of travel time and an overnight 
        stay. A Member or staff person may therefore attend 
        only a single day of a multiple-day conference, forum, 
        or other event that is being hosted primarily for 
        individuals other than congressional invitees.
        Under the Committee's travel regulations and guidelines 
        implementing the travel provisions of the gift rule, 
        the Committee may permit a second night's stay when 
        determined--on a case-by-case basis to be practically 
        required to participate in the one-day event (House 
        Rule 25, clause 5(b)(1)(C)). Some circumstances in 
        which the Committee may permit a second night's stay 
        are for certain long-distance trips, when a Member or 
        staff person is participating in a full day's worth of 
        officially-connected activities such that a second 
        night's stay is necessary to accomplish the purpose of 
        the trip, or other exceptional circumstances that are 
        described in detail by the traveler. The traveler will 
        be personally responsible for any expenses incurred 
        beyond those allowed by the Committee in connection 
        with the second night's stay.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \39\ House Ethics Manual (2008) at 92-93 (citing House Rule 25, 
clause 5(b)(1)(C) (emphasis in original)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    49. Citigroup, IBM and Verizon employ or retain 
lobbyists.\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \40\ Clerk of the House of Representatives Lobbying Disclosure 
Report 2008 (Exhibit 15 at 09-2567 0151.8).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    50. Congresswoman Kilpatrick spent four days at the 
conference.\41\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \41\ Member/Officer Post-Travel Disclosure Form signed by 
Representative Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (Nov. 20, 2008) (Exhibit 1 at 
09-2567 0002).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    51. There is substantial reason to believe that 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick violated House Rule 25, clause 
5(b)(1)(C) by accepting trip-related reimbursements from 
entities that employ or retain lobbyists for participating in 
an event for more than one day.

  E. THE GOVERNMENT OF ST. MAARTEN MADE IN-KIND DONATIONS TO THE 2008 
 CONFERENCE AND PLAYED A SIGNIFICANT ROLE IN PLANNING, ORGANIZING AND 
                     CONDUCTING THE 2008 CONFERENCE

    52. The Government of St. Maarten was the host of the 2008 
conference and the Leader of Government of St. Maarten 
personally invited Representative Kilpatrick to attend.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \42\ Letter from Leader of Government of St. Maarten, Commissioner 
Sarah Wescot-Williams, to Representative Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick 
(Aug. 28, 2008) (Exhibit 1 at 09-2567 0009). 

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    53. In that capacity, the Government of St. Maarten 
provided in-kind donations to support the conference and also 
had a substantial role in planning the conference. As a result, 
it was effectively a sponsor of the 2008 conference.\43\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \43\ In 2007, the 'host' of the conference was the Government of 
Antigua and Barbuda. In the event that the Government of Antigua and 
Barbuda provided the same support as St. Maarten did in 2008, then the 
members may have accepted gifts from a foreign government which would 
have been reportable under the Foreign Gift and Decorations Act. In 
addition, if the Government of Antigua provided these gifts to the 
Members, and if they were more than $335 in value, then the Members 
should have disclosed them on their financial disclosure form for 2007, 
which was filed in May 2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    54. Rodney provided the Leader of Government of St. 
Maarten, Commissioner Sarah Wescott-Williams, with a list of 
``Basic Requirements to Host Caribbean Multi-National Business 
Conference.'' \44\ These included:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \44\ Letter from Karl Rodney to Commissioner Sarah Wescott-Williams 
(Aug. 13, 2008) (Exhibit 16 at 09-2567 0151.15). 

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    55. According to a statement from Mr. Rodney submitted to 
the OCE, the Government of St. Maarten, (1) developed local 
Host Committees to facilitate local planning; (2) helped 
negotiate the rate with the hotel, (3) assisted in developing 
the theme of the Conference, (4) assisted in identifying local 
speakers, including the Leader of Government, (5) assisted in 
local publicity, (6) provided local entertainment, including a 
school choir and cultural items, (7) arranged Host Country 
Evening on Friday, November 8 (the whole group was transported 
to another property for refreshments and entertainment), (8) 
helped with local transportation for some CARIB NEWS employees 
and helped arrange accommodations for some guests (not paying 
for such accommodations), (9) participated as event speakers, 
and (10) issued invitations to attend to specially invited 
guests.\45\ These contributions to the conference were all in-
kind, according to Mr. Rodney, and he did not provide an 
estimated value for them.\46\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \45\ Letter from Joel Cohen, Counsel for Karl Rodney (May 18, 2009) 
(Exhibit 6 at 09-2567 0079-0080).
    \46\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    56. In addition, because these donations to the conference 
are from a foreign government, Members are required to take 
certain actions under the Foreign Gifts and Decorations 
Act.\47\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \47\ 5 U.S.C. ' 7342.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    57. Representative Kilpatrick told the OCE that she was 
unaware of what role the Government of St. Maarten played in 
the conference.\48\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \48\ Memorandum of Interview of Representative Carolyn Kilpatrick 
(May 14, 2009) (Exhibit 2 at 09-2567 0033).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

III. Role of the Chair's Counsel in the Approval of the 12th 
      Annual Caribbean Multi-National Business Conference in 2007

    58. As previously stated, Congresswoman Kilpatrick told the 
OCE that she relied on the Standards Committee to determine who 
the true sponsor of the conference was based on information the 
Standards Committee received from the organization that invited 
her to the conference--the Carib News Foundation.\49\ In the 
course of the Board's review, the OCE requested documents from 
Mr. Karl Rodney, the CEO of the Carib News Foundation. Mr 
Rodney voluntarily submitted documents to the OCE that 
included, among other things, communication with certain 
members of the staff of the Committee on Standards of Official 
Conduct in 2007. The contents of these documents from 2007 are 
relevant because they indicate the role of the corporations was 
concealed from the Committee in 2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \49\ Id. at 09-2567 0034.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    59. The Board requested that the Committee provide the 
information submitted to it for 2008 and the Committee declined 
to do so.
    60. The documents submitted by Mr. Rodney show that in 2007 
the CARIB NEWS initially identified, on several occasions, 
other corporations as sponsors of the Conference. The 
designation of these corporate entities as sponsors presented a 
problem for CARIB NEWS and the Members who wished to attend the 
conference insofar as their attendance would be limited to one 
day. In 2007, as a result of changes in the travel rules, a 
Member could not, in most instances, participate in an event 
(such as a conference) for more than one day if their travel to 
and participation in the event was paid for by an entity that 
employed or retained a lobbyist.\50\ Many of the corporate 
entities who sponsored the 2007, as well as the 2008 
conference, employed or retained lobbyists. Although CARIB NEWS 
initially identified these entities as sponsors, following 
interactions with the counsel to the then-chair of the 
Committee, apparently without the knowledge of the Standards 
Committee staff attorney assigned to review the trip, the 
documents identifying these organizations as sponsors were 
changed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \50\ House Ethics Manual (2008) at 92-93 (citing House Rule 25, 
clause 5(b)(1)(C)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    61. Subsequently, in 2008, the Carib News Foundation 
submitted documents that omitted the role of these other 
corporations as sponsors of the conference. Further, the staff 
attorney assigned to review the trip in 2008 was not the same 
staff attorney that reviewed the trip in 2007.
    62. The earliest communication between CARIB NEWS or the 
Carib News Foundation and anyone associated with the Ethics 
Committee in the documents submitted to the OCE from Mr. Rodney 
is an e-mail dated September 17, 2007 from Patricia Louis, an 
Executive Assistant at CARIB NEWS, to Dawn Kelly Mobley, 
Counsel to the then-Chair of the Ethics Committee.\51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \51\ E-mail from Patricia Louis to Dawn Kelly Mobley (Sept. 17, 
2007, 3:47 PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0174) (The Board elected not 
the interview Ms. Mobley and Ms. Olson because the Standards Committee 
voted against disclosing information to the OCE. The Board determined 
that it would have been an act of bad faith on the part of the OCE to 
attempt to interview staff and former staff of the Standards Committee 
in light of the Committee's refusal to grant OCE access to their 
records.).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    63. The next day, on September 18, 2007, Ms. Mobley 
responded and asked for ``any information on your sponsor's 
status.'' \52\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \52\ E-mail from Dawn Kelly Mobley to Patricia Louis (Sept. 18, 
2007, 12:57 PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0174).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    64. That same day Ms. Louis responded, indentifying 
multiple corporations as 'sponsors' of the trip.\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \53\ E-mail from Patricia Louis to Dawn Kelly Mobley (Sept. 18, 
2007) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0190) (The Board notes that while the 
document that contains the e-mail does not have a header which 
indicates a date and time, both the e-mail before it and responding to 
it are dated September 18, 2007).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    65. In response that same day, Ms. Mobley asked, ``[d]o any 
of these organizations have or retain a lobbyist' '' \54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \54\ E-mail from Dawn Kelly Mobley to Patricia Louis (Sept. 18, 
2007, 7:03 PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0189).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    66. The next day, Ms. Mobley further responded asking Ms. 
Louis whether she, Ms. Mobley, should ``assume'' the sponsor 
was CARIB NEWS, despite the fact that Ms. Louis had not 
identified CARIB NEWS as a sponsor.\55\ The Board notes that in 
her e-mail, Ms. Louis did not identify CARIB NEWS as a sponsor. 
Further, Ms. Mobley acknowledged that she had been told 
corporations identified by Ms. Louis were ``sponsoring food and 
other parts of the Antigua travel.'' Under House rules in place 
at the time, and under current rules, sponsoring a meal makes 
these corporations sponsors of a Member's travel.\56\ The Board 
also notes Ms. Mobley's use of the phrase ``safe review,'' 
which the Board takes to mean a review which results in 
approval of the trip.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \55\  E-mail from Dawn Kelly Mobley to Patricia Louis (Sept. 19, 
2007, 2:16 PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0189).
    \56\  House Ethics Manual (2008) at 97-98. 

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]

    
    67. Later in the afternoon on September 19, 2007, Ms. 
Mobley sent Ms. Louis another e-mail where she discussed the 
limitations posed by the new travel rules the House had adopted 
in 2007. Ms. Mobley told Ms. Louis, ``the new rules might 
prohibit some things you were able to do with so many different 
sponsors in the past.'' Thus, Ms. Mobley again acknowledged 
that these corporations were sponsors and that the new travel 
rules affected the nature of their participation in the 
trip.\57\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \57\ E-mail from Dawn Kelly Mobley to Patricia Louis (Sept. 19, 
2007, 3:23 PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0189).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    68. On September 21, 2007, Ms. Louis responded.\58\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \58\ E-mail from Patricia Louis to Dawn Kelly Mobley (Sept. 21, 
2007, 1:56 PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0187).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    69. That same day, on September 21, 2007, Ms. Louis faxed 
Ms. Mobley a Private Sponsor Travel Certification Form. On the 
form Carib News Foundation is listed as the sponsor of the trip 
in question 1.\59\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \59\ Private Sponsor Travel Certification Form (Sept. 21, 2007) 
(Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0177).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    70. However, the Carib News Foundation listed a number of 
corporations as private sponsors, each with responsibility for 
planning and conducting the trip, in question 12.\60\ This is 
at least the second instance where the Carib News Foundation 
identified these corporations as the trip's sponsors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \60\ Id. at 09-2567 0178.

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]

    
    71. This prompted the following e-mail from Ms. Mobley to 
Ms. Louis.\61\ The Board notes that Ms. Mobley stated she was 
``working through'' the Carib News Foundation's forms ``before 
leaving them with our staff attorney.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \61\ E-mail from Dawn Kelly Mobley to Patricia Louis (Sept. 25, 
2007, 12:42 PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0174).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    72. Later that same day, Ms. Mobley queried further.\62\ At 
least as of this date, following at least two instances where 
Ms. Louis identified these corporations as sponsors, Ms. Mobley 
appeared to treat these entities as ``co-sponsors.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \62\ E-mail from Dawn Kelly Mobley to Patricia Louis (Sept. 25, 
2007, 5:08 PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0174).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    73. On October 3, 2007, Ms. Mobley informed Ms. Louis that 
Susan Olson was the staff attorney assigned to review the 
trip.\63\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \63\ E-mail from Dawn Kelly Mobley to Patricia Louis (Oct. 3, 2007, 
12:39 PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0171).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    74. A copy of the Private Sponsor Travel Certification Form 
provided to a Member's office on October 5, 2007, shows that by 
October 5, 2007, following its interaction with Ms. Mobley, 
Carib News Foundation changed its answer to question 12 
regarding other private sponsors. As previously highlighted, as 
of September 21, 2007, Carib News Foundation provided the 
following answer to question 12.\64\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \64\ Private Sponsor Travel Certification Form (Sept. 21, 2007) 
(Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0177).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    75. However, as of October 5, 2007, it provided a different 
answer to question 12.\65\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \65\ Private Sponsor Travel Certification Form (Oct. 5, 2007) 
(Exhibit 18 at 09-2567 0192).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    And the attached sheet provided the following 
information.\66\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \66\ Id. at 09-2567 0197.

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]

    
On October 10, 2007, Susan Olson, the staff attorney on the 
Standards Committee assigned to review the trip e-mailed Ms. 
Louis the following questions \67\ (and copied Ms. Mobley and 
the Chief Counsel of the Standards Committee at that time, Bill 
O'Reilly). While the Private Sponsor Travel Certification Form 
for the trip had been changed by this date, the draft agenda 
for the conference apparently had not and still showed 
corporate sponsors for various events. What Ms. Olson does not 
appear to be aware of is the fact that Carib News Foundation 
had previously identified the same corporations she is raising 
questions about as private sponsors on its original Private 
Sponsor Travel Certification form.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \67\ E-mail from Susan Olson to Patricia Louis (Oct. 10, 2007, 4:01 
PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0159-0160).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    76. The Committee's Advisory Opinion dated October 27, 2006 
indicates, as Ms. Olson wrote, that Carib News Foundation told 
the Standards Committee in 2006 that there were several 
corporate entities that sponsored the conference.\68\ The 
``Advisory Opinion'' did not conclude that these entities were, 
in fact, the trip's sponsors, as the e-mail seems to indicate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \68\ Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, Advisory Opinion 
(Oct. 27, 2006) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0183-0185).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    77. A draft agenda for the conference dated October 3, 
2007, identified a ``sponsor'' for each event listed.\69\ This 
appears to be the version of the agenda that Olson is referring 
to in her e-mail. For example, ``Preferred Health Partners'' is 
identified as the sponsor of this event on ``Port & Airport 
Security--The Mandates.'' \70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \69\  Working Draft of the 13th Annual Caribbean Multi-National 
Business Conference Program (Oct. 3, 2007) (Exhibit 19 at 09-2567 0198-
0215).
    \70\  Id. at 09-2567 0204-0205. 

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]

    
And Citi is identified as the sponsor of this event on 
``Community Outreach--Education--Access and Collaboration.\71\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \71\  Id. at 09-2567 0211.

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]

    
78. Ms. Louis forwarded Ms. Olson's e-mail to Ms. Mobley, 
Congressman Charles Rangel's Chief of Staff George Dalley and 
Delegate Donna Christensen's scheduler Shelley Thomas, and 
asked them to advise her on a response.\72\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \72\ E-mail from Patricia Louis to Dawn Kelly Mobley, George 
Dalley, and Shelley Thomas (Oct. 10, 2007, 5:56 PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 
09-2567 0163).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


Ms. Louis appears to be pre-clearing her response to questions 
posed by the Standards Committee staff attorney. There is no 
indication that the staff attorney knew that the answer to her 
question had already been discussed with the counsel to the 
then-chair of the Standards Committee. Substantively, based on 
documents obtained by the OCE and interviews with sponsors, the 
statement ``the sponsors contribute to the overall expense of 
the trip'' appears to be true. However, the statement ``and the 
general work of the Foundation,'' does not appear to be true. 
All of the sponsors OCE interviewed stated unequivocally that 
the contribution was intended for the conference.\73\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \73\ Memorandum of Interview of Representative of IBM (May 8, 2009) 
(Exhibit 9); Memorandum of Interview of Representative 1 of the Verizon 
Foundation (Mar. 23, 2009) (Exhibit 11); Memorandum of Interview of 
Representative of Citi (Mar. 17, 2009) (Exhibit 4); Memorandum of 
Interview of Representative 1 from Macy's (Exhibit 20).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    79. Less than an hour later Ms. Mobley responded.\74\ The 
Board notes Ms. Mobley's concern with whether any of the 
corporate sponsors paid for an event and also retained a 
lobbyist'' and her conclusion that if they did, Members of 
Congress could only attend for one day.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \74\ E-mail from Dawn Kelly Mobley to Patricia Louis (Oct. 10, 
2007, 6:49 PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0165).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    80. Ms. Louis then faxed Ms. Mobley.\75\ The Board notes 
that Ms. Louis again appears to be pre-clearing her responses 
to the staff attorney, Ms. Olson, with Ms. Mobley (``Kindly 
review and advise before I send to Ms. Olson.'' ).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \75\ Fax from Patricia Louis to Dawn Kelly Mobley (Oct. 11, 2007) 
(Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0162).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    81. The Board further notes that Ms. Louis represented 
that, ``the program has been amended to reflect the companies 
as Participants,'' an action taken following Ms. Louis' 
interactions with Ms. Mobley. A copy of the revised agenda was 
submitted by another Member of Congress who attended the 
conference.\76\ The Board notes that this ``updated'' schedule 
changed the label applied to ``sponsors'' to ``participants'' 
and in some cases deleted any mention of the corporate entity 
that had previously been identified as a ``sponsor.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \76\ Working Draft of the 13th Annual Caribbean Multi-National 
Business Conference Program (Oct. 22, 2007) (Exhibit 21 at 09-2567 
0221-0232).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    82. This event was previously identified in the earlier 
draft as being ``sponsored'' by Preferred Health Partners.\77\ 
Now it identifies them as merely a ``participant.'' \78\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \77\  Working Draft of the 13th Annual Caribbean Multi-National 
Business Conference Program (Oct. 3, 2007) (Exhibit 19 at 09-2567 0204-
0205).
    \78\  Working Draft of the 13th Annual Caribbean Multi-National 
Business Conference Program (Oct. 22, 2007) (Exhibit 20 at 09-2567 
0225).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    83. In another example, the Board notes that the following 
event was previously identified as being sponsored by CITI.\79\ 
Now CITI is not even mentioned.\80\ Michael Flanigan, the 
moderator, was an executive at CITI at the time and represented 
the company at the conference.\81\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \79\  Working Draft of the 13th Annual Caribbean Multi-National 
Business Conference Program (Oct. 3, 2007) (Exhibit 19 at 09-2567 
0211).
    \80\  Working Draft of the 13th Annual Caribbean Multi-National 
Business Conference Program (Oct. 22, 2007) (Exhibit 21 at 09-2567 
0231).
    \81\  Memorandum of Interview of Representative of Citi (Mar. 17, 
2009) (Exhibit 4). 

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    84. These changes were entirely cosmetic. There is no 
indication that the corporations' substantive role in the 
conference changed in any way.
    85. That same day, October 11, 2007, Ms. Louis responded to 
Ms. Olson, stating that ``[t]he sponsors contribute to the 
overall expense of the trip.'' \82\ The Board notes that this 
is precisely the answer she had pre-cleared with Mobley.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \82\  E-mail from Patricia Louis to Susan Olson (Oct. 10, 2007, 
10:33 AM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0159). 

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    86. Ms. Olson then forwarded her exchange with Ms. Louis to 
Bill O'Reilly, the Staff Director and Chief Counsel of the 
Ethics Committee at that time, and to Dawn Mobley.\83\ Based on 
this e-mail, it appears that Ms. Olson was unaware that Mobley 
had been communicating directly with the Carib News Foundation. 
There is also no evidence that Ms. Mobley told her she had been 
involved in this manner. Witnesses for the various sponsors 
told the OCE that they did contribute funding directly to the 
trip (the conference) and in no case did they simply make 
donations to the ``general funds'' of the CARIB NEWS or the 
Carib News Foundation.\84\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \83\  E-mail from Susan Olson to Bill O'Reilly and Dawn Kelly 
Mobley (Oct. 12, 2007 9:29 AM) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0158-0159).
    \84\  Memorandum of Interview of Representative of IBM (May 8, 
2009) (Exhibit 9); Memorandum of Interview of Representative 1 of the 
Verizon Foundation (Mar. 23, 2009) (Exhibit 11); Memorandum of 
Interview of Representative of Citi (Mar. 17, 2009) (Exhibit 4); 
Memorandum of Interview of Representative 1 from Macy's (Exhibit 20).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    87. Ms. Mobley then forwarded Ms. Olson's internal e-mail 
to Ms. Louis.\85\ The Board notes that Ms. Mobley counseled 
that these ``other organizations'' can ``participate'' in the 
program but ``should not help pay for the trip.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \85\ E-mail from Dawn Kelly Mobley to Patricia Louis (Oct. 12, 2007 
9:59 AM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0158).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    88. Later that day, Ms. Mobley sent Ms. Louis an additional 
e-mail.\86\ As previously stated, the sponsors whom the OCE 
interviewed all stated that they did not ``support [the] 
foundation annually'' and did specifically designate their 
donations for the 2007 conference. Either Ms. Mobley was 
repeating inaccurate information Ms. Louis had given her, or 
she was giving inaccurate information to Ms. Olson without 
prompting.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \86\ E-mail from Dawn Kelly Mobley to Patricia Louis (Oct. 12, 2007 
1:55 PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0158).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    89. Ms. Olson then sent Ms. Louis additional questions 
about the corporate entities previously identified as 
``sponsors.\87\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \87\ E-mail from Susan Olson to Patricia Louis (Oct. 12, 2007 2:41 
PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0155).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    90. Three days later, Ms. Louis sent an e-mail to Ms. 
Mobley, but addressed to Ms. Olson.\88\ This may have been 
inadvertent or, based on their previous practice, Ms. Louis may 
have done this before she then sent it to Ms. Olson. This is 
the final communication regarding the 2007 conference provided 
to the OCE.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \88\ E-mail from Patricia Louis to Dawn Kelly Mobley (Oct. 18, 2007 
11:00 AM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0153).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]


    91. In an interview with the OCE, a staff member of 
Representative Rangel's office, Staff Member 1 of Congressman 
Rangel's Office, described discussions with Ms. Louis and Ms. 
Mobley in 2007 on the topic of how the new travel rules would 
affect the Members' participation in the 2007 conference.\89\ 
The staff member said that Ms. Louis, and Mr. and Mrs. Rodney 
told him that the then Chair of the Standards Committee had 
assigned her counsel on the Committee, Ms. Mobley, to ``find a 
way'' to allow Members of Congress to participate in the 
conference under the new travel rules passed by the House in 
2007.\90\ The staff member told the OCE that Congressman Rangel 
told him that the then-Chair had made similar statements to 
him.
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    \89\  Memorandum of Interview of Staff Member 1 of Congressman 
Rangel's Office (May 27-28, 2009) (Exhibit 22).
    \90\  Id. at 09-2657 0235.
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    92. Staff Member 1 of Congressman Rangel's Office said the 
``framework'' that was decided upon was that the Carib News 
Foundation would raise money from corporate donors who had 
previously sponsored the conference and that this money in turn 
would be deposited in a ``common fund'' that would then be used 
to pay for the conference. It was Staff Member 1 of Congressman 
Rangel's Office's understanding that if this was done, then 
Members of Congress could participate in the conference without 
any restrictions imposed by the new rules. Staff Member 1 of 
Congressman Rangel's Office said that it was important to break 
the link between the corporations and the conference under the 
new rules and that using the Foundation in this way would 
enable that to happen. Staff Member 1 of Congressman Rangel's 
Office said he learned of this new framework for the conference 
from Mr. and Mrs. Rodney and that they represented this 
approach had come from Ms. Mobley on the Standards Committee.
    93. This conduct in 2007 is relevant to the present review 
for a number of reasons. First, in and of itself, the 
intervention of the Chair's counsel in this matter is troubling 
and more likely constituted an improper manipulation of the 
clearance process. Following Ms. Mobley's intervention, Carib 
News Foundation changed the Private Sponsor Travel 
Certification Form to delete any mention of private sponsors 
before it was sent to the Standards Committee's staff attorney 
assigned to review the matter. This occurred after Carib News 
Foundation had told Ms. Mobley that these corporations were 
sponsors of the conference on several occasions. Ms. Louis's 
initial, and presumably truthful, submissions regarding the 
conference described the corporate entities as sponsors. 
However, if the corporations were sponsors of the conference, 
as opposed to Carib News Foundation, then the Members of 
Congress ability to attend would have been limited because, the 
corporations, unlike the Carib News Foundation, employed or 
retained lobbyists. It appears from the correspondence between 
Ms. Mobley and Ms. Louis, and Ms. Olson's apparent ignorance of 
the correspondence, that Ms. Mobley assisted Ms. Louis in 
preparing inaccurate answers for Ms. Olson in order to ensure 
that Ms. Olson would approve the trip in a manner that would 
not limit the attendance of the Members of Congress. Ms. 
Mobley's involvement in the process seems to have prevented the 
Standards Committee and its staff from correctly performing its 
responsibilities. Ms. Olson's approval of the trip was 
predicated on an incomplete or inaccurate factual record, in 
which Ms. Mobley apparently was complicit, putting at risk 
those Members of Congress who relied on that approval.
    94. The 2007 conduct and attendant misrepresentations 
appear to have directly influenced what occurred in 2008. When 
the Carib News Foundation submitted materials to the Standards 
Committee for their approval of the 2008 conference, the Carib 
News Foundation took the same approach that they had been 
counseled to take in 2007 and did not disclose the role of the 
corporate sponsors on the Private Sponsor Travel Certification 
Form or the conference agenda.
    95. In fact, in 2008, Carib News Foundation again first 
submitted its document to Ms. Mobley.\91\ The Board notes that 
while Ms. Mobley remains an employee of the U.S. House of 
Representatives as of the date of this report, the above 
described conduct did not occur after the day the House passed 
the resolution creating the OCE, and therefore, under the terms 
of the that resolution, the OCE does not have jurisdiction to 
open a preliminary review into Ms. Mobley's conduct.
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    \91\ Fax from Patricia Louis to Dawn Kelly Mobley (Aug. 20, 2008) 
(Exhibit 23 at 09-2567 0247-0269).

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    IV. The Value of the Trip Reported on the Member's Post-Travel 
                            Disclosure Form

    96. Under House Rule 25 clause 5(d), Members are required 
to obtain prior approval of the Standards Committee for trips 
where the Member's travel expenses will be reimbursed by a 
private source. The Standards Committee has adopted 
regulations, including a pre- and post-travel form Members must 
complete, pursuant to House Rule 25 clause 5(h)(i)(1)(B) \92\ 
that requires Members to publicly disclose ``trip expenses.''
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    \92\ House Rule 25(5)(h)(i)(1)(B) directs the Standards Committee 
to establish, ``regulations describing the information it will require 
individuals subject to this clause to submit to the committee in order 
to obtain the prior approval of the committee for any travel covered by 
this clause . . .'' On February 20, 2007, the Committee issued 
guidelines and regulations concerning the travel restrictions and 
requirements.
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    97. According to the House Ethics Manual, ``[t]he rule and 
implementing regulations are concerned with the organization(s) 
or individual(s) that actually pay for travel.'' House Ethics 
Manual (2008) at 97.
    98. There is substantial reason to believe that 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick violated House Rule 25 clause 
5(h)(i)(1)(B) by underreporting the value of the travel 
reimbursements she received to attend the 13th 
Annual Caribbean Multi-National Business Conference.

             A. REPRESENTATIONS FROM CARIB NEWS FOUNDATION

    99. Carib News Foundation submitted a Private Sponsor 
Travel Certification Form to each Member it sponsored for the 
2008 trip--Representatives Christensen, Kilpatrick, Payne, 
Rangel and Thompson.\93\ This form was provided to each Member 
Office and then submitted by the Member Office to the Standards 
Committee as part of the pre-travel approval process.
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    \93\ Private Sponsor Travel Certification Form signed by Karl 
Rodney (Oct. 3, 2008) (Exhibit 1 at 09-2567 0012).

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    100. The Board notes that the Carib News Foundation 
provided the same exact dollar figure for each Member of 
Congress that attended the conference despite the fact that 
Carib News Foundation recognized on the same form that the 
Congressional travelers were travelling to and from different 
cities. In fact, the Congressional travelers came from St. 
Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands; Detroit, Michigan; Newark, New 
Jersey; New York, New York; and Jackson, Mississippi.
    101. After the conference, the Carib News Foundation 
provided a memorandum to Representatives Rangel, Thompson, 
Payne and Kilpatrick and Delegate Christensen that represented 
to contain the value of the trip-related reimbursements.\94\
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    \94\ Memorandum from Carib News Foundation to Representatives 
Rangel, Thompson, Payne and Kilpatrick and Delegate Christensen (Nov. 
18, 2008) (Exhibit 1 at 09-2567 0004-0005). 

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    102. The Board notes that the Carib News Foundation 
provided the same ``total transportation'' figure to the 
Congressional travelers despite the fact that Carib News 
Foundation had, in its own files, airline tickets and receipts 
for each Congressional traveler that showed, with the exception 
of Congressman Payne, that the actual cost of the ticket was 
significantly higher.
    103. In addition, according to Mr. Rodney, the cost charged 
to individuals to attend the conference for four days and three 
nights was $840 for double occupancy or $1085 for single 
occupancy. The cost of attendance included ``room 
accommodations, meals, and admission to the Conference.'' 
However, these figures were not disclosed pre-travel to the 
Members or the Standards Committee, nor were these figures 
disclosed to the Members after the conference.

        B. INFORMATION REQUIRED FROM THE CONGRESSIONAL TRAVELER

    104. On her Member/Officer Post-Travel Disclosure Form,\95\ 
Representative Kilpatrick certified her travel cost as the 
following:
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    \95\ Member/Officer Post-Travel Disclosure Form signed by 
Representative Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (Nov. 20, 2008) (Exhibit 1 at 
09-2567 0002).

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    105. These figures are identical to the ones provided to 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick from Mr. Rodney on November 18, 
2008.\96\
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    \96\ Memorandum from Carib News Foundation to Representatives 
Rangel, Thompson, Payne and Kilpatrick and Delegate Christensen (Nov. 
18, 2008) (Exhibit 1 at 09-2567 0004-0005).
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    106. However, documents from Congresswoman Kilpatrick's 
office show her airline ticket cost $626.15, not $410.\97\ 
Representative Kilpatrick had copies of her flight itinerary 
showing this cost and the receipt for the tickets themselves in 
her files.
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    \97\ Flight Reservation for Representative Carolyn Cheeks 
Kilpatrick (Nov. 5, 2008) (Exhibit 24 at 09-2567 0273).

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    107. Also in her files is a fax cover sheet that indicates 
she was sent the itinerary that showed the cost.\98\
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    \98\  Id. at 09-2567 0271.

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    108. Representative Kilpatrick told the OCE that, as a 
matter of practice, staff gave her copies of her itinerary 
before any flight.\99\
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    \99\ Memorandum of Interview of Representative Carolyn Kilpatrick 
(May 14, 2009) (Exhibit 2 at 09-2567 0032).
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    109. According to the registration document in 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick's office files, her lodging, a 
``Conference Package Suite'' cost $1198, not $580 (which 
includes housing and registration) as reported.\100\
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    \100\ 13th Annual Caribbean Multi-National Business Conference 
Registration Form of Representative Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (Exhibit 
22 at 09-2567 0275). 

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    110. Representative Kilpatrick told the OCE that she gave 
her scheduler instructions as to what type of room she 
wanted.\101\ Representative Kilpatrick also confirmed that she 
stayed in a suite at the conference.\102\
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    \101\  Memorandum of Interview of Representative Carolyn Kilpatrick 
(May 14, 2009) (Exhibit 2 at 09-2567 0032).
    \102\  Id. at 09-2567 0031.
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V. More Than One Family Member Accompanied Congresswoman Kilpatrick on 
                                the Trip

    111. Pursuant to the House Ethics Manual:
        It is permissible for a Member, officer, or employee 
        participating in officially connected travel paid for 
        by a private source to be accompanied by a relative on 
        the trip (House Rule 25, clause 5(b)(4)(D)) . . . 
        Further, this provision allows the acceptance of 
        expenses for only one relative. For example, a Member, 
        officer, or employee, if offered by the sponsor, may 
        accept expenses for a spouse or one child only, not a 
        spouse and  a child. The travel expenses paid for a 
        relative must be specified by the private source and 
        traveler on the pre-travel forms and reported on travel 
        disclosure forms in the same manner as those paid for 
        the Member, officer, or employee.\103\
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    \103\ House Ethics Manual (2008) at 101.
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    112. Documents obtained from Mr. Rodney indicate that 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick brought her daughter and infant 
granddaughter with her as ``accompanying relatives.'' \104\
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    \104\ E-mail from Andrea Bragg to Patricia Louis (Oct. 31, 2008 
12:14 PM EST) (Exhibit 17 at 09-2567 0277.1).

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    113. This fact was not disclosed on her pre- or post-travel 
disclosure forms. On these forms Congresswoman Kilpatrick 
listed her sister as her accompanying relative.\105\
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    \105\ Member/Officer Post-Travel Disclosure Form signed by 
Representative Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (Nov. 20, 2008) (Exhibit 1 at 
09-2567 0002).
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    114. Congresswoman Kilpatrick confirmed in an interview 
with the OCE that in fact she brought her daughter and 
granddaughter.\106\
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    \106\ Memorandum of Interview of Representative Carolyn Kilpatrick 
(May 14, 2009) (Exhibit 2 at 09-2567 0031).
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    115. By bringing her daughter and granddaughter to the 
conference, there is substantial reason to believe that 
Congresswoman Kilpatrick violated the limitation that a Member 
may only bring one family member with them on privately 
sponsored travel.\107\
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    \107\ House Ethics Manual (2008) at 101.
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VI. Carib News Foundation, as a Private Foundation, Was Prohibited From 
              Paying for Congresswoman Kilpatrick's Travel

    116. The Carib News Foundation is identified as the 
``sponsor'' of this conference on at least three forms filed 
with the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct: (1) the 
``Private Sponsor Travel Certification Form,''; (2) the 
``Privately Sponsored Travel: Travel Form,'' and; (3) the 
``Member/Officer Post-Travel Disclosure Form.'' \108\
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    \108\ Member/Officer Post-Travel Disclosure Form signed by 
Representative Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (Nov. 20, 2008) (Exhibit 1 at 
09-2567 0002).
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    117. According to a query of the New York State's Office of 
the Secretary of State, Mr. Rodney appears to operate two 
organizations--the ``Carib News, Inc'' which operates a 
newspaper and the ``Carib News Charities, Inc'' which also may 
operate under the name ``Carib News Foundation.'' The OCE has 
not been able to identify any additional activity, other than 
the annual Caribbean Multi-National Business Conference, in 
which the latter organization is involved. Furthermore, while 
``Carib News Charities, Inc'' / ``Carib News Foundation'' is 
listed with New York's Office of the Secretary of State as a 
domestic not-for-profit corporation, it is not listed, as 
required by law, with the New York State Charities Bureau. In 
addition, there is no evidence that the organization has filed 
a tax return with the IRS, under either name, since 2005.\109\ 
According to Publication 78 of the IRS, a list of all charities 
claiming 501(c) status, Carib Charities, Inc is a private 
foundation.\110\
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    \109\  Letter from IRS to OCE (Apr. 17, 2009) (Exhibit 8 at 09-2567 
0106-0118.2).
    \110\  Online Version of Publication 78 (Accessed online on June 5, 
2009 at http://www.irs.gov/app/pub-78/) (Exhibit 8 at 09-2567 0118.1-
0118.2).
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    118. Every organization that qualifies for tax exemption 
described in section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code is 
defined as a private foundation unless the organization falls 
into one of the categories specifically excluded from the 
definition under section 509(a).\111\ In effect, the definition 
divides 501(c)(3) organizations into two classes: private 
foundations and public charities. Private foundations are 
generally funded through a single donor, family or corporation 
and operate through investment income; whereas, public 
charities are typically funded and operated through diversified 
support from governmental sources and the general public.
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    \111\ 26 U.S.C. Sec. Sec.  501 and 509.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    119. There are several restrictions that are placed on 
private foundations. At issue here is the restriction on 
``self-dealing'' between a disqualified person (the definition 
of which includes Members of Congress) and a private 
foundation.\112\ The Code defines the act of ``self-dealing'' 
to include any direct or indirect agreement to make any payment 
of money (including reimbursement of expenses) or other 
property by a private foundation to a government official.\113\ 
Although framed as a tax provision, the statute essentially 
bars certain federal employees and federally elected officials 
from receiving compensation, including reimbursements for 
international travel, from a private foundation. \114\
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    \112\  26 U.S.C. Sec. Sec.  4941 and 4946.
    \113\  26 U.S.C. Sec.  4941(d)(1)(F). The Code imposes a tax 
(currently 10 percent of the amount involved) on the illegal payments, 
with later penalties (up to $20,000 per act of self-dealing) for 
failure to pay back the foundation. The tax is imposed on the 
disqualified person, including a government official if the official 
participates in the act of self-dealing knowingly.
    \114\  The payment or reimbursement of travel expenses for travel 
solely from one point in the United States to another point in the 
United States is excepted from the definition of self-dealing provided 
that the payment or reimbursement does not exceed the actual cost of 
the transportation involved and provided the amount for all other 
traveling expenses does not exceed 125 percent of the maximum amount 
payable under section 5702 of title 5, United States Code, for like 
travel by employees of the United States. 26 U.S.C. Sec.  
4941(d)(2)(G)(vii).
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    120. As such, it appears that the Carib News Foundation's 
payment of travel expenses for Representative Kilpatrick and 
her acceptance of payment potentially violated the Internal 
Revenue Code.
    121. The Board infers from the fact that the Standards 
Committee approved the reimbursement that the Standards 
Committee is unaware of this restriction. The Board notes, 
however, that its own research revealed that numerous other 
ethics-related entities in the federal government are aware of 
this restriction, and have for some time been enforcing 
it.\115\
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    \115\ Memorandum from Ethics Counsel at the National Institutes of 
Health to Deputy Ethics Counsels at NIH (Jun. 2, 2000) (Exhibit 25 at 
09-2567 0279-0281).
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    122. Congresswoman Kilpatrick told the OCE that she was 
unaware of any limitations on the ability of private 
foundations to pay for overseas travel by government 
officials.\116\
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    \116\ Memorandum of Interview of Representative Carolyn Kilpatrick 
(May 14, 2009) (Exhibit 2 at 09-2567 0031).
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    123. The Board notes that these facts show failures at 
multiple points by multiple parties in complying with and 
enforcing the travel rules. Inaccurate information was provided 
by the Carib News Foundation to Members and the Standards 
Committee. Congresswoman Kilpatrick certified inaccurate 
information to the Standards Committee and failed to disclose 
the number of family members accompanying her. The counsel to 
the former Chair of the Standards Committee intervened in the 
review process in a way that both frustrated the process in 
2007 and set a pattern of obfuscation that continued in 2008. 
Finally, the Standards Committee appears unaware of limitations 
on the ability of private foundations to pay for overseas 
travel by Members.
    124. For all these reasons, the Board concludes further 
review of this matter by the Standards Committee is 
appropriate.


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