Showing posts with label campaign finance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label campaign finance. Show all posts

Monday, December 17, 2018

MLK Memorial Foundation Forced To Change Name By King Children


By Joseph Williams and Roland S. Martin
TV One, Washington Watch
They spent six years raising more than $100 million, one cocktail fundraiser, and souvenir mug and lapel pin at a time.
And on October 16, 2011, the idea to build a monument in honor of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., an idea that began 28 years earlier at the kitchen table of a member of his fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., came to fruition.
Thousands of people of different races and backgrounds watched as President Barack Obama, two of King’s children, and countless other entertainers and veterans of the Civil Rights Movement, dedicated a bold statue to civil rights icon.
Less than two years later, however, the organizing force behind the national monument – the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Foundation – is no more after the surviving children of Martin and Coretta Scott King refused to grant a license for the group to continue to use the name “Martin Luther King Jr.”
The website that served as the centerpiece of the foundation’s fundraising and informational efforts – www.mlkmemorial.org – no longer exists. What used to be a vibrant site that served as the centerpiece for online donations and information related to the memorial has vanished after the King children, through their attorneys, demanded it be turned over to them.
King’s surviving children – Dexter, Bernice and MLK III – control the copyrights to their father’s images and words through a for-profit entity, King, Inc., which was set up after his death to handle all affairs of his estate.
There have been a number of contentious moments between the MLK foundation and King, Inc., over the last few years. At one point as the memorial was ready to be dedicated, King, Inc. had all of Dr. King’s books removed from the bookstore on the site of the memorial. The King children wanted to control the bookstore and reap all profits from the selling of merchandise.
All of this despite the foundation paying MLK children through King, Inc., $2.7 million to use the likeness of King and his quotes on the memorial on the National Mall.
“We are trying to keep the memorial relevant,” said Harry E. Johnson Sr., a Houston lawyer and president of The Memorial Foundation, the foundation’s new name (The site is www.thememorialfoundation.org and bears the slogan, “Builders of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial).
“We had planned a hundred events around the memorial” and King’s famous name – including year-long classes and a seminar on nonviolent protest featuring the grandson of Mahatma Gandhi, who was King’s inspiration, Johnson said.
Clarence Jones, who served as a personal advisor and attorney for Dr. King, called the refusal to grant a new license by King, Inc., to the foundation “obscene.”
“They have done something unique in the history of this country in getting corporate America, private America to fund a memorial to honor the greatest hero of the 20th century,” said Jones, a scholar-in-residence at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Institute at Stanford University.
“They did this in a tribute to his legacy as an Alpha member…it’s not about protecting the legacy or encouraging discussions of King. It’s not about that. It’s about unexplained, selfish interests, which I believe Martin King would be appalled.”
Civil rights historians who have studied King and his family say the move follows a familiar pattern, one in which King’s children tightly control his image – and use a heavy hand to protect it.
That pattern could be at the center of plans to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.
The historic August 28,1963, event has left an indelible imprint on the history of America when 250,000 people gathered before the Lincoln Monument to present a series of demands to the federal government. The march has long been credited with setting the stage for the signing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
But it has also gone down in history due to the stunning speech of Dr. King. Today it is known as the “I Have A Dream” speech, even though that wasn’t the initial name, and the dream portion of it was never in the written text.
The march was convened by the top civil rights organizations and organized labor, including Congress of Racial Equality, the National Urban League, NAACP, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee), and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. It was organized by A. Phillip Randolph and Bayard Rustin.
The 50th anniversary march was supposed to commemorate that historic day, but the King children have different plans. For them, that day is more about King’s speech rather than the march. In fact, the King Center, the non-profit entity set up to continue his works, is promoting August 28 as the 50th anniversary of the speech first, and the march second, based on a logo they are using on various materials.
Since late last year, leaders of the civil rights organizations who organized the original march, as well as the Rev. Al Sharpton, founder of the National Action Network, have been quietly meeting with King family representatives and officials from the National Park Service, which issues permits for demonstrations on the Mall.
The latest meeting took place two weeks ago in Washington, and involved high-level representatives from some of the organizations involved in the event planning. The talks are so sensitive, however, that no one is willing to speak about them publicly or privately.
National Urban League CEO Marc Morial, Wade Henderson of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights, and Ben Jealous, NAACP president and CEO, all declined to comment on the record. Sharpton did not return several calls requesting an interview.
“Some things are being sorted out,” said one activist with knowledge of the situation. “In two weeks, we will have a clearer picture… The march is going to happen.”
Eric Tilden, a principal of Intellectual Properties Management, which controls Rev. King’s words and image, agreed to facilitate an interview with Dexter and Bernice King, two of the three shareholders of King, Inc. Their brother, Martin Luther King III, is the other (Yolanda King, the eldest child, died in 2007).
Tilden has not responded to follow-up calls and emails and the King siblings have not been made available for comment. We also called and texted Bernice King and MLK III to no avail.
Civil rights historian David Garrow said if the March on Washington organizers are negotiating with the King children – and putting money on the table – they’re making a mistake.
“As we’ve seen for over 15 years now, the behavior of the family’s financial representatives continue to do active harm to Dr. King’s legacy,” said Garrow, a University of Pittsburgh law professor and author of “Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.”
“King’s legacy has a reduced visibility and less substantive visibility because of the family’s demands,” said Garrow, noting that the family’s estate has raked in millions through the years by managing their father’s “brand” — something King himself would have adamantly rejected.
At the same time, “it’s not as if (King, Inc.) Is using any of this income for charitable good deeds,” Garrow said. “We’ve seen none of that whatsoever.  It appears to be simply self-enrichment for a small number of people.”
For years, the King heirs have used the courts to stop any unauthorized use of their father’s likeness and words, suing for custody of documents or a share of any proceeds in merchandise and publications. In the 1990s, the family reached undisclosed settlements with USA Today and CBS over their use of King’s seminal “I Have a Dream” speech without permission; in 1999 a federal appeals court sided with the estate, ruling that the speech was not in the public domain.
Yet the civil rights hero’s words and picture – including images from the March on Washington – have been used in major ad campaigns for products like Apple Computers, Mercedes-Benz and Chevrolet. Neither the corporations nor Intellectual Properties Management have disclosed the amount of money the foundation received for the ads.
In June 2006, Dexter King, then-head of King, Inc., put up the bulk of Dr. King’s personal papers for auction. But then-Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin prevented the sale by orchestrating a $32 million deal to buy them and have the papers preserved in the city of Atlanta. That money went directly to King, Inc.
Lawyers for King, Inc. even tried to demand that the man who helped Dr. King craft the “I Have A Dream” speech, and the one who filed the copyright, pay for using the full speech in his book.
Clarence Jones, who served as a personal advisor, attorney and speech writer for King, says when he wrote his book, “Behind the Dream: The Making of the Speech that Transformed a Nation,” he was told by attorneys for King, Inc., that if he wanted to use the full speech in the book, he could for $20,000.
A stunned Jones said, “If it wasn’t for me copyrighting that speech, the King children wouldn’t today own their biggest moneymaker.”
His small publisher was afraid of getting sued by King, Inc., so Jones indemnified them from any costs associated with a lawsuit and dared lawyers for the King children to sue him.
They never did.
The King children angered many civil rights leaders in September 2011 when King, Inc. sued Jackson, Miss., TV anchor Howard Ballou after he broadcasted a story about the papers his mom collected working for King at the SCLC.
The estate wanted possession of documents, photographs and other items that Ballou’s mother, Maude Ballou, said King gave her when they worked together at the Montgomery Improvement Association and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in the 1950s.
Attorneys for King, Inc. asserted they owned any and all papers of his mom. But last week, a federal court in Mississippi ruled that Ballou could keep documents and other materials associated with Rev. King. The documents include a sermon; a written statement King made after a landmark Supreme Court ruling on segregation; and a handwritten letter to Ballou’s mother from Rosa Parks.
While the March on Washington commemoration is still in the early planning stages, Carol Johnson, a National Park Service spokeswoman, said the Park Service holds the event permit for Aug. 28 on the National Mall. That’s not uncommon, she said, particularly since the march is months away, organizers haven’t specified their plans or outlined how they intend to cover the millions of dollars in baseline logistical and security costs.
Given the costs, it’s likely that the March on Washington organizers will have to raise significant amounts of money just to put the march on the National Park Service calendar.  Throw in additional events, such as seminars and a prayer breakfast, and the financial hurdles they must clear get even steeper.
At least one member of the organizing committee, however, isn’t worried.
“The preparations I know about are going just fine,” Clayola Brown, president of the Randolph Institute, told TV One’s Washington Watch. She said organizers have tentatively planned a weeklong series of events, culminating in a rally on the Mall expected to draw hundreds of thousands of people.
So far, she said, there have been about four meetings in Atlanta and elsewhere involving civil rights leaders and various unions.  They also met with the National Park Service and members of the King family for additional planning, though she wouldn’t specify the nature of the discussions.
The NAACP’s Jealous wouldn’t talk about the meetings with the King family and rejected any suggestion that the march wouldn’t happen.
“The 50th anniversary of the March for Jobs and Freedom comes in the midst of a moment in which black unemployment remains the highest in recent memory,” he said.  “There needs to be a march, and it needs to happen now, or we risk our children becoming truly the first generation of African Americans to be decidedly more worse off than their parents.”
But Garrow cautions Jealous and others from reaching a deal with the King children at any cost without keeping the meaning of the original march in mind.
The organizers “don’t need to deal with [the King heirs] to do a 50th anniversary event, so long as they’re not rebroadcasting a 50th anniversary of the ‘I Have A Dream’ speech,” Garrow said.  “Dexter King doesn’t represent anybody, while you’ve got a number of organizations that do represent the African American community. You can honor Dr. King’s legacy without talking to Dexter in the slightest.”
“I think the big question is whether it goes off in a significant way or goes off in an insignificant way,” he added.  “Does it really present a policy agenda and focus on issues? Or is it just a commemoration for the sake of commemoration?”
Disclosure: Roland S. Martin is a life member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., and played a role in helping the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Foundation raise money to help build the memorial. He has also emceeded a fundraising dinner for the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change, and wrote an endorsement for the book published by Bernice King about her mom, “Desert Rose: The Life and Legacy of Coretta Scott King.”
http://rolandmartinreports.com/blog/2013/03/mlk-memorial-foundation-forced-to-change-name-by-king-children/

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Sunday, November 11, 2018

CONYERS Voting Rights Report Removed From Library Of Congress: Preserving Democracy: What Went Wrong in Ohio - Status Report of the House Judiciary Committee Democratic Staff - 2004

Well, it seems that this federal document has been removed from the Library of Congress.

https://www.loc.gov/item/2009284117/

About this Item

Title
What went wrong in Ohio : the Conyers report on the 2004 presidential election /
Summary
Report of an investigation into irregularities reported in the 2004 Presidential election in Ohio, compiled by the Democratic staff of the House Judiciary Committee.
Contributor Names
United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary.
Created / Published
Chicago : Academy Chicago Publishers, c2005.
Subject Headings
-  Contested elections--Ohio
-  Minorities--Suffrage--Ohio
-  Presidents--United States--Election--2004
-  Elections--Ohio--Management
Notes
-  Includes bibliographical references (p. 117-142).
Medium
xii, 142 p. ; 22 cm.
Call Number/Physical Location
JK526 2004 .U55 2005
Digital Id
http://www.house.gov/judiciary%5Fdemocrats/ohiostatusrept1505.pdf
Library of Congress Control Number
2009284117
Description
Report of an investigation into irregularities reported in the 2004 Presidential election in Ohio, compiled by the Democratic staff of the House Judiciary Committee.
LCCN Permalink
https://lccn.loc.gov/2009284117
Additional Metadata Formats
MARCXML Record
MODS Record
Dublin Core Record

But, have no fear, I found it, below, and it was not found in any U.S. governmental archive.

Now, why would someone allow such a prescient, historic report on voting irregularities be removed from the National Archives?

Perhaps, it was to seize the assets of the civil rights legacy.

But, hey, what do I know?

I know the U.S. Department of Justice should look into this.

Congress can not obviate is there is no precedent.

For your generalizable pleasure, we can now statistically reconstruct these investigations using databases, for external validity in the courts, of course.

Executive Summary

Representative John Conyers, Jr., the Ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, asked
This is the first time this photo has
been published.
the Democratic staff to conduct an investigation into irregularities reported in the Ohio presidential election and to prepare a Status Report concerning the same prior to the Joint Meeting of Congress scheduled for January 6, 2005, to receive and consider the votes of the electoral college for president. The following Report includes a brief chronology of the events; summarizes the relevant background law; provides detailed findings (including factual findings and legal analysis); and describes various recommendations for acting on this Report going forward.

We have found numerous, serious election irregularities in the Ohio presidential election, which resulted in a significant disenfranchisement of voters. Cumulatively, these irregularities, which affected hundreds of thousand of votes and voters in Ohio, raise grave doubts regarding whether it can be said the Ohio electors selected on December 13, 2004, were chosen in a manner that conforms to Ohio law, let alone federal requirements and constitutional standards.

This report, therefore, makes three recommendations: (1) consistent with the requirements of the United States Constitution concerning the counting of electoral votes by Congress and Federal law implementing these requirements, there are ample grounds for challenging the electors from the State of Ohio; (2) Congress should engage in further hearings into the widespread irregularities reported in Ohio; we believe the problems are serious enough to warrant the appointment of a joint select Committee of the House and Senate to investigate and report back to the Members; and (3) Congress needs to enact election reform to restore our people’s trust in our democracy. These changes should include putting in place more specific federal protections for federal elections, particularly in the areas of audit capability for electronic voting machines and casting and counting of provisional ballots, as well as other needed changes to federal and state election laws.
Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

John Conyers, Jr. - Early Life & Biography

John Conyers Net Worth 2019
John Conyers, Jr.
Jоhn Соnуеrѕ іѕ а соngrеѕѕmаn thаt wаѕ bоrn оn 16 Мау 1929 іn Dеtrоіt.

Ніѕ раrеntѕ wеrе Јоhn аnd Luсіllе Соnуеrѕ. Соnуеrѕ іѕ а grаduаtе оf Wауnе ѕtаtе unіvеrѕіtу аnd Wауnе ѕtаtе lаw ѕсhооl.

Не іѕ аmоng thе lоngеѕt-ѕеrvіng mеmbеrѕ оf thе Соngrеѕѕ оf thе Unіtеd Ѕtаtеѕ аnd hаѕ bееn а рrоduсtіvе lаwmаkеr rеgаrdіng lеgіѕlаtіоn mаdе аnd раѕѕеd. Lеt’ѕ tаkе а lооk аt thе nеt wоrth оf Јоhn Соnуеrѕ іn 2018.

Реrѕоnаl Lіfе

Јоhn Соnуеrѕ іѕ mаrrіеd tо Моnіса Соnуеrѕ.

Моnіса Соnуеrѕ fіlеd fоr а dіvоrсе іn 2015 сіtіng brеаkdоwn іn thеіr mаrrіаgе.

Тhеу hаvе twо сhіldrеn, Јоhn ІІІ, аnd Саrl Соnуеrѕ. Саrееr, Аwаrdѕ & Nоmіnаtіоnѕ Соnуеrѕ hаd а ѕріrіt thаt іѕ сurіоuѕ аnd lеd hіm іntо аrеаѕ thаt аrе bеуоnd сіvіl rіghtѕ, hе, hоwеvеr, wоrkеd оn mаkіng hіѕ саrееr ѕuссеѕѕ dеѕріtе gеttіng аlсоhоl wаrnіng lаbеlѕ tо іntеllесtuаl рrореrtу rіghtѕ оf muѕісіаnѕ іn а wоrld thаt hаѕ сhаngіng tесhnоlоgу.

Іn hіѕ tеnurе аѕ thе rерrеѕеntаtіvе оf Місhіgаn’ѕ fіrѕt dіѕtrісt аnd а fоundіng mеmbеr оf thе Соngrеѕѕіоnаl Вlасk Саuсuѕ, hе wоrkеd tо рrоmоtе сіvіl rіghtѕ аnd ѕосіаl wеlfаrе саuѕеѕ.

Whеn hе аrrіvеd frоm Wаѕhіngtоn, hе ѕuрроrtеd Рrеѕіdеnt Lуndоn Меdісаrе рrоgrаm аnd vоtіng rіght асtѕ іn 1965.

А fеw dауѕ аftеr thе аѕѕаѕѕіnаtіоn оf Rеv. Dr. Маrtіn Luthеr Кіng Јr. іn Арrіl 1968, hе ѕubmіttеd а bіll thаt wоuld сrеаtе а nаtіоnаl hоlіdау fоr thе bіrthdау оf thе сіvіl rіghtѕ lеаdеr.

Whіlе hе hаѕ bееn аdvосаtіng fоr іndереndеnt blасk роlіtісаl mоvеmеntѕ, hе hаѕ рut hіmѕеlf fаr frоm аlіgnіng hіmѕеlf wіth thе blасk ѕераrаtіѕtѕ.

Іn 1972, hе wаѕ сrіtісаl оf thоѕе реорlе whо wеrе аdvосаtіng fоr fоrmіng аn іndереndеnt blасk роlіtісаl раrtу, аt thе nаtіоnаl blасk роlіtісаl соnvеntіоnаl thаt wаѕ hеld іn Gаrу, Іndіаnа.

Соnуеrѕ ѕеrvеd аѕ thе сhаіrmаn оf thе gоvеrnmеnt ореrаtіоnѕ соmmіttее аnd аlѕо ѕеrvеd оn thе hоuѕе ѕmаll buѕіnеѕѕ соmmіttее аnd thеn оn thе ѕреаkеr’ѕ tаѕk fоrсе оn mіnоrіtу ѕеt-аѕіdеѕ.

Іn 1998, hе wаѕ а vосаl орроnеnt thаt аdvосаtеd fоr thе іmреасhmеnt оf Рrеѕіdеnt Віll Сlіntоn. Nеt wоrth & Еаrnіngѕ Тhе nеt wоrth оf Јоhn Соnуеrѕ іѕ ѕоmеwhеrе аrоund $1 mіllіоn.

Соnуеrѕ’ mаіn ѕоurсе оf іnсоmе іѕ hіѕ саrееr аѕ а mеmbеr оf thе Unіtеd Ѕtаtеѕ Соngrеѕѕ. Тhе mаn hаѕ ѕеrvеd fоr 26 tеrmѕ аѕ оf nоw.

Durіng hіѕ tеnurе, hе hаѕ аlѕо ѕеrvеd аѕ thе сhаіrmаn оf vаrіоuѕ соmmіttееѕ.

Wіth thоѕе еngаgеmеntѕ, іt wоuldn’t bе а ѕurрrіѕе іf thе fіgurе іѕ ѕubѕtаntіаl. Іn 2005, Јоhn Соnуеrѕ rеlеаѕеd а bооk tіtlеd, whаt wеnt wrоng іn Оhіо: thе Соnуеrѕ Rероrt оn thе 2004 рrеѕіdеntіаl еlесtіоn thаt wаѕ аbоut thе fаultѕ іn thе vоtіng ѕуѕtеm. Не hаѕ hаd ѕіgnіfісаnt еffоrtѕ tоwаrdѕ bеttеr-unіtеd ѕtаtеѕ.

Не аlѕо hаd а gооd hоuѕе rерutаtіоn hаvіng wоn thе соngrеѕѕіоnаl еlесtіоnѕ 25 tіmеѕ аnd ѕеrvіng hіѕ 26th tеrm.

https://www.thewealthrecord.com/celebs-bio-wiki-salary-earnings-2019-2020-2021-2022-2023-2024-2025/politician/john-conyers-net-worth/

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Thursday, December 7, 2017

Quick Question To FEC: "Why Is John Conyers Registered As Campaign Website Administrator?"

Quick question to the FEC: 

Why is John Conyers registered as the site administrator and contact?

I have alot more questions, but I am pretty sure I already know the answers.

Stay tuned.

Showing results for: JOHNCONYERS.COM

Original Query: johnconyers.com

Contact Information

Registrant Contact

Name: Conyers, John
Organization: Conyers for Congress Committee
Mailing Address: 1031 North Edgewood Street, Arlington VA 22201 US
Phone: 540-548-2988
Ext:
Fax:
Fax Ext:
Email:campaign@johnconyers.com

Admin Contact

Name: Conyers, John
Organization: Conyers for Congress Committee
Mailing Address: 1031 North Edgewood Street, Arlington VA 22201 US
Phone: 540-548-2988
Ext:
Fax:
Fax Ext:
Email:campaign@johnconyers.com

Tech Contact

Name: Inc., NameSecure
Organization: Namesecure Inc.
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 785, Herndon VA 20172 US
Phone: +1.5707088418
Ext:
Fax:
Fax Ext:
Email:support@namesecure.com

Registrar

WHOIS Server: whois.namesecure.com
URL: http://www.namesecure.com
Registrar: NAMESECURE.COM
IANA ID: 30
Abuse Contact Email:abuse@web.com
Abuse Contact Phone: +1.8888012112

Status

Important Dates

Updated Date: 2017-03-20
Created Date: 2003-11-27
Registrar Expiration Date: 2019-07-22

Name Servers

DNS2.NAMESECURE.COM
DNS1.NAMESECURE.COM

Raw WHOIS Record

Domain Name: JOHNCONYERS.COM
Registry Domain ID: Registrar WHOIS Server: whois.namesecure.com
Registrar URL: http://www.namesecure.com
Updated Date: 2017-03-20T17:26:05Z
Creation Date: 2003-11-27T12:55:27Z
Registrar Registration Expiration Date: 2019-07-22T04:00:00Z
Registrar: NAMESECURE.COM
Registrar IANA ID: 30
Registrar Abuse Contact Email: abuse@web.com
Registrar Abuse Contact Phone: +1.8888012112
Reseller: Domain Status: Registry Registrant ID: Registrant Name: Conyers, John
Registrant Organization: Conyers for Congress Committee
Registrant Street: 1031 North Edgewood Street
Registrant City: Arlington Registrant State/Province: VA
Registrant Postal Code: 22201
Registrant Country: US
Registrant Phone: 540-548-2988
Registrant Phone Ext:
 Registrant Fax:
 Registrant Fax Ext:
 Registrant Email: campaign@johnconyers.com
Registry Admin ID:
 Admin Name: Conyers, John 
 Admin Organization: Conyers for Congress Committee
 Admin Street: 1031 North Edgewood Street
Admin City: Arlington
Admin State/Province: VA Admin Postal Code: 22201
Admin Country: US Admin Phone: 540-548-2988
Admin Phone Ext:
 Admin Fax:
 Admin Fax Ext:
 Admin Email: campaign@johnconyers.com
Registry Tech ID: Tech Name: Inc.,
NameSecure Tech Organization: Namesecure Inc.
Tech Street: P.O. Box 785 Tech City: Herndon
Tech State/Province: VA Tech Postal Code: 20172
Tech Country: US
Tech Phone: +1.5707088418
Tech Phone Ext:
 Tech Fax:
 Tech Fax Ext:
 Tech Email: support@namesecure.com
Name Server: DNS2.NAMESECURE.COM
Name Server: DNS1.NAMESECURE.COM DNSSEC:
Unsigned URL of the ICANN WHOIS Data Problem Reporting System: http://wdprs.internic.net/ >>> Last update of WHOIS database: 2017-12-07T06:25:22Z <<<

FEC FORM 1

STATEMENT OF ORGANIZATION

FILING FEC-1147776


1. Conyers for Congress

    1050 17th St NW
    Ste 590
    Washington, DC 20036
    Email: janica@pcmsllc.com

2. Date: 02/01/2017

3. FEC Committee ID #: C00409797

This committee is a Principal Campaign Committee.

Candidate: John Conyers, Jr.
Party: Democratic Party
Office Sought: House of Representatives
State is Michigan in District: 13

Affiliated Committees/Organizations

None
, ____

Custodian of Records:

Janica Kyriacopoulos
1050 17th St NW
Ste 590
Washington, DC 20036
Title: Custodian of Records
Phone # (202) 628-1580

Treasurer:

Greg Barnes
1050 17th St NW Ste 520
Washington, DC 20036
Title: Treasurer

Designated Agent(s):

Greg Barnes
1050 17th St NW
Ste 520
Washington, DC 20036
Title: Treasurer

Banks or Depositories

Amalgamated Bank
1825 K Street NW
Washington, DC 20006

Signed: Greg Barnes
Date Signed: 02/06/2017
Official Committee URL: http://www.johnconyers.com

(End FEC FORM 1)


Generated Thu Dec 7 02:00:45 2017

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Someone Said Sources Said Conyers Will Not Run Again

Any wagers on the next angle of attacks?

People are working really hard, knowing indictments are coming down, to prevent asset forfeiture and incarceration.

They already threw in a pinch of senility, but I did not feel like posting it.

Stay tuned.  This is just getting started.

Sources: Rep. John Conyers won't seek re-election in wake of sexual harassment claimsSources say Conyers will not resign



DETROIT - The controversy swirling around Michigan Rep. John Conyers has intensified this week as former staff members accused him of sexual harassment.

 Sources told Local 4 that Conyers will not seek re-election for a new term in the wake of the scandal, which continues to grow. Two sources close to the Conyers situation told Local 4's Rod Meloni that the congressman won't resign.

It's his intent to announce in January that he won't run for re-election in 2018.

 His attorney said the allegations are not true, but Conyers is under increased scrutiny, and his family is rallying around him.

 Conyers caught a bit of a break Wednesday as the Congressional Black Caucus met in Washington and Chairman Cedric Richmond disputed the stories saying he is pushing for Conyers to resign. 

Among the former staffers accusing Conyers of sexual harassment is Deanna Maher, who claimed Conyers sexually harassed her three times, including undressing to his underwear in her bedroom while she was in a nightgown.

 The Michigan Democratic Party has not yet responded to a request for comment about the sources' information that Conyers won't run again.

The situation could change depending on the pressure brought to bear in Washington.

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Why U.S. Representative Raul Grijalva Called For Conyers To Step Down

Congressman Adriano Espaillat (R), Speaker of the New York City Council Melissa Mark-Viverito (C), and Congressman Raul Grijalva (L) march onto 5th Avenue to block traffic, before getting arrested, during a rally to demand that U.S. President Donald Trump works with Congress to pass a clean DREAM Act on the sideline of the United Nations General Assembly in New York City, U.S. September 19, 2017. REUTERS/Darren Ornitz - RC1CF02AEF60The list continues to grow.

Stay tuned because Ethics has been very, very busy the last three years.

I did not stutter when I typed "three years", either.

Top House Democrat Took $50K From Taxpayers To Keep A Former Staffer Quiet

The top Democrat on the House Committee on Natural Resources used taxpayer dollars to pay off a former staffer who threatened to sue, claiming the lawmaker was often drunk and created a hostile workplace.

Arizona Rep. Raul Grijalva’s secret deal with a former female staffer was revealed by The Washington Times on Monday. The payout was negotiated by the House Employment Counsel, the body’s attorney, and cost taxpayers $48,395.

The settlement, however, may have violated House rules, The Times reported. It’s against House rules for a lawmaker to retain “an employee who does not perform duties for the offices of the employing authority commensurate with the compensation such employee receives.”

Grijalva’s payout also should have been handed over in a lump sum, not paid out in monthly installments, The Times reported. Taxpayers paid Grijalva’s disgruntled staffer five month’s severance. The female staffer left her job after just three months, and didn’t pursue the matter after leaving Grijalva’s employment.

“On the advice of House Employment Counsel, I provided a severance package to a former employee who resigned,” Grijalva told The Times in a statement.

“The severance did not involve the Office of Compliance and at no time was any allegation of sexual harassment made, and no sexual harassment occurred,” Grijalva said.

“Under the terms of the agreement, had there been an allegation of sexual harassment, the employee would have been free to report it,” he said. “Regrettably, for me to provide any further details on this matter would violate the agreement.”

News of Grijalva’s payout comes amid debate over the $17.2 million in taxpayer funds used to settle 264 complaints of sexual harassment and other issues in Congress. The settlements are kept secret.

Grijalva is only the latest lawmaker to come under fire for paying off staffers for workplace issues. Michigan Democratic Rep. John Conyers paid a former staffer more than $27,000 after allegedly firing her for spurning sexual advances.

Minnesota Democratic Sen. Al Franken has been accused of sexual harassment by four women — two of them anonymous. Franken has apologized, though he has refused to resign from office.

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And Another Former Staffer Accuses Conyers

Another former staffer accuses Rep. John Conyers of sexual misconduct

Veteran congressman John Conyers is facing a fresh round of sexual misconduct allegations after a former staffer said he made unwanted sexual advances toward her.

Deanna Maher, 77, said she decided to come forward with the allegations after Conyers, the longest-serving member in the House of Representatives, agreed to step down as ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee amid as Congress looked into separate claims of sexual misconduct against him.

The House Ethics Committee announced earlier this month that it would investigate allegations of sexual harassment and age discrimination against the Michigan Democrat, 88, involving his staff. Conyers, who has denied those allegations, said he would fully cooperate with the investigation.
Maher, who served as Conyers’ deputy chief of staff between 1997 and 2005, said Conyers touched her inappropriately on at least three occasions, including once in 1999 when he allegedly placed his hands underneath her dress.

“There are so many victims that passed through Conyers, and he was so cruel,” Maher told ABC News in a statement. “Everyone knew what was going on but no one did anything.”

“It’s been a long journey and a very painful one,” she added.

Maher said she decided to keep quiet about her experience because she “needed to earn a living.”

“Back when this was happening to me, I had to keep a job,” Maher said. “I was going through a divorce, and I had no money, and I had to have a job, and it’s hard to be employed especially at that time in my life. I was 57 at that time.”

Now, she says she hopes to be a champion for other victims of sexual harassment.

“At that time I could find my way out of circumstances, and he never succeeded with me, never -- I finally gave up and was able to move away. I survived it,” Maher said. “People would ask me how I was years later, and I would say I survived. I’m surviving. That’s the best you can do.”

“I’m doing this for all the other victims. Before I die, I will be happy to think that I did my part in helping all of the other staff members,” she added.

Maher said she was “absolutely amazed” when Conyers agreed to step down from his role as ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee.

His decision to step aside came after BuzzFeed News reported last week that Conyers' office paid a female aide over $27,000 to quietly settle a wrongful dismissal complaint.

ABC News also obtained court filings referencing a federal complaint filed by Conyers’ longtime scheduler, who alleged "sexual advances in the form of inappropriate comments and touches.” The case was later dropped after the judge denied her request to keep the complaint sealed to protect her privacy.

Separately, Melanie Sloan, a lawyer who worked with Conyers on the House Judiciary Committee, accused Conyers of being “increasingly abusive” to her, behavior she says wasn’t “sexual harassment” but “sexual discrimination.”

Conyers has acknowledged that his office settled a harassment complaint involving a former staffer but denies the allegations against him.

Conyers’ attorney, Arnold Reed, said Maher’s allegations were uncorroborated and that his client denies wrongdoing.

“At the end of the day, he’s confident that he will be exonerated because he maintains that he has not done anything wrong,” Reed said in a statement to The Detroit News, which first reported the story on Monday.

“Any female or male that comes forward and says anybody harasses them, that is serious. Those things are not to be taken lightly. But we have to be able to at least have some corroboration if we’re going to be saying my client did something wrong,” Reed added.

Conyers’ office did not immediately respond to ABC News' request for comment on these latest allegations.

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Former Conyers Staffers Come To The Defense

Former aides defend Conyers after harassment allegations

Washington (CNN)Twelve former female staffers of Rep. John Conyers say he "never behaved in a sexually inappropriate manner" in front of them as the Michigan Democrat faces an ethics investigation into sexual harassment allegations against him.

"While we do not pass judgment on the specific allegations reported in the press or the women who brought them, our experiences with Mr. Conyers were quite different than the image of him being portrayed in the media," the former staffers wrote in a joint statement that circulated on Sunday. "Mr. Conyers was a gentleman and never behaved in a sexually inappropriate manner in our presence. He was respectful, valued our opinions, challenged our thinking, and treated us as professionals."

Conyers, 88, faces a House Ethics Committee investigation into allegations that he sexually harassed or discriminated against members of his staff. Conyers has denied any wrongdoing but has indicated that he will cooperate with the ethics probe.
    Earlier Sunday, Conyers said he would step aside as the top Democrat on the powerful House Judiciary Committee, but would fight the allegations.

    "I very much look forward to vindicating myself and my family before the House Committee on Ethics," Conyers wrote Sunday in a letter to House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat.

    Pelosi said she supported his decision.

    "Zero tolerance means consequences," Pelosi said in a statement. "Any credible accusation must be reviewed by the Ethics Committee expeditiously. We are at a watershed moment on this issue, and no matter how great an individual's legacy, it is not a license for harassment."

    BuzzFeed News reported last week that Conyers settled a wrongful dismissal complaint in 2015 after allegedly sexually harassing a staffer. Court documents also revealed that a second former aide to Conyers accused him of sexual harassment.

    New York Democratic Rep. Kathleen Rice has called on Conyers to resign his congressional seat over the allegations. Two other House Democrats, Reps. Gregory Meeks of New York and Raul Grijalva of Arizona, had called on Conyers to step aside from his judiciary post.

    I will do a special honor of Raul Grijalva.

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    I Know What You Did Last Summer, Nancy Pelosi

    I know what you did last summer, Nancy.

    I know you have been plotting with your minions to strip Mr. Conyers of his chairmanship for quite some time.

    I know you have been plotting to take Mr. Conyers out of congress, for quite some time, also.

    I know how your tried to do it.

    I know why you tried to do it.

    And I know who you did it with.

    Perhaps, it is time you retire, gracefully, Nancy.

    I know you shall do the right thing.




    CHUCK TODD:
    Joining me now is House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi of California. Leader Pelosi, welcome back to Meet the Press.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Morning. My pleasure to be here.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Happy Thanksgiving weekend.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Thank you. Happy Thanksgiving to you, and congratulations on 70 years.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Thank you. Thank you for that. We're now 71. I'm going to go back into our wayback machine here. Here's you on Meet the Press, asked specifically about allegations against President Clinton. Here's what you said back in 1998.
    (BEGIN TAPE)
    TIM RUSSERT:
    Why the silence when there have been these allegations, serious ones, about President Clinton?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Well, I'd like to say that I think that the women of America are speaking out about what they think about this whole situation. And the women of America are just like other Americans in that they value fairness, they value privacy, and do not want to see a person with uncontrolled power, uncontrolled time, uncontrolled, unlimited money investigating the president of the United States.
    (END TAPE)
    CHUCK TODD:
    That's back then. And look, both Senator Gillibrand and Mayor de Blasio were basically making the argument that our culture's changed, and that, today, same allegations probably would have led Democrats, perhaps like yourself, to call for his resignation. You can have a debate about whether it was an impeachable offense, but whether he had the moral standing to stay in office. Do you agree with this idea that this is a generational change that we're experiencing?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Well, I think it's obviously a generational change. But let me just say the concern that we had then was that they were impeaching the president of the United States, and for something that had nothing to do with the performance of his duties, and trying to take him out for that reason.
    But let's go forward. Let's go forward. I think that something wonderful is happening now, very credible. It's 100 years, almost 100 years, since women got the right to vote. Here we are, almost 100 years later, and something very transformative is happening. That is, women are saying, "Zero tolerance, no more, and we're going to speak out on it." And this is so wholesome, so refreshing, so different.
    CHUCK TODD:
    But why do you think the reaction was different by women on Bill Clinton? And I say that because it does seem as if, frankly, when you watch some of the reactions by the president in defending Roy Moore, or at least overlooking the allegations against Roy Moore, that, were you putting politics ahead of your personal disgust?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    No, but we're talking about a child molester. This is--
    CHUCK TODD:
    Okay, but--
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    We're talking about a child molester.
    CHUCK TODD:
    But President Clinton was accused of being a sexual predator.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Well--
    CHUCK TODD:
    And of even rape at one point, by one accuser.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Why don't we talk, instead, about how we go forward. Nobody is proud of President Clinton's behavior at the time. But he was being impeached--
    CHUCK TODD:
    But I think the reason there's a re-litigation of this is that, I think the concern is that we allowed the erosion, that the reason we're at this moment and the reason it got worse over the last 20 years is because of the way we handled it collectively then. Do you buy that argument?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    No. I buy that the election of President Trump, really, as your presenter said earlier, just evoked a response. So many women, and this is really important, I think, to note, because I've heard from so many women in the last few months, in fact, I heard, around the time of Anita Hill, so many women who've had a bad experience.
    And now they're saying, "I had a bad experience, and now a person who possibly engaged in that activity is the president of the United States. I'm speaking out." So I think, as your presenter said earlier--
    CHUCK TODD:
    It was me, actually.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Was that your voice?
    CHUCK TODD:
    Yes, that is my voice. That's okay.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Then you had it right when you said Harvey didn't evoke this, the election of President Trump evoked what happened to Harvey. And now everybody is served notice.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Right.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Let's go forward. Let's talk about, okay, let's learn from past decisions and go forward.
    CHUCK TODD:
    So define zero tolerance. You said there’s now a zero tolerance.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Yes.
    CHUCK TODD:
    John Conyers. What does that mean for him? Right now. In or out?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    We are strengthened by due process. Just because someone is accused -- and was it one accusation? Is it two? I think there has to be -- John Conyers is an icon in our country. He has done a great deal to protect women -- Violence Against Women Act, which the left -- right-wing -- is now quoting me as praising him for his work on that, and he did great work on that. But the fact is, as John reviews his case, which he knows, which I don’t, I believe he will do the right thing.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Why don’t you?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Excuse me. May I finish my sentence?
    CHUCK TODD:
    Sure, sure.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    That he will do the right thing.
    CHUCK TODD:
    And is the right thing what? Resign?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    He will do the right thing in terms of what he knows about his situation. That he’s entitled to due process. But women are entitled to due process as well.
    CHUCK TODD:
    But he took advantage of a situation where he had a - the rules of Congress and I know you guys want to change these rules, but he got to hide his settlement, he got to - his accusers had to go through all sorts of craziness, so why is he entitled to new due process in this case?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    No, I I - we are talking about what we have heard. I’ve asked the Ethics Committee to review that. He has said he’d be open - he will cooperate with any review.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Do you believe the accusers?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Excuse me?
    CHUCK TODD:
    Do you believe John Conyers’ accusers?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    I don’t know who they are. Do you? They have not really come forward. And that gets to --
    CHUCK TODD:
    So you don’t know if you believe the accusations?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Well, that’s for the Ethics Committee to review. But I believe he understands what is at stake here and he will do the right thing. But all of these non-disclosure agreements have to go. By the way, some of them are there to protect the victim because they didn’t want some of it to be public. But that’s over. In other words, if the victim wants to be private, she can be -- he or she can be.
    CHUCK TODD:
    I guess it goes back to what is this line? What is a fireable offense? You say it’s zero tolerance.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Yes.
    CHUCK TODD:
    But zero tolerance -- what does that mean if you’re saying John Conyers, who already had due process, gets to stay right now.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    As I said, we’ve asked for the Ethics Committee to review that. He, I believe, will do the right thing. It’s about going forward.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Where are you on Senator Franken?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Well, same thing. I don't think that you can equate Senator Franken with Roy Moore. It's two different things. So, you know, let's have some discernment.
    CHUCK TODD:
    So you would accept an apology right now from Al Franken if there's no other accusers, or if all we know are what we know?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Well, also, his accusers have to accept an apology. The victims have some say in all of this, as well. And that has happened in the past. People have accepted an apology, as is coming forth now that I see in the press. But we didn't know, because there was a nondisclosure agreement to protect the victim. Sometimes they didn't want to be public. Sometimes they did. So now they will have their choice.
    But this is about going forward. And when we go forward, we will address all of that. But we also have to address it for every person, every workplace in the country, not just in the Congress of the United States. And that's very important. And a good deal of that would be done by the Judiciary Committee.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Okay.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    And I know that John would take that into consideration.
    CHUCK TODD:
    You have one member has already, Gregory Meeks has already called for him to be withdrawn as ranking member.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    No.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Isn't that something in your power? Can't you decide that he should be suspended on ranking member on Judiciary, of all committees for him to be ranking on?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    You have to remember that this all happened during the Thanksgiving break. When we come together at the beginning of this week, I think John will do the right thing.
    CHUCK TODD:
    You're not going to unilaterally make this decision?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    I'm not sharing that with you right now. But what I am saying is this is a big distraction, and it's very, very important. Do you know that the beginning of the Women's Movement, Elizabeth Cady Stanton lived in Seneca Falls. And she would hear down below examples of family domestic violence. And that was one of the motivators for her to advance the cause of women.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Right.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    So this is as old as-- well, it's old as civilization, probably.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Right.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    But in terms of our history, in terms of the women's movement, one of the motivators. Now, 100 years after her fight for the right of women to vote, we will clear the deck on this. But I am here to talk about something also transformative in our society, and that is this tax bill that the Republicans have put forth.
    CHUCK TODD:
    And I want to get into this. But there seems to be a bit of a political paralysis here. I'm trying to figure this out.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    That isn't. It isn't. We're moving. This week we will pass bipartisan legislation for mandatory anti-harassment, anti-discrimination behavior, A. B) we will then take the larger issue, which has to pass both houses of the Congress for ending the nondisclosure, ending of who pays, all of the concerns that we have about this.
    But I don't think that it should-- I think that we want to give people hope. This is going to be addressed. Women have spoken out. Their concerns will be addressed in a way that I think will give comfort, as well as end this behavior.
    CHUCK TODD:
    All right.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Because you know what? It's disgusting, it's repulsive, and it has to be zero tolerance.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Will you support Congress retroactively making public all of these private settlements that taxpayer dollars have been used?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Not necessarily. Sometimes the victim does not want that to happen.
    CHUCK TODD:
    But if the victim wants it public, will you side with the victim?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    What I have-- yes. But what I--
    CHUCK TODD:
    100%?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Well, here's the thing. It's really important.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Okay.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Because there is a question as to whether the Ethics Committee can get testimony if you have signed a nondisclosure agreement. We're saying we think the Ethics Committee can, but if you don't agree, we'll pass a law that says the Ethics Committee can, a resolution in Congress that the Ethics Committee can.
    CHUCK TODD:
    All right.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    But there's no-- I don't want anybody thinking there's any challenge here to our changing the law and see how people-- when we know more about the individual cases. Well, because you know what our biggest strength is? Due process that protects the rights of the victim, so that, whatever the outcome is, everybody knows that there was due process.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Leader Pelosi, unfortunately for time, I have to end it there. Appreciate your coming on.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    You mean we're not even going to talk about taxes?
    CHUCK TODD:
    I'm--
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    See, you have fallen into the place where they are doing something that's going to increase the debt enormously.
    CHUCK TODD:
    We're--
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    It's going to be a job killer.
    CHUCK TODD:
    I've been covering it a lot.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    A job killer.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Just finish this thought.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    And it's going to raise taxes on the middle class. And that has a big impact on individual lives of all Americans. And really, we should be spending more time on that.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Do you think this other issue isn't as serious as taxes?
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    I think it's eno-- look, as a woman, mother of four daughters, I think it's enormously important. But I think that we have to have a balance in how we go forward. Because this is giving the--
    CHUCK TODD:
    I struggle with this myself every day.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    This is giving them cover.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Okay.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    There are so many reasons that we should be concerned about the Republican majority in Congress.
    CHUCK TODD:
    I am going to be asking a Republican across the aisle some of these questions in a few minutes. Anyway, Leader Pelosi, I have to leave it there.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Yeah. Well, thank--
    CHUCK TODD:
    I appreciate it.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Yeah. That's disappointing. But anyway.
    CHUCK TODD:
    I wish I had more time.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Let me just say one more thing.
    CHUCK TODD:
    I'm always for more--
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    I have to say one more thing.
    CHUCK TODD:
    Go to my bosses, ask for two hours.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    I've got to thank--
    CHUCK TODD:
    I'll take it.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    --our firefighters and our first responders in California for what they did in the fires. Our Thanksgiving, we prayed for them as a blessing to us. And wishing their families the best.
    CHUCK TODD:
    A worthy last word. Thank you very much.
    REP. NANCY PELOSI:
    Thank you. Bye-bye.
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