By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 9.6.07 @ 12:08AM
It's back, by Clintonite demand. Except, anyone seen my old friend Norman?
WASHINGTON -- I hope you followed the news with the utmost care
last week. A stupendous story peeked into the media, grew to
adulthood in no time, and vanished.
The news story began with the Wall Street Journal's
report that a major donor to the Clinton presidential campaign,
Hong Kong-born Norman Hsu, appeared to have "bundled" vast amounts
of money into donations to Democrats. Particularly blessed was the
Clinton presidential campaign. One of Mr. Hsu's donors was the Paw
family, the modest Chinese-American family of a California mail
carrier whose annual salary is $45,000, but whose family has
donated $244,000 to the Democrats since 2004 -- $55,000 of which
went to the Clinton campaign. So prominent has Mr. Hsu been among
Clinton donors that he has been anointed a "Hillraiser," a donor
who has pledge at least $100,000 for the Clinton cause. The
Journal reports that Democratic sources claim his
donations to the Clintons amount to "well over $1 million."
The story gets better. Mr. Hsu's sudden notoriety alerted
officials in California that he is a convicted felon who has been
on the lam since 1992. That news broke late in the week when Mr.
Hsu turned himself in and posted $2 million for bail. Then over the
weekend the story died. Then this week Mr. Hsu failed to show up
for his bail hearing.
I suppose this is what the Clintons call "old news." Asian money
from shadowy figures has figured in Clinton campaigns going back to
at least 1986. Writing in The American Spectator even
prior to the Clinton campaign finance scandals of the
mid-1990s, James Ring Adams followed the Riady family, an
Indonesian family of Chinese ancestry then prominent among Clinton
supporters and White House guests, back to Arkansas in 1986 where
the Riadys played their eleemosynary role in Governor Clinton's
reelection. In the autumn of 1992 the family illegally pumped as
much as $1 million into Clinton's presidential campaign and in 2001
paid an $8.6 million fine for its indiscretions. In that settlement
it admitted to 86 misdemeanor charges of making illegal foreign
campaign contributions from 1988 to 1994. The Clintons dismiss
The American Spectator as part of the "Vast Right-Wing
Conspiracy," though we have never been wrong when we made their
"old news" new news.
In 1998, the Senate Government Affairs Committee report on the
Clintons' 1996 fundraising scandal claimed "strong circumstantial
evidence" that the Riadys may have illegally funneled money into
the 1996 campaign. Whether they did or not, that 1996 campaign
abounded with dubious Asian donors many of whom paid hefty fines
for illegal contributions. Former Democratic National Committee
finance chair, John Huang, pleaded guilty to felony campaign
finance violations after the Justice Department estimated that he
arranged for some $156,000 in illegal contributions to his party.
Just to be safe, the party returned more than $1 million. Pauline
Kanchanalak, a Thai businesswoman, admitted to making $690,000 in
illegal contributions to the Democrats, $457,000 after a June 18,
1996 coffee at the White House with President Clinton. Charlie
Trie, a former fry cook from Little Rock, was convicted of federal
campaign finance violations after he donated nearly $300,000 to the
Democrats in the mid-1990s and personally delivered at least
$640,000 in questionable checks and money orders to the Clintons'
legal defense. Taiwan-born Maria Hsia, a friend of Al Gore's since
1988, was convicted of arranging more than $100,000 of illegal
donations to the Democratic Party during the 1996 presidential
cycle from a Buddhist temple.
Yet there is more. Johnny Chung pleaded guilty to numerous
felonies committed during that race. He donated $366,000 to the
Democratic National Committee, $35,000 of which he admitted came
from Lt. Col. Liu Chaoying of the People's Liberation Army. Chung
in May 1999 told the U.S. House of Representatives that Liu
introduced him to Gen. Ji Shengde, head of Chinese military
intelligence, who told him, Chung testified, that: "We like your
president very much. We would like to see him reelect [sic] I will
give you 300,000 U.S. dollars. You can give it to the president and
the Democratic Party."
Perhaps one of the reasons the Clintons can dismiss so many of
the scandals in their wake as "old stories" is that the Clintons
are what law enforcement officials call "repeat offenders." But I
am perplexed as to why the mainstream media do not catch on. In the
Hsu stories the press reported that he is a "textile executive."
From what my reporters have been able to discover his textile
concerns have no offices and no legitimate addresses. Philip Klein
found that one of Mr. Hsu's addresses for his campaign finance
filings is the site of the Mid-Manhattan Public Library. Put
another way, this major Democratic donor seems to have had no
visible means of support. Now he is a missing person.
topics:
Mainstream Media, Business, Law, Military