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Money Well Spent: RNC Donation Helped Wealthy Businessman Secure Ambassadorship
Minnesota Monitor ^ | 14 Nov 2007 | Jeff Fecke

Posted on 12/24/2007 9:33:43 AM PST by VxH

Roland Arnall certainly never has tried to hide his support for the Republican Party. He personally donated $5 million to help run a pro-Bush ad in 2004 and Ameriquest, a mortgage company Arnall founded, gave $250,000 to President Bush's inaugural in 2005. Arnall and his wife, Dawn, also helped raise more than $200,000 each to secure Bush's re-election.

But another donation of Arnall's has received little attention. In 2004, Arnall donated $5 million to help fund the Republican National Convention in New York City. Arnall gave the donation in the name of RoDa Drilling LLC, a company he co-owned with his wife. The donation was the second-largest given to the RNC, trailing only the nearly $7 million given by Mayor Michael Bloomberg of New York City, who was a Republican at the time. It was more money than was donated by Citigroup and IBM combined, and more than any single donation to the Democratic National Convention, all from a small Nevada company that has no website.

Arnall may have been looking to bury this donation, or there may have been a business reason; Arnall did not respond to a request for comment. Either way, the donations did not go unnoticed by a very important person: President Bush himself, who in 2005 appointed Arnall to serve as ambassador to The Netherlands.

A Small Company Writes a Big Check

RoDa Drilling shows up rarely in the public record. The LLC was registered in the state of Nevada and appears to be embroiled in a lawsuit with Oklahoma oil exploration company Zenergy Inc. The suit, Zenergy Inc. v. Palace Exploration Co., revolves around 1,554 oil and gas properties/prospects pursuant to "hundreds of agreements." The suit also alleges that RoDa was under investigation by the IRS for transactions between RoDa and Palace Exploration Co.

Roland ArnallAside from the lawsuit and RoDa's 2004 donation to the RNC, it's unclear what else the company has been up to. A search of Google and Lexis/Nexis turns up precious little information about the company, and the Nevada Secretary of State simply shows that Roland and Dawn Arnall are the co-owners and that the filing is in default as of Oct. 1.

RoDa took advantage of the fact that companies and individuals are able to make unlimited donations to convention committees.

"That is one of the last free-for-all loopholes where people can write unlimited checks, and they do," said Mary Boyle, vice president of communications for the watchdog group Common Cause in Washington, D.C. Boyle said that conventions were once financed publicly, but that corporations have taken an increasing role in funding them.

The size of the RoDa Drilling donation brings up the obvious question of a quid pro quo, Boyle added.

"Certainly, when people make six-, seven-figure donations, they are looking for access and influence."

A Contentious Confirmation Battle

One of the few places RoDa does come up is with regard to Arnall's ambassadorial confirmation. Arnall pledged to sever financial ties with RoDa Drilling, Ameriquest and a number of other companies and organizations. Nevertheless, Arnall's appointment was controversial on both sides of the Atlantic. In The Netherlands, Labor M.P. Bert Koenders criticized the governing party for accepting the nomination of Arnall. In an interview with the Associated Press, Koenders said, "There are doubts about Arnall's integrity because there are so many lawsuits against him. You have to be sure someone is perceived to be of the utmost integrity."

Those lawsuits were class-action suits against Ameriquest, some of which were settled for $325 million in January of 2006. The suits alleged predatory lending practices by the subprime lender.

The suits brought Arnall under heavy fire from consumer activists and nearly scuttled his appointment. During the confirmation hearings, Sen. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., voted against confirmation, telling The New York Times, "I do think we should send people who are not under a cloud of investigation. Mr. Arnall -- fairly or unfairly -- finds himself in that position. I need more answers before I can move forward."

And Sen. Paul Sarbannes, D-Md., sharply criticized Arnall and Ameriquest.

"All of this is what we call predatory lending," he said, according to the report. "Preying on the lack of knowledge and inexperience of borrowers who are often on the low end of the scale."

But Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn., voted for Arnall's confirmation, and said he was a worthy candidate.

"His personal actions have never been called into question. His credibility and integrity were praised by members from both sides of the aisle during his hearings. For these reasons, it is inappropriate to hold up Mr. Arnall's nomination."

Ultimately, Arnall was narrowly confirmed by the Senate, which was at that time under Republican control.

Ameriquest but a Memory

Today, Ameriquest has vanished from the landscape. Citigroup purchased Ameriquest and shut down its retail lending arm, keeping it alive only through its wholesale brand, Argent Mortgage. The company, which burst on the scene in 1997 and grew to the point where it owned blimps and the naming rights to the Texas Rangers' home field, has now faded from view. Citigroup, meanwhile, is struggling with the debts it obtained from the subprime lender; like almost every mortgage company, it has been hit hard by the recent collapse in the mortgage industry.

Ameriquest's fate is hardly unique, as the meltdown in mortgages continues to affect the lending industry. Industry tracking site ml-implode.com lists it among 183 lenders who have collapsed or disappeared since 2006.

But Arnall continues on, still ambassador to The Netherlands, still a multibillionaire. His purchase of an ambassadorship got him out of the country at precisely the right time, just before the floor fell in. And he's been happily ensconced in his position ever since.

What of 2008?

The donation by RoDa Drilling is important not just in the context of Arnall's ambassadorship, but also the way that money flows, unfettered, into both parties for their national conventions. There are no donation limits, so companies and organizations take advantage of the moment to spread the wealth around. About $78 million was poured into the 2004 RNC convention by donors, such as pharmaceutical giants Pfizer, which gave $1.6 million, and Bristol-Meyers-Squibb, which gave $250,000. Meanwhile, the Democrats took in more than $50 million in 2004, including more than $3 million from telecommunications behemoth Verizon.

Some changes were made this year to try to limit lobbyists and corporations from buying influence, including a ban on corporate parties for individual members of Congress, a tradition at past events. But Common Cause's Boyle said it remained to be seen how that would play out.

"We're already seeing lots of stories in newspapers about lobbyists scheming and planning how to get around that," she said, adding that lobbyists are considering whether a party thrown just before or just after a convention would be legal.

Regardless of whether that changes, the money that will be pumped into the Republican and Democratic National Conventions in 2008 will likely be even greater -- the RNC alone could top $100 million. It will be interesting to see how the money flows into St. Paul, who it's flowing from and what donors hope to gain from it.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Front Page News; Government
KEYWORDS: centrism; suprime
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Arnall is RINO.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1891779/posts?page=36#36

Where's LEO? Going once, going twice, SOLD!

1 posted on 12/24/2007 9:33:45 AM PST by VxH
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To: VxH
Another liberal rag ratting out donations to the Republicans.

It would be far more interesting to learn about Hildabeast's bundling scandals than to waste time writing about transparent donations to Republicans.

2 posted on 12/24/2007 9:37:25 AM PST by xtinct (I was the next door neighbor kid's imaginary friend.)
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To: xtinct
[It would be far more interesting to learn about Hildabeast's bundling scandals than to waste time writing about transparent donations to Republicans.]
 
Well this transparent donation just happens to be from sub-prime overlord Roland Arnall.
 
Turn the world's economic infrastructure into stone, get an ambassadorship.
 
Arnall is typical of the centrist cancer that has corrupted American politics.  He belongs in jail, not in the Hague.

3 posted on 12/24/2007 9:47:19 AM PST by VxH (One if by Land, Two if by Sea, and Three if by Wire Transfer)
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To: doug from upland

ping

Thought you’d be interested in the coverage of this.


4 posted on 12/24/2007 9:47:35 AM PST by Gondring (I'll give up my right to die when hell freezes over my dead body!)
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To: VxH
I see a quid and a quo, but no pro.
5 posted on 12/24/2007 9:49:17 AM PST by The Pack Knight (Duty, Honor, Country.)
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To: VxH

Typical. Dem and Repubs both do it. PS: Nobody cares who the Ambassador to 95% of the countries is.


6 posted on 12/24/2007 9:49:57 AM PST by purpleraine
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To: purpleraine
[Nobody cares who the Ambassador to 95% of the countries is.]
 
Do people care when criminal behavior is rewarded instead of being punished?

7 posted on 12/24/2007 9:52:00 AM PST by VxH (One if by Land, Two if by Sea, and Three if by Wire Transfer)
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To: VxH

Apparently not 50% of the country. Remember the Clinton pardons.


8 posted on 12/24/2007 9:56:10 AM PST by purpleraine
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To: VxH
Who cares who is the ambassador to anywhere?

I knew a man who was an amabassador during the GHWB administration and it cost him hundreds of thousands of dollars per year. Only the wealthy can afford it.

9 posted on 12/24/2007 9:57:39 AM PST by lonestar
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To: VxH

When I get a fundraising letter from the RNC, I seal up the return-reply envelope with nothing in it and mail it. I make them pay postage for an empty envelope.


10 posted on 12/24/2007 9:58:31 AM PST by no dems (FRED THOMPSON: The only Conservative running who can beat Hillary or Obama.)
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To: xtinct
Another liberal rag ratting out donations to the Republicans. It would be far more interesting to learn about Hildabeast's bundling scandals

Got that right.

The size of the RoDa Drilling donation brings up the obvious question of a quid pro quo, Boyle added.

"Certainly, when people make six-, seven-figure donations, they are looking for access and influence."

I must have missed the side bar about the likes of Soros?

appointed Arnall to serve as ambassador to The Netherlands.

That's supposed to be a payback? Brrr-rr

11 posted on 12/24/2007 10:01:39 AM PST by maine-iac7 (",,,but you can't fool all of the people all the time" LINCOLN)
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To: lonestar

I always wondered, if you were appointed ambassador to a place like Nigeria or Zimbabwe, did you have to make huge donations to get out?


12 posted on 12/24/2007 10:03:58 AM PST by Krankor (kROGER)
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To: xtinct

I agree somewhat, but really RNC/DNC - not much difference other than one letter.


13 posted on 12/24/2007 10:06:51 AM PST by ImpBill ("America ... Where are you now?" --Greg Adams--Brownsville, TX --On the other Front Line)
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To: VxH
Hmmmm...Mr. Fecke has failed to point out any illegal actions. And as far as legal “loopholes”, there is no such thing. The law is the law. Further, the article’s author gratuitously threw in a subprime mortgage comment. Without real linkage that's as relevant as the price of tea in China.

As far as I can tell from the article, Ambassador Arnall has not been convicted of anything. And the article presented no real information, just emotion.

Ambassador Arnall may be a RINO. But Mr. Fecke is definitely a hack writing another not-so-clever hit piece on the Republican Party. Maybe if he concentrated on proven illegal activities of the Democrat Party and its convicted & unindicted co-conspirators, the Clintons, he’d write an article with substance?!

14 posted on 12/24/2007 10:09:17 AM PST by DakotaGator
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To: VxH

reference bump.


15 posted on 12/24/2007 10:09:41 AM PST by AuntB (" It takes more than walking across the border to be an American." Duncan Hunter)
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To: purpleraine
[Apparently not 50% of the country. Remember the Clinton pardons.]
 
This is OUR party, not the Clinton's.
 
A Republic is a form of government characterized by the rule of law. 
 
Is the rule of law characterized by rewarding criminal behavior?

16 posted on 12/24/2007 10:11:31 AM PST by VxH (One if by Land, Two if by Sea, and Three if by Wire Transfer)
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To: lonestar
[Who cares who is the ambassador to anywhere?]
 
The only place subprime overlord Roland Arnall should be ambassador to is a Federal Prison Cell.
 
 

17 posted on 12/24/2007 10:13:17 AM PST by VxH (One if by Land, Two if by Sea, and Three if by Wire Transfer)
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To: DakotaGator
[Ambassador Arnall has not been convicted of anything.]
 
quid-pro-quo?
 
Dear Mr. Lee:   I was previously employed by Argent Mortgage for two and a half years and managed, among other areas, the corporation's fraud investigation, borrower complaints and repurchase departments. There are currently over 568 open fraud investigations involving hundreds of brokers and hundreds of millions of dollars in fraudulent loans that are being covered up by top executives in the company. If a broker sustains a certain monthly volume, Argent management looks the other way and, not only does not suspend the bad brokers, but knowingly sells these fraudulent loans on the secondary market to unwitting investors.
  I was terminated today and left with just my purse in tow, but I have names of individuals in the company who need to be served with subpoenas to enable them to turn over their spreadsheets and boxes full of documentation and evidence of all the fraud they have found that is being covered up by Argent Mortgage's executive management. The state regulators need to know the truth about the blind eye Argent turns to the fraud perpetrated on innocent consumers by high volume brokers. They also need to be aware that Argent knowingly bundles these fraudulent loans and sells them as mortgage-backed securities on Wall Street, thereby compromising the SEC, as well as our country's economic stability.
  At a recent fraud seminar attended by hundreds of mortgage lenders in Washington D.C. a week ago, an attorney who works for Argent's retained law firm, Buchalter Nemer, stood up and told the seminar attendees that the wholesale lenders in the audience had better beware, unless their name is Argent. Argent is safe from investigation because the government got their $325 million settlement from Ameriquest and won't be looking into Argent, per the settlement agreement. I hope this isn't true because Argent Mortgage funded over $50 billion in 2005 and is gearing up to fund well over $80 billion dollars of fraudulent loans in 2007.
 
 
 

18 posted on 12/24/2007 10:19:59 AM PST by VxH (One if by Land, Two if by Sea, and Three if by Wire Transfer)
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To: DakotaGator
[The law is the law.]
 
Only for the little people.  Others, apparently, are above it.  Just ask OJ.
 
 

19 posted on 12/24/2007 10:43:20 AM PST by VxH (One if by Land, Two if by Sea, and Three if by Wire Transfer)
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To: VxH

It is done all the time by both parties. About 1/3 of ambassadorships are filled by political appointees. It usually is a reward for big donors. So what?


20 posted on 12/24/2007 10:45:23 AM PST by kabar
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