Keyword: charleskushner
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The Federal Election Commission (FEC) has entered into conciliation agreements with Charles Kushner, a New Jersey-based real estate developer, and 40 partnership entities he controls. The agreements settle an investigation stemming from over $500,000 in contributions that the partnerships made without obtaining the agreement of the individual partners to whom the contributions were attributed. The contributions were made between December 5, 1997 and August 17, 2000 for the 1999-2000 election cycle. Recipients of these contributions included 13 candidate committees, one party committee and one PAC. The conciliation agreement with the Kushner Respondents resulted in a civil penalty of $508,900. The...
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FEC levels one of largest fines against NJ developer Wednesday June 30, 2004 By DONNA DE LA CRUZ Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) The Federal Election Commission on Wednesday leveled one of its largest fines ever against a New Jersey developer for contributing money to political candidates in the names of his partnerships when he did not have the authority to do so. Charles Kushner, a major Democratic Party donor, agreed to pay FEC $508,900, said FEC spokesman George Smaragdis. The FEC investigation focused on $540,900 contributed to various political candidates and committees between Dec. 5, 1997 and Aug. 17,...
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<p>TRENTON -- Wealthy developer Charles Kushner twice amended his financial disclosure statement last week to clarify his relationship with NorCrown Bank, trying but failing to quell demands for him to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee.</p>
<p>At one point last week, Kushner's lawyer said his client owned nearly 100 percent of the bank, which would make hundreds of thousands of dollars in political donations he has made illegal. The lawyer retracted that, but critics say Kushner still isn't forthcoming in ethics disclosures.</p>
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Pledge to yield $113,000 is largest from a politician U.S. Sen. Jon Corzine and a national Democratic fund-raising committee he runs are giving up $113,000 in campaign contributions received over the years from real estate developer Charles Kushner, party officials said yesterday. Kushner was arrested Tuesday by federal agents on charges of obstructing a federal investigation into his finances and campaign contributions. Prosecutors accuse him of hiring prostitutes to have sex with two government witnesses, and say he sent a secretly recorded videotape of an encounter between a prostitute and one of the witnesses -- identified by sources as Kushner's...
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Call girl scandal has got the right ring for the GOP Thursday, July 15, 2004 There is nothing like a call girl to bring down a government. When I was 12 years old, for example, I can remember bicycling to the park with my friends as we discussed the Profumo scandal in England. Who was Profumo? We didn't know. We did know the name of one of the call girls, however: Mandy Rice-Davies. I still remember it to this day. When I did a Google search on her, I found out that the affair brought down the government of Harold...
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NEWARK, N.J. (AP) - Federal prosecutors have charged Gov. James E. McGreevey's top fund-raiser with hiring a prostitute to try to thwart a federal probe, authorities said Tuesday. Real estate developer Charles Kushner hired a New York City call girl to have sex with a witness in the investigation, had the sex act videotaped and sent the witness' wife a copy of the tape, U.S. attorney Christopher J. Christie said. Kushner, 50, is charged with conspiracy, obstructing a federal investigation and promoting interstate prostitution, Christie said. Kushner was under criminal investigation for possible tax fraud and illegal campaign contributions,...
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<p>TRENTON -- Gov. McGreevey relied on exaggerated anti-terrorism credentials to justify hiring a 33-year-old Israeli national, Golan Cipel, as a highly paid adviser, a Gannett New Jersey investigation revealed.</p>
<p>The overstated credentials of Cipel, a low-level officer in the Israeli reserves who worked in public relations at the Israeli Consulate in New York, add to a series of questions that have been raised since McGreevey hired the Israeli citizen early this year for a $110,000-a-year post in the governor's office.</p>
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