for stuff related to the Abramoff scandal! I stumbled on this quite by accident!
snip...
Abramoff reached out to his old friends Grover Norquist, leader of Americans for Tax Reform, and Ralph Reed, former leader of the Christian Coalition, to help rile up support among religious right leaders. Norquist and Reed funneled money to the Christian Coalition of Alabama (CCA), and CCA retained Reed as a lobbyist. In February and March of 2000, Norquist directed $850,000 from the Choctaws to CCA. The CCA's anti-gambling campaign solved the Choctaw's problem with its rival Indian tribe.
But now CCA has an image problem. The Boston Globe revealed in an interview with Norquist that the money which fueled CCA's anti-gambling campaign in Alabama originated from one of Abramoff's gambling industry clients. The Abramoff scandal has resulted in Abramoff's conviction for conspiracy, wire fraud, and mail fraud. Abramoff has been sentenced to 70 months in prison. The scandal has also embroiled Norquist, Reed, and a number of religious right groups and leaders, including CCA.
Yet instead of returning the cash from the tribe with a casino and issuing an apology, the CCA is now engaged in self-righteous finger-pointing. Their target? The CCA is blaming trial lawyers for exercising their freedom of speech by making political campaign contributions. Now why would the CCA say a thing like that?
In a high-profile campaign headlined on its homepage, the CCA claims, "Trial lawyer political donations are undermining traditional family values." And in a flyer prepared for direct mail distribution, the CCA asserts, "Trial lawyers are attacking our Christian values." "Trial lawyers are behind the forces undermining our rights and beliefs." What rights and beliefs do they mean? CCA complains that trial lawyers -- through their perfectly legal, fully disclosed campaign contributions -- are funding legislators and judges who support reproductive freedom, marriage equality, and the teaching of science (and not religious dogma) in public school science classes. God bless trial lawyers who do contribute to all that; many Christians support those same freedoms and values.
But the remedy, according to CCA, is for Christians to tell judicial candidates not to accept campaign donations from trial lawyers "because of their anti-Christian agenda."
However, the CCA knows that trial lawyers do not have an anti-Christian agenda, and that in fact, Alabama trial lawyers contributed nearly a million dollars to three conservative Christian candidates for the Alabama Supreme Court in 2004. These three candidates campaigned on the fact that they share the same judicial philosophy as former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Judge Roy S Moore, the "Ten Commandments" judge. In November 2003, Moore was booted out of office by the unanimous decision of an ethics committee for refusing to remove a granite monument of the Ten Commandments from the statehouse rotunda. Moore's opponents contended that the former Alabama Chief Justice's actions undermined President Thomas Jefferson's wall of separation between church and state.
more...
http://www.talk2action.org/story/2006/4/14/21537/1823---------------------------------------------------
EDIT: COPYRIGHT: PLEASE POST ONLY 4 OR 5 PARAGRAPHS
FROM THE COPYRIGHTED NEWS SOURCE PER DU RULES.