Peter Cloeren

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Peter Cloeren is president and majority shareholder[1] of The Cloeren Company, also known as Cloeren Incorporated, a plastics manufaturing company[2] in Orange, Texas.


"led astray" by Tom DeLay

In June 1998, Cloeren "pleaded guilty[3] to paying his employees to funnel $37,000 to a Texas Republican congressional candidate. He has also told the Federal Election Commission and The Hill's Jock Friedly who led him astray. The guilty parties, Cloeren alleges, include none other than Tom DeLay, the House Majority Whip. A DeLay aide called Cloeren 'a liar, a cheat, and a fraud' before insisting that he not be quoted and threatening never to speak to The Hill again," Susan Threadgill wrote in the November 1998 issue of The Washington Monthly.[4]

"Of special interest to criminal investigators in 2004 was DeLay's role in funneling illegal campaign contributions through corporate accounts to finance GOP candidates. Peter Cloeren, a Texas businessman and loyal Republican donor, charged that DeLay orchestrated a campaign contribution conduit scheme in which money was funneled through a variety of candidates and organizations to support a Republican candidate from Texas.[5]

"Cloeren told a congressional investigator that DeLay told him about this scheme and showed him how to funnel cash through a corporation called Triad, which controlled non-profit foundations that held money for these purposes. Money was also illegally shuffled through other campaigns, Cloeren stated.

"While DeLay earned only the ire of campaign finance reform activists and others interested in ethics, Cloeren was fined $400,000 and received a 2-year community service sentence for his role in DeLay's campaign scheme," Joel Wendland wrote March 21, 2005, in Political Affairs Magazine.[6]

In March 2006, Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle issued a subpoena requesting "records relating to contributions made by Citizens United Political Victory Fund through Peter Cloeren, Patricia Cloeren or Cloeren, Inc."[7]

Resources and articles

References

  1. 2006 WI App 190. Published Opinion, Court of Appeals. Decision dated and filed August 1, 2006.
  2. Cloeren Inc. website.
  3. Henry A. Waxman, "Campaign Finance Investigation Abuses," Office of Henry A. Waxman, U.S. House of Representatives, October 8, 1998.
  4. Susan Threadgill, "Who's Who?" The Washington Monthly, November 1998.
  5. 105th Congress; 2nd Session. House Committee on Government Affairs; Senate Report 105-167 Part 5: Investigation of Illegal or Improper Activities in Connection with 1996 FedElection Campaigns," Ordered to be printed March 10, 1998: "Peter Cloeren of Orange, Texas, made a contribution to Texas House candidate Brian Babin in September 1996. On October 14, Cloeren made a $5,000 contribution to Citizens United. On the same day, Citizens United made a $5,000 contribution to Babin. On October 1, Cloeren made a $20,000 contribution to Triad-affiliated Citizens for Reform. Citizens for Reform spent an unknown amount on television commercials attacking Babin opponent Jim Turner."
  6. Joel Wendland, "Republican Party Stars: Corporate Sponsored and Ethically Challenged," Political Affairs Magazine, March 21, 2005. Scroll down to "Tom DeLay: Corporate Strongman".
  7. Sherry Koonce, "DeLay case hits home - DA issues subpoena for Cloeren's 1996 contribution records," The Orange Leader, March 27, 2006.

External articles