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Wrangling Over Rangel: What Do We Know?

There's nothing that inspires confidence like the chair of the House Ways and Means Committee -- the body that writes our tax laws -- submitting a financial disclosure form in which the value for one piece of property varies by as much as 10 times from one page to another. But that's the case with embattled New York Democrat Charlie Rangel.

We learned yesterday that, with crucial support from Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Rangel will defy GOP calls for his resignation and stay on as chair of the powerhouse committee. So given that Rangel's going to be around for at least a while longer, we thought it was worth running down the allegations against the Harlem Congressman.

The trouble started for Rangel in July, when an investigation by the New York Times found that Rangel rents four rent-stabilized apartments -- one of which he uses as a campaign office -- in the same Harlem building, at well below market rates. City and state regulations prevent the use of rent-controlled apartments for purposes other than as a primary residence.

The more serious charge, first reported by the New York Post at the end of August, is that Rangel failed to disclose -- either on his tax returns or on Congressional disclosure forms -- over $75,000 in income from a rental villa he owns in the Dominican Republic. Rangel has called the disclosure failures an oversight, and has admitted that he owes around $10,000 in back taxes and penalties.

The Ways and Means Committee, which Rangel chairs, is in charge of writing federal tax laws, making the news particularly embarrassing for Rangel.

A few days after the Post's report, Bloomberg News reported that Rangel received an interest-free loan from the developers of the villa, when he bought it in 1990. But, according to the director of the complex that contains the villa, several other non-Dominican investors received similar breaks at the time, because the project wasn't producing sufficient income.

Rangel has asked the House Ethics Committee to look into both the rent-stabilized apartments issue and the Dominican villa issue, as well as a third matter -- that he used his Congressional office letterhead to solicit donors for an educational center named for himself, and run by the City College of New York. In addition, Rangel directed a forensic accounting expert to pore over his tax returns and financial disclosure statements to Congress, and to submit a report to the Ethics Committee.

On Monday, it was announced that the accountant had found additional discrepancies.

As summarized by the Associated Press:


-Rangel's papers over the past 10 years show no reference to the sale of a home he once owned on Colorado Avenue in Washington.
-The details of a property bought in Sunny Isles, Fla., are bewildering at best. The stated value changes significantly from year to year, and even page to page, from $50,000 to $100,000 all the way up to $500,000.
-Some of the entries for investment funds fluctuate strangely, suggesting that the person either didn't have accurate information or didn't fill out the paperwork correctly.

In a statement put out alongisde the announcement of the discrepencies, Rangel said:

"While over the years I delegated to my staff the completion of my annual House financial disclosure statements, I had the ultimate responsibility. I owed my colleagues and the public adherence to a higher standard of care not only as a member of Congress but even more as the chair of the House Ways and Means Committee," he said.

And it was reported today that Rangel has asked the Ethics Committe to allow him to use campaign contributions to pay for the forensic audit of his tax returns and disclosure forms -- which could end up costing more than $100,000.

Right now, the jury is still out on what this all adds up to. At best, Rangel has been irresponsibly lax in the management of his financial affairs. And he may have been deliberately mendacious. But as things currently stand, there's little evidence of a quo for the quid.

On the issue of the Harlem apartments, Rangel did have a 2005 meeting with a lobbyist for the Olnick Association, the company that owns the building in question, when Olnick was seeking government approval for two building projects in the Bronx and Harlem. But both Olnick and Rangel say the Congressman took no action on the company's behalf, and neither project advanced.

And as for the Dominican vila, there's no evidence whatsoever that Rangel took steps to help the company that owned the complex, or that his failure to pay taxes on the villa income, or make proper disclosures to Congress, was abetted by anyone seeking favors from him.

Still, at the very least, Rangel's inability to personally comply with the tax laws doesn't inspire much confidence that he's the best person to be writing those laws.


13 Comments

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The Dems need to dump this guy quickly. I know we shouldn't rush to judgment, but they can at least put up the pretense of acting and not stonewalling. A clean party is what they should strive for.

Has the spirit of Adam Clayton Powell possessed poor Charlie? Maybe it’s in the water? . If he couldn’t afford a CPA or Tax Attorney, might I suggest TurboTax? How can an intelligent, articulate man such as Mr. Rangel do what he’s done financially and expect us to believe it was an honest mistake? Under reporting income is a criminal offense, and while the IRS applies a lower standard for Congressmen than Citizens, I’d expect more from Pelosi (just kidding; Nancy has no standards).

Sorry Charlie.

Rangel, I know you are an honorable person, but it's also clear that years of power has caused you to be complacent and lazy. You correctly took the ultimate blame for the utter disgrace of your financial statements as well as the tax issues. Now is the time to follow up and step down from your chairmanship. Don't hold onto power for the sake of power. Take a year to clean up your closet and then come back to us for regaining the privilege of heading such an important part of Congress. Don't think of the chairmanship as a right but an honor. For the sake of our party and our country, don't let your personal ambitions overtake your character.

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agreed

I believe Rangel should step down voluntarily and let the ethics committee, and any other investigation that takes place, clear him or not. I've always liked Rangel, but if he's done something intentionally dishonest, he needs to, not only step down as Chairman, but resign his seat. Democrats cannot condemn Republicans for corrupt behavior, and then allow it within their own.

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It's only fair to call him out on this sloppy business; but in the light of what perspective do we do so?
Where's the forest?
Can we have a forensic auditor go over Cheney's returns?

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And, to follow up on the last line of Zachary's story, neither does Passive Pelosi's blank-check backing of him (payoff not disclosed in public) inspire much confidence in the Speaker of the House seriously dealing with ethics issues.

And, it is more like "Champagne Charlie," not "poor Charlie."

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Why is Rangel being targeted now? I can think of more than a few representatives and senators with similar financial histories (including a few candidates for president). Where is this sudden emphasis on ethics coming from and who is really behind it?

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First, my prediction as to which black politician gets hit with trumped up corruption charges before Election Day:

#1 pick - Governor Deval Patrick of Massachusetts

Think I am exaggerating? Read up on what the GOP did to Congressman William H. Gray III of Philadelphia in 1990 after he became House majority whip.

I heard a few weeks ago that the Feds were looking into Andrew J. Young's business.

I will always be grateful to Charlie Rangel for never missing an opportunity to cheerfully stick it the Republicans during the dark days of the DeLay era.

Two years ago, Rangel, who is 78 years old, made noise about retiring but I think the Dems talked him out of it.

Rangel and his staff should have known that his business and personal affairs would be scrutinized very closely this year, especially after Obama won the nomination.

Rangel's rent-controlled NYC apartments were hardly a secret and I'm sure Rove had that fact up his sleeve for years.

I'm also sure that Rove could have found who rented Charlie's Dominican villa fairly easily because Pepe Fanjul, the Florida sugar baron and big GOP supporter, controls a big piece of the D.R.

I couldn't find the property records for the Sunny Isles condo which I assume is in Miami-Dade County.

A couple of weeks ago, there was an inflammatory and very misleading entry in Rangel's Wiki bio that linked Charlie to Louis Farrakhan and the cold-blooded murder of a NYC policeman in
the '60s. I notice it has been removed.

What's in store for Charlie Rangel? Are we going to have to defend him against charges that he didn't earn his medals during the Korean War?

Message to Ken Mehlman: We all knew your so-called apology was bullshit.


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Mrs Panstreppon,

As always, your posts are on point. Thank you for another insightful explanation, I'd forgotten about Fanjul's ties to the Bush family.

No resigning. He should fight this. If all of it was true it's still pretty thin in comparison to take-your-pick Republican problems.
Rent controlled and rent stabilized apartments are two totally different classifications. Most apartments in New York are rent stabilized and you do pretty much whatever you think you can sneak by the landlord. Paying more rent is the penalty for getting caught. God bless him if one of those apartments is rent controlled. Those are the Holy Grail. You keep those in your immediate family forever.
Rental income is screwed up tax-wise. Big time property owners don't want it classified as income. It can be really hard to figure out how it's taxable. And letter head stationary? Please. Next case.

Rangel needs to go.

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Rangel should step down.

We do not need, nor can we afford the appearance of chummy insiderism. We need to draw a clear distinction. This is not the party of Ted Stevens.

Step down now.

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