Sunday, September 30, 2007

Lifestyles of the rich and infamous: Congressional scandal figures.

Lifestyles of the rich and infamous. And, unfortunately, once elected.


A front page story in Friday's New York Times takes a peek at the large number of disgraced lawmakers who have, at one time or another, anchored their yachts at "a 'floating trailer park' where everyone knows everyone else’s business," yet "neighbors tend not to discuss what they see and hear."


"When he is not at the Capitol, Senator Larry E. Craig spends much of his time aboard the Suz II, the 42-foot yacht that serves as his Washington home," Marilyn W. Thompson writes for the paper. "Further down D Dock at the Capital Yacht Club, his friend Senator Ted Stevens occasionally escapes the pressures of a federal investigation aboard his pleasure boat."


The article continues, "Former Representative Randy Cunningham, Republican of California, used to reside a few slips over on the Duke Stir before federal investigators built a bribery case against him. And at the Gangplank Marina next door, the disgraced congressmen Bob Ney, a Republican, and James A. Traficant Jr., a Democrat, both from Ohio, traded coveted slips for federal prison cells in bribery cases."


Thompson takes readers into a world where "[p]rotected by locked gates and security, members of Congress rub elbows with lawyers and lobbyists, judges and bureaucrats, established government contractors and aspiring ones, and others lucky enough to own expensive boats and secure a coveted slip."

In the October 1 issue of The New Yorker, Seth Hettena wrote of the "The D Dock Curse."


"In the past two years, thanks to the men of D Dock, club members have been subpoenaed to testify before a grand jury, they have witnessed federal agents on a raid, and they have grown used to reporters gathering like gulls on the sea wall," Hettena wrote.


One member told Hettena, "Are all these politicians even good for us? We used to think they were great. They could lobby on our behalf. Now it’s spinning the opposite way. We’re all wondering if there’s something in the water. Or maybe the ‘D’ stands for ‘dummy.’"

Members typically make public few details about their nautical lives, and Congressional rules require them to disclose boats as assets only if they produce income or are bought or sold.


Mr. Craig, who is known as exceptionally frugal, unwittingly called attention to the club when he gave the arresting officer in Minneapolis his club mail drop as a home address, 1000 Water Street SW. Mr. Craig, an outdoorsman who likes to fish and hunt, is a well-known figure at the marinas, where he has lived off and on during his Congressional career. More on the story.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

It might be too scary to be a visitor to the water street area.