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Posted November 6, 2006
                     
U.S./HAITI
Top Republicans Leave Telecom Accused of Bribery
                  
By LUCY KOMISAR

NEW YORK, Nov 6 (IPS) - Five nationally prominent U.S. Republicans, the independent board members of a corporation that has been charged with paying hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes to get a sweetheart telecom deal in Haiti, are leaving its board.

The company is IDT, the world's third-ranked international phone company.

The Republicans are Rudy Boschwitz, former senator from Minnesota; James S. Gilmore III, former Virginia governor; Thomas Slade Gorton III, former senator from Washington State; Jack Kemp, former congressman from New York and 1996 vice presidential nominee; and Jeane Kirkpatrick, the former U.S. ambassador to the U.N. under President Ronald Reagan.

They are not included among nominees on the IDT proxy statement filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Oct. 30. Two other independent board members, Warren Blaker and Saul K. Fenster, are also leaving, and four company board members are stepping down, whilst three others are coming on, reducing the board from 15 to seven members, with the independents at a one-person majority.

IDT is run by James Courter, a former Republican congressman from New Jersey. The company is under investigation by the SEC, the United States Attorney in Newark, New Jersey, and a U.S. federal grand jury for allegedly paying bribes to Jean-Bertrand Aristide, former president of Haiti.

The five board members either declined or did not respond to requests for comment. The Oppenheimer Fund, the largest institutional investor in IDT, also chose not to comment.

However, Herb Denton, president of Providence Capital, a New York investment firm with stock in the company until March, said, "Kirkpatrick, Gordon, Gilmore, Kemp and Boschwitz were pals and friends of James Courter," he told IPS. "Why do you put very powerful politicians on your board? Because you like them, you think they're capable, and they buy you protection."

Of the independents, only Marc J. Oppenheimer, president of Octagon Associates, Inc., a banking and financial strategy firm, currently serves on the board. The new members will be James R. Mellor, former CEO of General Dynamics; Alan Claman, former president of an aerospace company; and Judah Schorr, who owns an anesthesia supplier.

Denton noted that other than Mellor, the new board nominees had never sat on other company boards, which was unusual. He explained, "You want business people with public company board experience."

IDT spokesperson Gil Nielsen said that the company two weeks ago had told the SEC it planned to reduce the size of its board "as part of a cost saving and restructuring plan". He said, "Clearly, the fact that several board members will not stand for re-election is only a result of the proposed reduction in the number of board seats." Nielsen did not explain why IDT, while removing some members, added three new people to its board.

He said, "As far as any allegations concerning Haiti, IDT continues to maintain that any such claims are false and without merit and are the result of a former disgruntled employee."

Bribery allegations were first raised by a former IDT executive, Michael Jewett, who said that IDT made a deal to pay off Aristide in return for a lucrative contract to provide phone service to Haiti, paying nine cents a minute instead of the legally mandated 23 cents. He said that the money was paid to a secret offshore bank account controlled by Aristide and listed in the name of a shell company in the Turks and Caicos Islands. Jewett says that when he refused to go along with the deal, he was fired. In October 2005, he sued the company in U.S. court for wrongful dismissal.

Following the Jewett allegations, in November 2005, the government of Haiti and the phone company, Teleco, filed a RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organisations Act) lawsuit in Miami against the former president and his alleged collaborators. It says that in one six-month period, February to April 2004, IDT paid 302,588 dollars in kickbacks to the Aristide group.

Through his lawyer, Ira Kurzban, Aristide has denied all charges and described them as a "political investigation".

Regarding the recent shake-up of the board, Denton said, "I speculate there's something rotten in Denmark." He said he thought the departure of the Republican board members "goes back to the 27 million dollars this company spent over three years on Bill Weld's law firm [McDermott, Weld and Emery]."

Until he resigned in fall 2005, William F. Weld, the former Republican governor of Massachusetts, was a member of the IDT board and chairman of its corporate governance committee.

Denton said, "We have no investment in this company at this moment. We used to own stock in the company until we started to wonder why the company spent nine million dollars a year on Bill Weld's law firm. There was something they were investigating, in my opinion. We got out of it this year." Weld did not respond to a request for comment.

Denton explained, "This company acquired licenses to do telecommunications in a lot of strange parts of the world. 'Notoriously corrupt' are the words that come to mind. I think Weld's law firm was looking at dozens of other countries that are notoriously corrupt, such as Russia, the Caribbean, South America, where this company does business. I asked Courter 'How did they get all these licenses?' He said, 'We swarm all over them'."

Denton said, "I don't think so; that doesn't sound plausible to me. This company was put together in 1993 and they sprung up like mushrooms all over the world getting telecom licenses in notoriously corrupt places. I don't think Teleco Haiti gave a darn whether they were 'swarmed'. They cared that Aristide got paid off."

He noted, "The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act goes right to the board of directors. [The Act bans bribery and kickbacks.] Gorton, Kemp, Kirkpatrick, Boschwitz and Gilmore have reputations to protect. Why do they leave all at one time?"

After Weld's departure, his fellow Republicans were the sole members of the corporate governance committee. Boschwitz was also on the audit committee, which investigated the Haiti bribery charge and concluded that there was no wrongdoing.

The directors are paid 25,000 dollars, plus 15,000 dollars if they are directors of IDT subsidiaries. They also get stock options. Denton said that the only serious new candidate who replaced them was James Mellor, the former General Dynamics CEO, who is on a committee of Net-to-Phone, an IDT subsidiary.

The IDT's shareholder's meeting will be Dec. 14 at the company's headquarters in Newark, New Jersey. Denton said he would be there. He said, "I wouldn't miss this for the world."

*Lucy Komisar is a New York-based investigative journalist writing a book on the international impact of the offshore bank and corporate secrecy system. (END/2006)

Related texts: Aristide's secret bank accounts / Haiti tops world corruption table

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