(Traduction/résumé: ça dit que Stanford a contribué notamment à financer Phil Gramm, sénateur qui s'est targué ensuite d'avoir "tué la législation anti-blanchîment).
The Stanford Financial Group hired its first Washington lobbyists in 1999, at the time the anti-money laundering drive was gathering steam. And the company quickly learned how to cultivate pull in the Capitol -- between July 2000 and July 2001, Stanford and his employees doled out $448,000 in "soft money" contributions to senior lawmakers in both parties, according to a report by watchdog group Public Citizen.
Among the lawmakers benefiting from Stanford's largesse was Senate Banking Committee Chairman Phil Gramm (R-TX), who let a House-passed money laundering bill die a quiet death in his panel in the last months of the Clinton administration.
According to Public Citizen's report, "Gramm later publicly boasted to a group of bankers that 'I killed the administration's anti-money-laundering legislation.'" But Stanford's attention was by no means limited to Republicans, who happened to control the Senate at the time. Stanford made a splash at the 2000 Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles, a tale that we'll pick up in Part Two of Mr. Stanford Goes to Washington ...
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