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Ex-Washington lobbyist Abramoff, associate indicted in Florida
This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2005, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

MIAMI - A trail of intrigue that has followed an ill-fated gambling boat deal, including a Mafia-style hit and lawsuits over alleged financial irregularities, has now ensnared a man House Majority Leader Tom DeLay once called one of his ''dearest friends.''

Jack Abramoff, once a powerful Washington lobbyist and major Republican fundraiser, was accused Thursday in a federal grand jury indictment with conspiring with a partner to defraud two lenders out of $60 million in the casino boat deal.

A few months after the September 2000 transaction, the man who was selling the SunCruz Casinos fleet, Greek-born Konstantinos ''Gus'' Boulis, 51, was shot to death in his luxury car near his Fort Lauderdale office. Police described it as a gangland-style slaying that remains unsolved.

The six-count conspiracy and wire fraud indictment stems from the $147 million purchase of SunCruz by Abramoff and a partner, New York businessman Adam Kidan.

Prosecutors say they concocted a fake $23 million wire transfer to Boulis to make it appear they were putting a cash stake into the transaction.

''That document was counterfeit. The defendants never transferred these funds and never made a cash equity contribution toward the purchase of SunCruz,'' said U.S. Attorney R. Alexander Acosta of Miami.

Abramoff is also under investigation by a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Senate Indian Affairs Committee for deals in which he and an associate received at least $66 million from six Indian tribes to lobby for their casinos and other interests. The tribes question whether the charges were excessive.

Congressional Democrats have also raised questions about Abramoff's ties to DeLay, who is not named in either an earlier SunCruz civil lawsuit filed by the lenders nor the indictment released Thursday.

DeLay has asked the House Ethics Committee to review allegations that Abramoff or his clients paid some of DeLay's overseas travel expenses. DeLay has denied knowing that the expenses were paid by Abramoff, whom he once described as ''one of my closest and dearest friends.''

Abramoff collected more than $100,000 for President Bush's 2004 re-election campaign and raised thousands of dollars for DeLay and other Republican members of Congress. He also was friends with former Christian Coalition leader Ralph Reed, now a Republican candidate for lieutenant governor in Georgia.

Abramoff denies any wrongdoing in the SunCruz deal and insists that his signature on the wire transfer was obtained under false pretenses, said his Miami defense lawyer, Neal Sonnett.

Friend of DeLay: The charges include conspiracy and fraud in a $147M casino-boat deal
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