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Abscam

Abscam, sometimes written ABSCAM, was an FBI sting operation in the late 1970s and early 1980s that led to the convictions of seven members of the United States Congress and others for bribery and corruption.[1] The two-year investigation initially targeted trafficking in stolen property and corruption of prominent businessmen, but later evolved into a public corruption investigation. The FBI was aided by the Justice Department and convicted con-man Mel Weinberg in videotaping politicians accepting bribes from a fictitious Arabian company in return for various political favors.[2]

U.S. Representative Michael Myers, second from left, holds an envelope containing $50,000 that he just received from undercover FBI agents

More than 30 political figures were investigated, and six members of the House of Representatives and one senator were convicted.[3] One member of the New Jersey State Senate, members of the Philadelphia City Council, the Mayor of Camden, New Jersey, and an inspector for the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service were also convicted. The operation was directed from the FBI's office in Hauppauge, New York, and was under the supervision of Assistant Director Neil J. Welch, who headed the bureau's New York division, and Thomas P. Puccio, head of the Justice Department's Organized Crime Strike Force for the Eastern District of New York.

"Abscam" was the FBI codename for the operation, which law enforcement authorities said was a contraction of "Arab scam".[4] The American-Arab Relations Committee made complaints, so officials revised the source of the contraction to "Abdul scam" after the name of its fictitious company.[5]

Operation

In March 1978, John F. Good of the FBI's office in suburban Long Island created and oversaw a sting operation called "Abscam", which was initially intended to investigate theft, forgery and stolen art.[6][7][8][9] The FBI employed Melvin Weinberg, a convicted swindler, international con artist and informant, and his girlfriend, Evelyn Knight, to help plan and conduct the operation. They were facing a prison sentence at the time and in exchange for their help, the FBI agreed to let them out on probation.[3] Weinberg, supervised by the FBI, created a fake company called Abdul Enterprises in which FBI employees posed as fictional Arab sheikhs led by owners Kambir Abdul Rahman and Yassir Habib, who had millions of dollars to invest in the United States.[8] Weinberg instructed the FBI to fund a $1 million account with the Chase Manhattan Bank in the name of Abdul Enterprises, giving the company the credibility it needed to further its operation.[2]

When a forger who was under investigation suggested to the sheikhs that they invest in casinos in New Jersey and that licensing could be obtained for a price, the Abscam operation was re-targeted toward political corruption. Each congressman who was approached would be given a large sum of money in exchange for "private immigration bills" to allow foreigners associated with Abdul Enterprises into the country and for building permits and licenses for casinos in Atlantic City, among other investment arrangements.[10] Among the casino projects involved were the Ritz-Carlton Atlantic City,[11] the Dunes Hotel and Casino (Atlantic City),[12] the Penthouse Boardwalk Hotel and Casino, and the sheikh's fictional casino.[13] The first political figure ensnared in the phony investment scheme was Camden mayor Angelo Errichetti. In exchange for monetary kickbacks, Errichetti told the sheikhs' representatives "I'll give you Atlantic City." Errichetti helped to recruit several government officials and United States congressmen who were willing to grant political favors in exchange for monetary bribes (originally $100,000 but then reduced to $50,000).[3]

The FBI recorded each of the money exchanges and, for the first time in American history, surreptitiously videotaped government officials accepting bribes.[8] The meeting places included a house in the Foxhall neighborhood of Washington, D.C., which was owned by Lee Lescaze,[14] a yacht in Florida, and hotel rooms in Pennsylvania and New Jersey.[citation needed]

Each convicted politician was given a separate trial. During these trials, much controversy arose regarding the ethics of Operation Abscam. Many lawyers defending their clients accused the FBI of entrapment. Though some judges concurred,[15] [16] appeals eventually overruled this claim and each politician was convicted.[17]

Convictions

Of the 31 targeted officials, the following members of Congress were convicted of bribery and conspiracy in 1981:

Five other government officials were convicted, including

Angelo Errichetti

Angelo Errichetti, mayor of Camden, New Jersey, was the first government official to be caught in Operation Abscam.[3] Errichetti first accepted the bribe in exchange for obtaining a casino license in Atlantic City for Abdul Enterprises. He then introduced Abdul to Senator Harrison Williams, who also took the bait. Errichetti also introduced Michael Myers and Raymond Lederer to the company, and arranged meetings for them with the undercover agents. He also introduced the "Arab businessmen" to Frank Thompson Jr. By the middle of 1979, Errichetti had arranged meetings with an entire list of state and federal politicians who were willing to go in on the operation.[2] The FBI set up video cameras in a hotel suite near New York's John F. Kennedy Airport to record the transactions between the undercover agents and Errichetti.[3] He was convicted on the federal bribery charges, for which he served about three years in prison.

Harrison A. Williams

Senator Harrison "Pete" Williams (D-N.J.) was indicted on October 30, 1980,[18] and convicted on May 1, 1981,[19] on nine counts of bribery and conspiracy to use his office to aid in business ventures.[20] Williams repeatedly met with the FBI agents and had worked out a deal where he would become involved in a titanium mining operation by way of having 18% of the company's shares issued to his lawyer, Alexander Feinberg. Williams then promised to steer government contracts to the venture by using his position in the Senate.

At his trial, lawyers for Williams argued that he had not actually been bribed because the stock in the titanium mining company was worthless. Other defenses attempting to have the charges dismissed included that he was a victim of selective prosecution by the Justice Department because he had supported the presidential bid of Ted Kennedy over Jimmy Carter in the Democratic primary.[21] These premises were not accepted by the jury, who convicted Williams after 28 hours of deliberation on May 1, 1981. Later appeals made by Williams included arguments that a main prosecution witness had perjured himself and that Williams had been a victim of entrapment. The guilty verdict was upheld, and Williams was sentenced to three years in prison.

Because of the convictions, the Senate Ethics Committee voted to censure Williams and put a motion to the floor to expel him for charges of bringing dishonor upon the Senate and his "ethically repugnant behavior". Supporters of Williams moved that the censure was enough, and that the expulsion was unnecessary. The Senate voted to censure Williams, but before the vote on his expulsion could occur, Williams resigned his seat. In his resignation speech, Williams proclaimed his innocence and argued that the investigation into his activities was a grievous assault on the rights of the Senate, and that other senators should be wary of unchecked investigations into their activities by other branches of the government.[22]

Williams served two years of his three-year sentence at a federal penitentiary in Newark, New Jersey. He served the remainder of his term at the Integrity House halfway house, where he later became a member of the board of directors until his death by cancer on November 17, 2001. He also attempted to receive a presidential pardon from President Bill Clinton but his request was denied. Williams was the first Senator to be imprisoned in almost 80 years and, had the expulsion motion been approved, would have been the first Senator to be expelled from the Senate since the Civil War.

Linguistics expert Roger Shuy is convinced of Williams' innocence. In a recording of Williams' encounter with an agent disguised as a sheikh, "At one point, the sheikh put the bribe directly to Williams: 'I would like to give you...some money for, for permanent residence.' The first four words of Williams's reply were 'No, no, no, no.'"[23] A prosecution memo at the time stated that there was no case against Williams but the judge, who in his ruling decried "the cynicism and hypocrisy of corrupt government officials", set it aside. After trial, the lead juror said that had he known all the facts he would not have found Williams guilty.[24]

Frank Thompson

Frank Thompson (D-NJ) was a member of the House from Trenton, New Jersey, who was indicted and convicted of accepting a bribe from an FBI agent posing as an Arab sheik. Thompson was offered money in exchange for helping the Arabs overcome certain immigration laws.[2] Well-liked by his constituents, he was the longest-serving member of Congress convicted in Operation Abscam.

Thompson abstained on the vote to expel Representative Myers, the first Congressman to be indicted. While most of the politicians resigned, Myers was expelled from the House, and Williams did not resign until the vote on his expulsion was almost to take place. Thompson himself was not expelled from the House of Representatives because he lost his re-election campaign in 1980 to Republican Chris Smith, a relatively unknown candidate who in 1978 had run against Thompson as a sacrificial lamb candidate. Smith won the 1980 election by a margin of 20,000 votes. On December 29, 1980, Thompson resigned his seat in the US House of Representatives. Smith has since represented Thompson's former district continuously through the 117th United States Congress.

On December 2, 1980, Thompson was indicted on bribery charges. Thompson spent $24,000 of campaign funds fighting the charges and appealing his conviction on grounds of entrapment. Thompson was convicted of bribery and conspiracy charges and sentenced to three years in prison, starting in 1983. He served two years before being released, and worked as a consultant in Washington until his death in 1989.

John M. Murphy

Thompson introduced John M. Murphy to the operation. Murphy was from Staten Island, New York. He was chairman for the Committee on the Merchant Marine and Fisheries. He accepted monetary bribes in exchange for his resources.[2] Murphy's conviction differed from the other Congressmen. His conviction was considered "receiving an unlawful gratuity" instead of bribery but he served three years in prison for conspiracy charges only. Murphy was not filmed taking the $50,000 that most other participants took that day, instead arguing on tape with attorney Howard Criden about who would pick up Murphy's money for him, which Criden did at a John F. Kennedy airport hotel.[25]

Richard Kelly

In 1982 the conviction of Richard Kelly was overturned on the grounds of entrapment. Kelly, the sole Republican, said that he was only pretending to be involved with the bribery from Abdul Enterprises. He claimed that he was conducting his own operation dealing with corruption and that the FBI was ruining his own investigation. However, an appeals court upheld the conviction and Kelly served 13 months in prison.[26]

John Jenrette

John Jenrette was one of the few who resigned before being expelled from the House.[2] During the operation, Jenrette was asked by an undercover FBI agent if he would take the bribe from the Sheikh. He replied, "I've got larceny in my blood. I'd take it in a goddamn minute."[3]

Also approached by the FBI

John Murtha

John Murtha (D-PA) was one of the Congressmen who refused to take the bribe from the undercover agents. He too was videotaped[27] in his encounter with undercover FBI operatives.[28] Although he was never convicted or prosecuted, he was named an unindicted co-conspirator in the scandal.[29] As such, he testified against Frank Thompson (D-NJ) and John Murphy (D-NY), the two Congressmen mentioned as participants in the deal at the same meeting. A short clip from the videotape shows Murtha stating "I'm not interested, I'm sorry. At this point..." in direct response to an offer of $50,000 in cash.[30]

In November 1980, the Justice Department announced that Murtha would not face prosecution for his part in the scandal. The U.S. Attorney's Office reasoned that Murtha's intent was to obtain investment in his district. Full length viewing of the tape shows Murtha citing prospective investment opportunities that could return "500 or 1,000" miners to work. In July 1981, the House Ethics Committee also chose not to file charges against Murtha following a mostly party-line vote. The resignation later that day of attorney E. Barrett Prettyman Jr., the panel's special counsel and a Democrat, has been interpreted as an act of protest.[31]

Murtha remained prominent in Congress, and was re-elected by his constituency 19 times over the course of 36 years before his death on February 8, 2010.[32]

Larry Pressler

Senator Larry Pressler (R-SD) refused to take the bribe, saying at the time, "Wait a minute, what you are suggesting may be illegal." He immediately reported the incident to the FBI. When Senator Pressler was told that Walter Cronkite referred to him on the evening news as a "hero" he stated, "I do not consider myself a hero... what have we come to if turning down a bribe is 'heroic'?"[33]

Bob Guccione

Bob Guccione, publisher of Penthouse, was also approached with a bribe from the undercover FBI agents. Guccione was in the process of building the Penthouse Boardwalk Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City and needed financing. Guccione was associated with Abscam's interest in Atlantic City, so Weinberg approached Guccione and told him that an Arab sheikh wanted to invest $150 million in the casino project, but only if the casino had obtained a gaming license. Weinberg wanted Guccione to pay a $300,000 bribe to New Jersey gaming officials to get the license. Guccione refused and responded by saying "Are you out of your mind?"[34] After the Abscam scandal came to light, Guccione sued the federal government but lost.[35]

Joseph A. Maressa

In 1980, New Jersey State Senator Joseph A. Maressa accepted $10,000 from a group of FBI agents who were part of the Abscam undercover operation. The money was given to Maressa to obtain his support on behalf of a fictional Arab sheikh in exchange for Maressa's efforts to get legislative support to obtain a gambling license for a casino in Atlantic City. Maressa justified accepting what he described as legal fees, saying that "I felt like it would be patriotic to take some of this OPEC oil money and get it back to the United States."[36] Maressa was not prosecuted for his actions.[37]

Conclusion

When the investigation became public in the early 1980s, ethical controversy focused on the use of the "sting" technique and Weinberg's involvement in selecting targets. Although Weinberg was a previously convicted criminal and had been involved in previous scams, he avoided a three-year prison sentence and was paid $150,000 in concurrence with the operation. Ultimately, all of the Abscam convictions were upheld on appeal,[38] although some judges criticized the tactics used by the FBI and lapses in FBI and DOJ supervision.[39]

In the wake of Abscam, Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti issued "The Attorney General Guidelines for FBI Undercover Operations" ("Civiletti Undercover Guidelines") on January 5, 1981. These were the first Attorney General Guidelines for undercover operations and formalized procedures necessary to conduct undercover operations to avoid future controversy. Following the initial press accounts about the Abscam investigation, Congress held a series of hearings to examine FBI undercover operations and the new Civiletti Undercover Guidelines. The House Subcommittee on Civil and Constitutional Rights began hearings on FBI undercover operations in March 1980 and concluded with a report in April 1984. Among the concerns expressed during the hearings were the undercover agents' involvement in illegal activity, the possibility of entrapping individuals, the prospect of damaging the reputations of innocent civilians, and the opportunity to undermine legitimate rights to privacy.

In March 1982, after the Senate debated a resolution to expel Senator Williams for his conduct in Abscam, the Senate established the Select Committee to Study Undercover Activities. In December 1982, the Committee issued its final report, which was generally supportive of the undercover technique but observed that its use "creates serious risks to citizens' property, privacy, and civil liberties, and may compromise law enforcement itself".

FBI documents later disclosed in accordance with the Freedom of Information Act, consisting of newspaper clippings and letters written to the FBI, revealed a mixed response of the American public. Some Americans supported the FBI, but others argued that Abscam was an entrapment scenario ordered by a revenge-minded FBI, which earlier had been stung by Congressional inquiries into acts of police brutality and similar widespread abuses.[40] Congressional concern about sting operations persisted, creating numerous additional guidelines in the ensuing years:

During the course of Abscam, the FBI handed out more than $400,000 in "bribes" to Congressmen and middlemen.

In his book, The Dangers of Dissent, historian Ivan Greenberg suggests that the FBI's aggressive investigation of political corruption might have been a response to the years of criticism the agency had received from Congressional investigations: "Was this [ABSCAM] payback for the Church Committee hearings? The FBI wanted to punish the Congress for exposing its past corruption." Greenberg cites FBI Director William Webster's 1980 speech to the Atlanta Bar Association as evidence, in which Webster stated that "In the FBI we've been under attack for past incidents and circumstances. It's quite understandable for those in Congress who love their institution, who are trying to rebuild its reputation and the confidence of the American people, to have an encounter and deal with a situation of this kind, and emotions run high. It's my sense that the good sense of the Congress, similar to the emotions in the Bureau when they had their times, that now people are saying, well, let's wait and see what the facts are..." However, Greenberg does not provide evidence beyond this public comparison for his allegation.[41]

In popular culture

Movies

  • French director Louis Malle adapted the Abscam story into a film script titled Moon Over Miami, with Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi set to star, with Belushi playing a fictionalized version of Weinberg. Belushi's death in March 1982 scuttled plans for the film.[42] The script was co-written with John Guare, who also co-wrote Atlantic City, also by Malle, who would turn the unproduced screenplay into a play of the same name.
  • In the 1997 film Donnie Brasco, Abscam is mentioned.
  • The Abscam operation is dramatized in the 2013 feature film American Hustle, directed by David O. Russell, which received ten Academy Award nominations but no wins. The film is described as a "fictionalization" rather than a straight adaptation. The opening screen states, "Some of this actually happened."[14][43]

Television

  • Saturday Night Live parodied the scandal in a skit titled "The Bel-Airabs" (a spoof of The Beverly Hillbillies), February 9, 1980.
  • Fridays parodied the scandal in a skit titled "Abscam Camera" (a spoof of Candid Camera).
  • The incident was referenced in the Seinfeld episode "The Sniffing Accountant".
  • Abscam was also mentioned as an insult to an FBI agent on an episode of Simon & Simon.
  • In Dallas episode "The Fall of the House of Ewing", an FBI agent attempts to get J. R. Ewing to offer a bribe to a government official. However J.R. notices the hidden camera and denies ever wanting to offer a bribe. The undercover FBI agent is upset, and says, "I don't understand how this happened, I even nailed a couple of those ABSCAM guys".
  • It was referenced in an episode of The Jeffersons titled "The Defiant Ones" when Louise asks a fellow inmate if she was in jail for prostitution, and she replies, "No, we're three of the Abscam senators."

Music

  • Prince refers to the Abscam story in the track "Annie Christian" from his 1981 album Controversy.
  • In 1980, folk singer Tom Paxton wrote and recorded the song "I Thought You Were an Arab" (pronounced Ay'-rab) on his album The Paxton Report.
  • In 2019, indie rock artist David Berman sang the lyric "Got a comb over cut circa Abscam sting" on the song "Storyline Fever".

Print media

  • A 1981 Bloom County comic strip in which Milo Bloom envisions himself as a senator on trial has him accused of (among many things) "taking money from FBI agents posing as Arab camel scalpers". A later strip showed Milo attempting the same thing when working as a reporter for the local paper, the Beacon, only for Senator Bedfellow to state he knows he is Milo. Milo claims he is an Arab and will show ID, asking Bedfellow to hold the bribe money while he retrieves the ID, only for the picture to be snapped and a misleading headline of "Caught!" published.
  • The Doonesbury comics also parody the investigation; they show congressmen claiming that they were doing the sting operation to bust FBI agents who were bribing elected officials and working for foreign organizations hostile to the United States.[44]

Video games

  • In 1981, a modified version of Pac-Man was unofficially created to satirize the investigation. In the game, the player takes control of a congressman (Pac-Man) who runs around Washington DC collecting dollar bills while avoiding FBI vans (the ghosts).[45]

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Investigations at a Glance; Origin Disclosure Results Inquiries Under Way". The New York Times. February 10, 1980.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Salinger, Lawrence M. Encyclopedia of White-Collar & Corporate Crime. (Thousand Oaks, Calif: Sage Publications), 2005. eBook Collection (EBSCOhost), EBSCOhost (accessed February 19, 2014).
  3. ^ a b c d e f Jensen, Eric L., and Jurg Gerber. 2007. Encyclopedia of White-collar Crime. (Westport. Conn: Greenwood Press), 2007. eBook Collection (EBSCOhost), EBSCOhost (accessed February 19, 2014).
  4. ^ Maitland, Leslie (February 3, 1980). "High Officials Are Termed Subjects of a Bribery Investigation by F.B.I." The New York Times. p. 1. Retrieved December 4, 2013.
  5. ^ "Etymology of "Abscam" Undergoes Revision". The New York Times. August 21, 1980. Retrieved December 4, 2013.
  6. ^ United States of America v. Michael O. Myers, et. al., Federal Bureau of Investigation. Accessed October 19, 2016. "'Abscam' is the code word given by the Federal Bureau of Investigation to an undercover 'sting' operation conducted out of the FBI office at Hauppauge, Long Island, New York, under the supervision of agent John Good."
  7. ^ Gates, Anita. "John Good, Architect of F.B.I.'s Abscam Sting Operation, Dies at 80", The New York Times, October 18, 2016. Accessed October 19, 2016. "John F. Good, who developed and directed the F.B.I.'s Abscam investigation, resulting in grainy black-and-white videotapes on the evening news that showed elected officials accepting bags and envelopes of cash from what appeared to be an Arab sheikh, died on Sept. 28 at his home in Island Park, N.Y."
  8. ^ a b c Noonan, John T. (1987). Bribes: The Intellectual History of a Moral Idea. University of California Press. pp. 604–11. ISBN 978-0-520-06154-5.
  9. ^ Leiby, Richard (December 26, 2013). "To the players in Abscam, the real-life 'American Hustle,' the bribes now seem quaint". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
  10. ^ Tolchin, Martin, and Susan J. Tolchin. Glass Houses. Boulder: Westview Press, 2001.
  11. ^ Tale of Atlantic City Hotel That Tried to be a Casino by Donald Janson New York Times May 31, 1981 [1]
  12. ^ Greene, Robert W. (December 2, 2013). The Sting Man: Inside Abscam. Penguin. ISBN 9780698144446 – via Google Books.
  13. ^ 'Abscam' fallout: Atlantic City casinos By Ward Morehouse III, The Christian Science Monitor February 6, 1980 [2]
  14. ^ a b Yates, Clinton (December 26, 2013). "American Hustle's fun D.C. connection". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 26, 2013.
  15. ^ "U.S. JUDGE DISMISSES ABSCAM CONVICTIONS OF 2 IN PHILADELPHIA; Ruling Asserts That Government 'Stretched' Federal Laws and 'Entrapped' Councilmen The Rights of All Citizens Effect on Other Cases U.S. Judge Dismisses Convictions Of 2 in Philadelphia Abscam Case". The New York Times. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  16. ^ Pear, Robert (May 15, 1982). "JUDGE OVERTURNS ABSCAM CONVICTION OF EX-LEGISLATOR". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
  17. ^ "A Byte Out of History: Remembering the Lessons of ABSCAM.", Federal Bureau of Investigation, February 7, 2005. Accessed October 19, 2016.
  18. ^ Maitland, Leslie (October 31, 1980). "Williams Is Indicted With 3 For Bribery in New Abscam Case; Jersey Senator Denies Guilt Accused of Pledging to Use Office to Obtain Federal Contracts in a Deal for Mine Shares Other Charges in Indictment Jersey's Senator Williams and 3 Are Indicted for Bribery in Abscam Case 2 Representatives Convicted Boast on Casino Alleged A Promise on Immigration". The New York Times.
  19. ^ Fried, Joseph P. (May 2, 1981). "Williams Is Guilty on All Nine Counts in Abscam Inquiry". The New York Times.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on March 23, 2005.
  21. ^ Fried, Joseph P. (December 20, 1980). "Williams Seeking the Dismissal of Abscam Charges". The New York Times.
  22. ^ Sullivan, Joseph F. (March 12, 1982). "Williams Quits Senate Seat As Vote To Expel Him Nears; Still Asserts He Is Innocent". The New York Times. Retrieved April 30, 2014.
  23. ^ Mercer, Neil (2000). Words and Minds: How We Use Language to Think Together. Routledge. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-134-59084-1.
  24. ^ Hitt, Jack (July 23, 2012). "Words on Trial" (PDF). The New Yorker. Retrieved December 25, 2013.
  25. ^ "Abscam (cont.)". Time. December 15, 1980.
  26. ^ Saxon, Wolfgang (August 26, 2005). "Richard Kelly, 81, Congressman Who Went to Prison in Scandal, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved December 11, 2013.
  27. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Full Abscam Video part 1". YouTube. Retrieved September 22, 2012.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on October 5, 2006. Retrieved 2006-10-20.
  29. ^ Katz, Neil (February 8, 2010). "Abscam Scandal Lingers as Jack Murtha, Dead Congressman, is Remembered". CBS News. Retrieved May 10, 2014.
  30. ^ "Surveillance video". Mfile.akamai.com. Retrieved September 28, 2012.
  31. ^ Rabkin, Jeremy (September 17, 2012). . Spectator.org. Archived from the original on October 6, 2008. Retrieved September 22, 2012.
  32. ^ Jackson, Peter (February 9, 2010). . The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on February 11, 2010.
  33. ^ . Larrypressler.com. March 12, 1999. Archived from the original on February 6, 2012. Retrieved September 22, 2012.
  34. ^ Heidentry, John. 'What Wild Ecstasy'. Simon & Schuster 2007 ISBN 978-0-7432-4184-7 [3]
  35. ^ "847 F.2d 1031". Ftp.resource.org. Retrieved March 23, 2014.
  36. ^ Morehouse III, Ward. "'Abscam' fallout: Atlantic City casinos", The Christian Science Monitor, February 6, 1980. Accessed October 5, 2016. "Mr. Maressa has admitted to several newspapers that he received $10,000 in 'legal fees' from FBI undercover agents acting in behalf of a nonexistent Arab businessman seeking help in obtaining a casino license. The New York Daily News Feb. 5 quoted Mr. Maressa as saying, 'the Arabian Nights portrait these two agents painted was such that I felt like it would be patriotic to take some of this OPEC oil money and get it back to the United States.'"
  37. ^ Tinney, Kathleen. "Joseph A. Maressa, 89, former state Senator", The Philadelphia Inquirer, November 1, 2012. Accessed October 5, 2016. "He took $10,000 from FBI agents purporting to represent Arab sheikhs seeking a casino license in Atlantic City. In rejecting allegations that the money was a bribe – he adamantly said it was a legal fee – Mr. Maressa memorably reasoned that he was being patriotic by taking OPEC money and putting it back into American hands. The Abscam investigation did not produce any criminal charges against him."
  38. ^ "Special Report". Usdoj.gov. Retrieved September 22, 2012.
  39. ^ "Special Report". Usdoj.gov. Retrieved September 28, 2012.
  40. ^ . Archived from the original on August 10, 2004. Retrieved 2006-06-30.
  41. ^ Greenberg, Ivan. 'The Dangers of Dissent: The FBI and Civil Liberties Since 1965' (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2010), p. 106 [4]
  42. ^ Plunka, Gene A. (January 1, 2002). The black comedy of John Guare. University of Delaware Press. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-87413-763-7. Retrieved March 3, 2012.
  43. ^ . iamrogue.com. July 31, 2013. Archived from the original on March 7, 2014. Retrieved August 1, 2013.
  44. ^ Garry Trudeau (February 25, 1980). "Doonesbury Comic Strips". Doonesbury – via gocomics.com.
  45. ^ "Abscam". Arcade History.

External links

  • FBI files on ABSCAM
  • FBI Records: The Vault – ABSCAM at vault.fbi.gov
  • Attorney General's Investigative Guidelines, September 2005
  • full, unedited 53:41 FBI Abscam/John Murtha video from Jan 7, 1980 on YouTube

abscam, confused, with, adscam, sometimes, written, abscam, sting, operation, late, 1970s, early, 1980s, that, convictions, seven, members, united, states, congress, others, bribery, corruption, year, investigation, initially, targeted, trafficking, stolen, pr. Not to be confused with Adscam Abscam sometimes written ABSCAM was an FBI sting operation in the late 1970s and early 1980s that led to the convictions of seven members of the United States Congress and others for bribery and corruption 1 The two year investigation initially targeted trafficking in stolen property and corruption of prominent businessmen but later evolved into a public corruption investigation The FBI was aided by the Justice Department and convicted con man Mel Weinberg in videotaping politicians accepting bribes from a fictitious Arabian company in return for various political favors 2 U S Representative Michael Myers second from left holds an envelope containing 50 000 that he just received from undercover FBI agents More than 30 political figures were investigated and six members of the House of Representatives and one senator were convicted 3 One member of the New Jersey State Senate members of the Philadelphia City Council the Mayor of Camden New Jersey and an inspector for the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service were also convicted The operation was directed from the FBI s office in Hauppauge New York and was under the supervision of Assistant Director Neil J Welch who headed the bureau s New York division and Thomas P Puccio head of the Justice Department s Organized Crime Strike Force for the Eastern District of New York Abscam was the FBI codename for the operation which law enforcement authorities said was a contraction of Arab scam 4 The American Arab Relations Committee made complaints so officials revised the source of the contraction to Abdul scam after the name of its fictitious company 5 Contents 1 Operation 2 Convictions 2 1 Angelo Errichetti 2 2 Harrison A Williams 2 3 Frank Thompson 2 4 John M Murphy 2 5 Richard Kelly 2 6 John Jenrette 3 Also approached by the FBI 3 1 John Murtha 3 2 Larry Pressler 3 3 Bob Guccione 3 4 Joseph A Maressa 4 Conclusion 5 In popular culture 5 1 Movies 5 2 Television 5 3 Music 5 4 Print media 5 5 Video games 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksOperation EditIn March 1978 John F Good of the FBI s office in suburban Long Island created and oversaw a sting operation called Abscam which was initially intended to investigate theft forgery and stolen art 6 7 8 9 The FBI employed Melvin Weinberg a convicted swindler international con artist and informant and his girlfriend Evelyn Knight to help plan and conduct the operation They were facing a prison sentence at the time and in exchange for their help the FBI agreed to let them out on probation 3 Weinberg supervised by the FBI created a fake company called Abdul Enterprises in which FBI employees posed as fictional Arab sheikhs led by owners Kambir Abdul Rahman and Yassir Habib who had millions of dollars to invest in the United States 8 Weinberg instructed the FBI to fund a 1 million account with the Chase Manhattan Bank in the name of Abdul Enterprises giving the company the credibility it needed to further its operation 2 When a forger who was under investigation suggested to the sheikhs that they invest in casinos in New Jersey and that licensing could be obtained for a price the Abscam operation was re targeted toward political corruption Each congressman who was approached would be given a large sum of money in exchange for private immigration bills to allow foreigners associated with Abdul Enterprises into the country and for building permits and licenses for casinos in Atlantic City among other investment arrangements 10 Among the casino projects involved were the Ritz Carlton Atlantic City 11 the Dunes Hotel and Casino Atlantic City 12 the Penthouse Boardwalk Hotel and Casino and the sheikh s fictional casino 13 The first political figure ensnared in the phony investment scheme was Camden mayor Angelo Errichetti In exchange for monetary kickbacks Errichetti told the sheikhs representatives I ll give you Atlantic City Errichetti helped to recruit several government officials and United States congressmen who were willing to grant political favors in exchange for monetary bribes originally 100 000 but then reduced to 50 000 3 The FBI recorded each of the money exchanges and for the first time in American history surreptitiously videotaped government officials accepting bribes 8 The meeting places included a house in the Foxhall neighborhood of Washington D C which was owned by Lee Lescaze 14 a yacht in Florida and hotel rooms in Pennsylvania and New Jersey citation needed Each convicted politician was given a separate trial During these trials much controversy arose regarding the ethics of Operation Abscam Many lawyers defending their clients accused the FBI of entrapment Though some judges concurred 15 16 appeals eventually overruled this claim and each politician was convicted 17 Convictions EditOf the 31 targeted officials the following members of Congress were convicted of bribery and conspiracy in 1981 US Senator Harrison A Williams D NJ US Representative Frank Thompson D NJ US Representative John Jenrette D SC US Representative Raymond Lederer D PA US Representative Michael Ozzie Myers D PA US Representative John M Murphy D NY US Representative Richard Kelly R FL Five other government officials were convicted including Mayor of Camden New Jersey Angelo Errichetti D Philadelphia PA City Council President George X Schwartz D Philadelphia PA City Councilman Harry Jannotti D Philadelphia PA City Councilman Louis Johanson D An inspector for the US Immigration and Naturalization ServiceAngelo Errichetti Edit Angelo Errichetti mayor of Camden New Jersey was the first government official to be caught in Operation Abscam 3 Errichetti first accepted the bribe in exchange for obtaining a casino license in Atlantic City for Abdul Enterprises He then introduced Abdul to Senator Harrison Williams who also took the bait Errichetti also introduced Michael Myers and Raymond Lederer to the company and arranged meetings for them with the undercover agents He also introduced the Arab businessmen to Frank Thompson Jr By the middle of 1979 Errichetti had arranged meetings with an entire list of state and federal politicians who were willing to go in on the operation 2 The FBI set up video cameras in a hotel suite near New York s John F Kennedy Airport to record the transactions between the undercover agents and Errichetti 3 He was convicted on the federal bribery charges for which he served about three years in prison Harrison A Williams Edit Harrison A Pete Williams Senator Harrison Pete Williams D N J was indicted on October 30 1980 18 and convicted on May 1 1981 19 on nine counts of bribery and conspiracy to use his office to aid in business ventures 20 Williams repeatedly met with the FBI agents and had worked out a deal where he would become involved in a titanium mining operation by way of having 18 of the company s shares issued to his lawyer Alexander Feinberg Williams then promised to steer government contracts to the venture by using his position in the Senate At his trial lawyers for Williams argued that he had not actually been bribed because the stock in the titanium mining company was worthless Other defenses attempting to have the charges dismissed included that he was a victim of selective prosecution by the Justice Department because he had supported the presidential bid of Ted Kennedy over Jimmy Carter in the Democratic primary 21 These premises were not accepted by the jury who convicted Williams after 28 hours of deliberation on May 1 1981 Later appeals made by Williams included arguments that a main prosecution witness had perjured himself and that Williams had been a victim of entrapment The guilty verdict was upheld and Williams was sentenced to three years in prison Because of the convictions the Senate Ethics Committee voted to censure Williams and put a motion to the floor to expel him for charges of bringing dishonor upon the Senate and his ethically repugnant behavior Supporters of Williams moved that the censure was enough and that the expulsion was unnecessary The Senate voted to censure Williams but before the vote on his expulsion could occur Williams resigned his seat In his resignation speech Williams proclaimed his innocence and argued that the investigation into his activities was a grievous assault on the rights of the Senate and that other senators should be wary of unchecked investigations into their activities by other branches of the government 22 Williams served two years of his three year sentence at a federal penitentiary in Newark New Jersey He served the remainder of his term at the Integrity House halfway house where he later became a member of the board of directors until his death by cancer on November 17 2001 He also attempted to receive a presidential pardon from President Bill Clinton but his request was denied Williams was the first Senator to be imprisoned in almost 80 years and had the expulsion motion been approved would have been the first Senator to be expelled from the Senate since the Civil War Linguistics expert Roger Shuy is convinced of Williams innocence In a recording of Williams encounter with an agent disguised as a sheikh At one point the sheikh put the bribe directly to Williams I would like to give you some money for for permanent residence The first four words of Williams s reply were No no no no 23 A prosecution memo at the time stated that there was no case against Williams but the judge who in his ruling decried the cynicism and hypocrisy of corrupt government officials set it aside After trial the lead juror said that had he known all the facts he would not have found Williams guilty 24 Frank Thompson Edit Frank Thompson Frank Thompson D NJ was a member of the House from Trenton New Jersey who was indicted and convicted of accepting a bribe from an FBI agent posing as an Arab sheik Thompson was offered money in exchange for helping the Arabs overcome certain immigration laws 2 Well liked by his constituents he was the longest serving member of Congress convicted in Operation Abscam Thompson abstained on the vote to expel Representative Myers the first Congressman to be indicted While most of the politicians resigned Myers was expelled from the House and Williams did not resign until the vote on his expulsion was almost to take place Thompson himself was not expelled from the House of Representatives because he lost his re election campaign in 1980 to Republican Chris Smith a relatively unknown candidate who in 1978 had run against Thompson as a sacrificial lamb candidate Smith won the 1980 election by a margin of 20 000 votes On December 29 1980 Thompson resigned his seat in the US House of Representatives Smith has since represented Thompson s former district continuously through the 117th United States Congress On December 2 1980 Thompson was indicted on bribery charges Thompson spent 24 000 of campaign funds fighting the charges and appealing his conviction on grounds of entrapment Thompson was convicted of bribery and conspiracy charges and sentenced to three years in prison starting in 1983 He served two years before being released and worked as a consultant in Washington until his death in 1989 John M Murphy Edit Thompson introduced John M Murphy to the operation Murphy was from Staten Island New York He was chairman for the Committee on the Merchant Marine and Fisheries He accepted monetary bribes in exchange for his resources 2 Murphy s conviction differed from the other Congressmen His conviction was considered receiving an unlawful gratuity instead of bribery but he served three years in prison for conspiracy charges only Murphy was not filmed taking the 50 000 that most other participants took that day instead arguing on tape with attorney Howard Criden about who would pick up Murphy s money for him which Criden did at a John F Kennedy airport hotel 25 Richard Kelly Edit In 1982 the conviction of Richard Kelly was overturned on the grounds of entrapment Kelly the sole Republican said that he was only pretending to be involved with the bribery from Abdul Enterprises He claimed that he was conducting his own operation dealing with corruption and that the FBI was ruining his own investigation However an appeals court upheld the conviction and Kelly served 13 months in prison 26 John Jenrette Edit John Jenrette was one of the few who resigned before being expelled from the House 2 During the operation Jenrette was asked by an undercover FBI agent if he would take the bribe from the Sheikh He replied I ve got larceny in my blood I d take it in a goddamn minute 3 Also approached by the FBI EditJohn Murtha Edit John Murtha John Murtha D PA was one of the Congressmen who refused to take the bribe from the undercover agents He too was videotaped 27 in his encounter with undercover FBI operatives 28 Although he was never convicted or prosecuted he was named an unindicted co conspirator in the scandal 29 As such he testified against Frank Thompson D NJ and John Murphy D NY the two Congressmen mentioned as participants in the deal at the same meeting A short clip from the videotape shows Murtha stating I m not interested I m sorry At this point in direct response to an offer of 50 000 in cash 30 In November 1980 the Justice Department announced that Murtha would not face prosecution for his part in the scandal The U S Attorney s Office reasoned that Murtha s intent was to obtain investment in his district Full length viewing of the tape shows Murtha citing prospective investment opportunities that could return 500 or 1 000 miners to work In July 1981 the House Ethics Committee also chose not to file charges against Murtha following a mostly party line vote The resignation later that day of attorney E Barrett Prettyman Jr the panel s special counsel and a Democrat has been interpreted as an act of protest 31 Murtha remained prominent in Congress and was re elected by his constituency 19 times over the course of 36 years before his death on February 8 2010 32 Larry Pressler Edit Larry Pressler Senator Larry Pressler R SD refused to take the bribe saying at the time Wait a minute what you are suggesting may be illegal He immediately reported the incident to the FBI When Senator Pressler was told that Walter Cronkite referred to him on the evening news as a hero he stated I do not consider myself a hero what have we come to if turning down a bribe is heroic 33 Bob Guccione Edit Bob Guccione publisher of Penthouse was also approached with a bribe from the undercover FBI agents Guccione was in the process of building the Penthouse Boardwalk Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City and needed financing Guccione was associated with Abscam s interest in Atlantic City so Weinberg approached Guccione and told him that an Arab sheikh wanted to invest 150 million in the casino project but only if the casino had obtained a gaming license Weinberg wanted Guccione to pay a 300 000 bribe to New Jersey gaming officials to get the license Guccione refused and responded by saying Are you out of your mind 34 After the Abscam scandal came to light Guccione sued the federal government but lost 35 Joseph A Maressa Edit In 1980 New Jersey State Senator Joseph A Maressa accepted 10 000 from a group of FBI agents who were part of the Abscam undercover operation The money was given to Maressa to obtain his support on behalf of a fictional Arab sheikh in exchange for Maressa s efforts to get legislative support to obtain a gambling license for a casino in Atlantic City Maressa justified accepting what he described as legal fees saying that I felt like it would be patriotic to take some of this OPEC oil money and get it back to the United States 36 Maressa was not prosecuted for his actions 37 Conclusion EditWhen the investigation became public in the early 1980s ethical controversy focused on the use of the sting technique and Weinberg s involvement in selecting targets Although Weinberg was a previously convicted criminal and had been involved in previous scams he avoided a three year prison sentence and was paid 150 000 in concurrence with the operation Ultimately all of the Abscam convictions were upheld on appeal 38 although some judges criticized the tactics used by the FBI and lapses in FBI and DOJ supervision 39 In the wake of Abscam Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti issued The Attorney General Guidelines for FBI Undercover Operations Civiletti Undercover Guidelines on January 5 1981 These were the first Attorney General Guidelines for undercover operations and formalized procedures necessary to conduct undercover operations to avoid future controversy Following the initial press accounts about the Abscam investigation Congress held a series of hearings to examine FBI undercover operations and the new Civiletti Undercover Guidelines The House Subcommittee on Civil and Constitutional Rights began hearings on FBI undercover operations in March 1980 and concluded with a report in April 1984 Among the concerns expressed during the hearings were the undercover agents involvement in illegal activity the possibility of entrapping individuals the prospect of damaging the reputations of innocent civilians and the opportunity to undermine legitimate rights to privacy In March 1982 after the Senate debated a resolution to expel Senator Williams for his conduct in Abscam the Senate established the Select Committee to Study Undercover Activities In December 1982 the Committee issued its final report which was generally supportive of the undercover technique but observed that its use creates serious risks to citizens property privacy and civil liberties and may compromise law enforcement itself FBI documents later disclosed in accordance with the Freedom of Information Act consisting of newspaper clippings and letters written to the FBI revealed a mixed response of the American public Some Americans supported the FBI but others argued that Abscam was an entrapment scenario ordered by a revenge minded FBI which earlier had been stung by Congressional inquiries into acts of police brutality and similar widespread abuses 40 Congressional concern about sting operations persisted creating numerous additional guidelines in the ensuing years The Civiletti Guidelines 1980 1981 The Smith Guidelines 1983 The Thornburgh Guidelines 1989 The Reno Guidelines 2001During the course of Abscam the FBI handed out more than 400 000 in bribes to Congressmen and middlemen In his book The Dangers of Dissent historian Ivan Greenberg suggests that the FBI s aggressive investigation of political corruption might have been a response to the years of criticism the agency had received from Congressional investigations Was this ABSCAM payback for the Church Committee hearings The FBI wanted to punish the Congress for exposing its past corruption Greenberg cites FBI Director William Webster s 1980 speech to the Atlanta Bar Association as evidence in which Webster stated that In the FBI we ve been under attack for past incidents and circumstances It s quite understandable for those in Congress who love their institution who are trying to rebuild its reputation and the confidence of the American people to have an encounter and deal with a situation of this kind and emotions run high It s my sense that the good sense of the Congress similar to the emotions in the Bureau when they had their times that now people are saying well let s wait and see what the facts are However Greenberg does not provide evidence beyond this public comparison for his allegation 41 In popular culture EditMovies Edit French director Louis Malle adapted the Abscam story into a film script titled Moon Over Miami with Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi set to star with Belushi playing a fictionalized version of Weinberg Belushi s death in March 1982 scuttled plans for the film 42 The script was co written with John Guare who also co wrote Atlantic City also by Malle who would turn the unproduced screenplay into a play of the same name In the 1997 film Donnie Brasco Abscam is mentioned The Abscam operation is dramatized in the 2013 feature film American Hustle directed by David O Russell which received ten Academy Award nominations but no wins The film is described as a fictionalization rather than a straight adaptation The opening screen states Some of this actually happened 14 43 Television Edit Saturday Night Live parodied the scandal in a skit titled The Bel Airabs a spoof of The Beverly Hillbillies February 9 1980 Fridays parodied the scandal in a skit titled Abscam Camera a spoof of Candid Camera The incident was referenced in the Seinfeld episode The Sniffing Accountant Abscam was also mentioned as an insult to an FBI agent on an episode of Simon amp Simon In Dallas episode The Fall of the House of Ewing an FBI agent attempts to get J R Ewing to offer a bribe to a government official However J R notices the hidden camera and denies ever wanting to offer a bribe The undercover FBI agent is upset and says I don t understand how this happened I even nailed a couple of those ABSCAM guys It was referenced in an episode of The Jeffersons titled The Defiant Ones when Louise asks a fellow inmate if she was in jail for prostitution and she replies No we re three of the Abscam senators Music Edit Prince refers to the Abscam story in the track Annie Christian from his 1981 album Controversy In 1980 folk singer Tom Paxton wrote and recorded the song I Thought You Were an Arab pronounced Ay rab on his album The Paxton Report In 2019 indie rock artist David Berman sang the lyric Got a comb over cut circa Abscam sting on the song Storyline Fever Print media Edit A 1981 Bloom County comic strip in which Milo Bloom envisions himself as a senator on trial has him accused of among many things taking money from FBI agents posing as Arab camel scalpers A later strip showed Milo attempting the same thing when working as a reporter for the local paper the Beacon only for Senator Bedfellow to state he knows he is Milo Milo claims he is an Arab and will show ID asking Bedfellow to hold the bribe money while he retrieves the ID only for the picture to be snapped and a misleading headline of Caught published The Doonesbury comics also parody the investigation they show congressmen claiming that they were doing the sting operation to bust FBI agents who were bribing elected officials and working for foreign organizations hostile to the United States 44 Video games Edit In 1981 a modified version of Pac Man was unofficially created to satirize the investigation In the game the player takes control of a congressman Pac Man who runs around Washington DC collecting dollar bills while avoiding FBI vans the ghosts 45 See also EditOperation Greylord Operation Tennessee WaltzReferences Edit The Investigations at a Glance Origin Disclosure Results Inquiries Under Way The New York Times February 10 1980 a b c d e f Salinger Lawrence M Encyclopedia of White Collar amp Corporate Crime Thousand Oaks Calif Sage Publications 2005 eBook Collection EBSCOhost EBSCOhost accessed February 19 2014 a b c d e f Jensen Eric L and Jurg Gerber 2007 Encyclopedia of White collar Crime Westport Conn Greenwood Press 2007 eBook Collection EBSCOhost EBSCOhost accessed February 19 2014 Maitland Leslie February 3 1980 High Officials Are Termed Subjects of a Bribery Investigation by F B I The New York Times p 1 Retrieved December 4 2013 Etymology of Abscam Undergoes Revision The New York Times August 21 1980 Retrieved December 4 2013 United States of America v Michael O Myers et al Federal Bureau of Investigation Accessed October 19 2016 Abscam is the code word given by the Federal Bureau of Investigation to an undercover sting operation conducted out of the FBI office at Hauppauge Long Island New York under the supervision of agent John Good Gates Anita John Good Architect of F B I s Abscam Sting Operation Dies at 80 The New York Times October 18 2016 Accessed October 19 2016 John F Good who developed and directed the F B I s Abscam investigation resulting in grainy black and white videotapes on the evening news that showed elected officials accepting bags and envelopes of cash from what appeared to be an Arab sheikh died on Sept 28 at his home in Island Park N Y a b c Noonan John T 1987 Bribes The Intellectual History of a Moral Idea University of California Press pp 604 11 ISBN 978 0 520 06154 5 Leiby Richard December 26 2013 To the players in Abscam the real life American Hustle the bribes now seem quaint The Washington Post Retrieved January 24 2014 Tolchin Martin and Susan J Tolchin Glass Houses Boulder Westview Press 2001 Tale of Atlantic City Hotel That Tried to be a Casino by Donald Janson New York Times May 31 1981 1 Greene Robert W December 2 2013 The Sting Man Inside Abscam Penguin ISBN 9780698144446 via Google Books Abscam fallout Atlantic City casinos By Ward Morehouse III The Christian Science Monitor February 6 1980 2 a b Yates Clinton December 26 2013 American Hustle s fun D C connection The Washington Post Retrieved December 26 2013 U S JUDGE DISMISSES ABSCAM CONVICTIONS OF 2 IN PHILADELPHIA Ruling Asserts That Government Stretched Federal Laws and Entrapped Councilmen The Rights of All Citizens Effect on Other Cases U S Judge Dismisses Convictions Of 2 in Philadelphia Abscam Case The New York Times Retrieved March 24 2023 Pear Robert May 15 1982 JUDGE OVERTURNS ABSCAM CONVICTION OF EX LEGISLATOR The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 4 2023 A Byte Out of History Remembering the Lessons of ABSCAM Federal Bureau of Investigation February 7 2005 Accessed October 19 2016 Maitland Leslie October 31 1980 Williams Is Indicted With 3 For Bribery in New Abscam Case Jersey Senator Denies Guilt Accused of Pledging to Use Office to Obtain Federal Contracts in a Deal for Mine Shares Other Charges in Indictment Jersey s Senator Williams and 3 Are Indicted for Bribery in Abscam Case 2 Representatives Convicted Boast on Casino Alleged A Promise on Immigration The New York Times Fried Joseph P May 2 1981 Williams Is Guilty on All Nine Counts in Abscam Inquiry The New York Times CNN com Former N J Sen Harrison Williams dead at 81 November 19 2001 Archived from the original on March 23 2005 Fried Joseph P December 20 1980 Williams Seeking the Dismissal of Abscam Charges The New York Times Sullivan Joseph F March 12 1982 Williams Quits Senate Seat As Vote To Expel Him Nears Still Asserts He Is Innocent The New York Times Retrieved April 30 2014 Mercer Neil 2000 Words and Minds How We Use Language to Think Together Routledge p 36 ISBN 978 1 134 59084 1 Hitt Jack July 23 2012 Words on Trial PDF The New Yorker Retrieved December 25 2013 Abscam cont Time December 15 1980 Saxon Wolfgang August 26 2005 Richard Kelly 81 Congressman Who Went to Prison in Scandal Dies The New York Times Retrieved December 11 2013 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Full Abscam Video part 1 YouTube Retrieved September 22 2012 The American Spectator Archived from the original on October 5 2006 Retrieved 2006 10 20 Katz Neil February 8 2010 Abscam Scandal Lingers as Jack Murtha Dead Congressman is Remembered CBS News Retrieved May 10 2014 Surveillance video Mfile akamai com Retrieved September 28 2012 Rabkin Jeremy September 17 2012 The American Spectator Spectator org Archived from the original on October 6 2008 Retrieved September 22 2012 Jackson Peter February 9 2010 Pa Dem Murtha remembered as military advocate The Seattle Times Archived from the original on February 11 2010 Pressler Senator Larry Biography 2007 Larrypressler com March 12 1999 Archived from the original on February 6 2012 Retrieved September 22 2012 Heidentry John What Wild Ecstasy Simon amp Schuster 2007 ISBN 978 0 7432 4184 7 3 847 F 2d 1031 Ftp resource org Retrieved March 23 2014 Morehouse III Ward Abscam fallout Atlantic City casinos The Christian Science Monitor February 6 1980 Accessed October 5 2016 Mr Maressa has admitted to several newspapers that he received 10 000 in legal fees from FBI undercover agents acting in behalf of a nonexistent Arab businessman seeking help in obtaining a casino license The New York Daily News Feb 5 quoted Mr Maressa as saying the Arabian Nights portrait these two agents painted was such that I felt like it would be patriotic to take some of this OPEC oil money and get it back to the United States Tinney Kathleen Joseph A Maressa 89 former state Senator The Philadelphia Inquirer November 1 2012 Accessed October 5 2016 He took 10 000 from FBI agents purporting to represent Arab sheikhs seeking a casino license in Atlantic City In rejecting allegations that the money was a bribe he adamantly said it was a legal fee Mr Maressa memorably reasoned that he was being patriotic by taking OPEC money and putting it back into American hands The Abscam investigation did not produce any criminal charges against him Special Report Usdoj gov Retrieved September 22 2012 Special Report Usdoj gov Retrieved September 28 2012 Federal Bureau of Investigation Freedom of Information Privacy Act Archived from the original on August 10 2004 Retrieved 2006 06 30 Greenberg Ivan The Dangers of Dissent The FBI and Civil Liberties Since 1965 Lanham MD Rowman and Littlefield 2010 p 106 4 Plunka Gene A January 1 2002 The black comedy of John Guare University of Delaware Press p 37 ISBN 978 0 87413 763 7 Retrieved March 3 2012 First Trailer for David O Russell s American Hustle Cuts Loose iamrogue com July 31 2013 Archived from the original on March 7 2014 Retrieved August 1 2013 Garry Trudeau February 25 1980 Doonesbury Comic Strips Doonesbury via gocomics com Abscam Arcade History External links EditFBI files on ABSCAM FBI Records The Vault ABSCAM at vault fbi gov Attorney General s Investigative Guidelines September 2005 full unedited 53 41 FBI Abscam John Murtha video from Jan 7 1980 on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abscam amp oldid 1152130232, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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