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Indian Americans involved in
Raising $1 Million to Buy Illinois Senate Seat from Blagojevich for
Jesse Jackson Jr.
Indian Americans involved in Illinois scandal
13 Dec 2008, 1306 hrs IST, IANS CHICAGO:
Several eminent Indian Americans are linked to the corruption scandal
involving Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich's attempt to sell the
Senate seat vacated by president-elect Barack Obama, a front page
investigative report by theChicago Tribune said.
Blagojevich
was arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) on Tuesday for
allegedly negotiating with several politicians to nominate them for the
senate seat for monetary and material favour. He was let off on a $4,500
cash bond but the scandal has hogged headlines in the US.
Obama,
who represented Illinois in the US Senate before being elected
president, resigned after the elections. Under US laws, the state
governor has the authority to nominate his replacement for the rest of
the term.
The Chicago Tribune has named several Indian Americans
- all based in Chicago - for holding negotiations on behalf of US
Representative Jesse Jackson Jr with Blagojevich over the seat Obama
vacated.
Jackson has been named as "Senate Candidate 5" in the FBI charge
sheet against the Illinois governor.
The Indian American
supporters of Jackson, the newspaper said, promised to hold a fundraiser
for the Illinois governor for his re-election bid and raise more than $1
million in lieu of the senate seat.
The daily identified one
such Indian American as Raghuveer Nayak or Raghu.
He owns a
series of surgery centres in Chicago.
"Raghu (Nayak) said he
needed to raise a million for Rod to make sure Jesse got the seat," a
businessman who attended one of the meetings where requests were made
for the fundraiser was quoted as saying by The Chicago Tribune.
"He said, 'I can raise half of it, $500,000.'," added the businessman,
also an Indian American.
Nayak, who the report said is a major
Blagojevich fundraiser, also has ties with the Jackson family.
Nayak and Jesse Jackson Jr's brother Jonathan have known each other for
a long time and even went into business together some years ago.
Among other Indian Americans named in the report are pharmacist
Harish Bhatt and brothers Rajinder Bedi and Jatinder Bedi.
Rajinder is managing director for the Illinois Department of Commerce
and Economic Opportunity's Office of Trade and Investment, overseeing
nine foreign trade offices around the world, from China to Israel.
Jatinder is editor of the Chicago-based ethnic Indian newspaper, Indian
Reporter.
Quoting two unidentified businessmen who attended the
fundraiser meetings, the report said Nayak and Rajinder privately told
many of the more than two dozen attendees that the fundraising effort
was aimed at supporting Jackson's bid for the Senate.
One such fundraiser was held a few days before the arrest of the
Illinois governor. It was co-sponsored by Nayak and attended by Jonathan
Jackson as well as Blagojevich, according to several people who were
there.
Iftekhar Shareef, past president of the influential
Federation of Indian Associations, who attended the fundraiser, said: "Raghu
(Nayak) is always talking about how we need to appoint Jesse to the
Senate. They are very close. Raghu is close to all the Jacksons. He even
asked me to write a letter to the governor supporting Jesse for the
senate."
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Indian_Americans_involved_in_Illinois_scandal_Report/articleshow/3832123.cms
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