Firms Donated to Groups That Gave Judges Free Trips
By Eric M. Weiss
Washington Post Staff Writer
05/25/06 "Washington
Post" -- -- Two organizations that have
provided free trips to hundreds of federal judges received large
contributions from tobacco, oil and other corporate interests,
according to documents released yesterday.
The Montana-based Foundation for Research on Economics and the
Environment (FREE) and George Mason University's Law & Economics
Center previously said corporate money does not pay for the
judges' seminars or declined to disclose their donors.
But documents released by the Community Rights Counsel, a
nonprofit Washington law firm, show that corporations including
Exxon Mobil, Philip Morris and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco have
contributed tens of thousands of dollars toward these programs.
The new information comes as judicial trips are receiving
increased scrutiny on Capitol Hill, where bills would either
outlaw such trips or create an inspector general for the
judicial branch.
Opponents of these seminars -- often held at pleasant places
with plenty of time to do pleasant things, such as play golf and
ride horses -- is a way to lobby powerful judges who often
decide cases that change industries and roil markets. The groups
generally pay for judges' travel, lodging, food and tuition
expenses, and together have funded 1,158 trips for 349 federal
judges between 1992 and 2004, according to the Community Rights
Counsel.
Douglas T. Kendall, the counsel's executive director, said the
two seminar groups "have consistently misled the media, the
public and participating judges about the nature of their
operations and the extent of their corporate support."
For example, in a letter to The Washington Post last year,
FREE's chairman said the group "accepts no corporate support for
the judges' seminars nor support from any foundation with links
to business or involvement in litigation."
But documents released yesterday show that the Exxon Mobil
Foundation gave FREE $50,000 in 2004, including $20,000 for
"federal judicial seminars."
"How does it look? It doesn't look good," said Pete Geddes,
FREE's executive vice president. But he said that despite what
the Exxon Mobil documents say, corporate money does not go to
reimburse federal judges who attend the seminars, which provide
a free-market perspective in solving the nation's environmental
problems.
Corporate money, he said, is used for rent, salaries and
overhead, not for reimbursing judges for their expenses. He
acknowledged that that might be a distinction that makes little
difference. "We try to do the best we can," he said. "Everyone
understands money is fungible."
George Mason's Law & Economics Center, which has focused on
issues such as tort reform, declines to release any information
on donors or fundraising.
Documents released by the Community Rights Counsel, including
some released as a part of the national tobacco settlement,
appear to show that the center's officials asked R.J. Reynolds
Tobacco for $20,000 for the federal judges program, according to
a Reynolds internal e-mail. The center received $40,000 from
Philip Morris from 1996 through 1999, and was listed as one of
the company's "key allies" among public policy groups. The
center also received $40,000 from the Exxon Mobil Foundation in
2004.
Francis H. Buckley, a law professor who serves as director of
the center, said the policy of silence when it comes to donors
is best for everyone involved. He also declined to say where the
seminars take place, citing security reasons. "We've been
advised that there are more ethical problems if you disclose
than if you don't," he said.
He also said that corporate funding makes up 15 percent of the
center's $1.67 million annual budget and that no single
corporation's donation adds up to more than 2 percent of the
budget.
Leaders of both organizations stressed that their programs offer
serious, academic discussions about complex legal issues
moderated by giants in their fields. They are not barbecues on
the beach. And besides, they argue, few groups are as
sophisticated as federal judges, who routinely moderate between
some of the nation's best and highest paid legal advocates.
"I don't think they're going to come to Montana, go on a horsy
ride and run home and strike down federal environmental laws,"
Geddes said.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company
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