From the Washington Post
Palin Accepted $25,000 in Gifts, Alaska Records Show
By James V. Grimaldi and Robert O'Harrow Jr.
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, September 26, 2008; A08
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, who has made a crackdown on gift-giving to state officials
a centerpiece of her ethics reform agenda, has accepted gifts valued at $25,367
from industry executives, municipalities and a cultural center whose board includes
officials from some of the largest mining interests in the state, a review of
state records shows.
The 41 gifts Palin accepted during her 20 months as governor include honorific
tributes, expensive artwork and free travel for a family member. They also include
more than $2,500 in personal items from Calista, a large Alaska native corporation
with a variety of pending state regulatory and budgetary issues, and a gold-nugget
pin valued at $1,200 from the city of Nome, which lobbies on municipal, local
and capital budget matters, documents show.
About a quarter of the entities bestowing gifts on the governor are represented
by one of Alaska's most influential mining lobbyists, who said in an interview
that she was not involved in the tributes. The lobbyist, Wendy Chamberlain,
has a relationship with the governor's family through the friendship of their
teenage daughters.
On forms disclosing the gifts, Palin, who is the Republican vice presidential
nominee, routinely checked "no" when asked whether she was in a position
to "take official action that may affect the person who gave me the gift,"
and a spokeswoman for Sen. John McCain's presidential campaign said the gifts
had no undue influence on her.
In response to e-mailed questions, Meghan Stapleton, who is based in Alaska
for the McCain-Palin campaign, wrote: "Throughout her career Governor Palin
has stood for the highest standards of ethics. She spearheaded new ethics reforms
in Alaska and took on her own party and entrenched interests to return Alaska's
government to its people."
Records show that 23 of the gifts were offered during Palin's early months in
office, when she was pushing the legislature to address a state corruption scandal
by passing a package of ethics reforms. She accepted 18 gifts after the law
passed in July 2007. Among other provisions, the law forbade executive branch
officials from taking gifts from lobbyists or from interests with pending state
business.
Gift rules for elected officials vary among states, with some such as Wisconsin
banning all gifts and others with no applicable rules other than anti-bribery
statutes. When former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee (R) ran for president
this year, he faced questions about his acceptance of more than $150,000 in
gifts during a decade in office.
The Alaska attorney general's office contends that gifts to a governor must
be evaluated on "a case-by-case basis," Assistant Attorney General
Judy Bockman said. Some are offered as "a courtesy," she said, to
newly elected officials and are not considered an ethical issue.
Palin has noted that passage of the tough ethics law was a proud accomplishment.
She took office amid a widespread federal investigation of influence-peddling
by Veco, a now-defunct oil pipeline services and construction company, that
had led to indictments of prominent state legislators and eventually to charges
against Ted Stevens, the state's senior Republican senator, who is now on trial
in Washington.
Palin forwarded her ethics proposals to the legislature in January 2007, her
first month in office. That month, she accepted three gifts from Calista's chief
executive, Matthew Nicolai: a $2,200 ivory puffin mask, a woven grass fan worth
$300 and a $150 ivory necklace. Nicolai, who did not return phone calls, runs
the large corporation, which profits from a multibillion-dollar gold-mining
operation on its land.
Palin, who holds significant sway over budgetary issues affecting cities, also
accepted for "personal use" the gold-nugget pin from Nome. Mayor Denise
Michels said the memento was meant to remind the governor that "Nome is
a historic mining community." Palin approved about $6 million in funding
this year for a public safety building in the city. "Anything our state
can do to help us in capital projects, we're very grateful," Michels said.
Palin has also reported as gifts two fact-finding trips that mining companies
sponsored for her husband, Todd. The trips were among several sponsored by mining
companies for state officials.
Todd Palin accepted an $805 charter flight from Barrick Gold and a $200 flight
from Red Dog Mines. Both companies are clients of Chamberlain, a top lobbyist
with Legislative Consultants, which led the state in lobbying income last year.
Red Dog is the sole taxpayer to the Northwest Arctic Borough, an Alaskan jurisdiction
represented by Chamberlain that received $10.9 million from the zinc mine in
2007. The borough gave Palin a whale baleen basket valued at $300.
Chamberlain, the ex-wife of an influential former state lawmaker, said in an
interview that she was unaware of her clients giving gifts to the Palins.
Under the new ethics laws, Palin may not accept lobbyist gifts unless the lobbyist
is a family member. The governor explains in detail in her disclosure how she
reimbursed Chamberlain for a summer trip made by Palin's 14-year-old daughter,
Willow. Willow is friends with Chamberlain's teenage daughter, Mackenzie. Chamberlain
said Willow accompanied her and her daughter in the summer of 2007 to a basketball
camp and then to Mexico.
"This is not a gift," reads a handwritten note on Palin's disclosure
form. "It is merely interaction with a parent who is registered as a lobbyist
with the state of Alaska."
Chamberlain said she kept trip receipts to ensure that the Palins could reimburse
her. The lobbyist said she has been careful around Palin in government settings.
"Because our kids are together quite a bit, people made the assumption
we are good buddies, but we aren't," she said. "I was a bit nervous
of her, and I guess she was a bit nervous of me."
It was an unspoken rule that lobbyists should not directly approach Palin, Chamberlain
said. The lobbyist said she had access to the governor's key staff members and
she set up meetings for her clients. "I didn't have business conversations
with her, because she didn't see lobbyists," Chamberlain said. "She
preferred to see clients without lobbyists present."
Chamberlain also represents the Pebble Partnership, which has proposed a massive
gold mine on Bristol Bay that has encountered opposition from conservationists.
Palin has come under fire for speaking out against a statewide initiative, Proposition
4, that would have imposed costly environmental regulations on mining operations,
particularly the Pebble Mine. A hearing by a state ethics watchdog agency has
been scheduled for mid-November to see whether statutes prohibiting partisan
activity apply to the governor's statements on the initiative.
Mining interests did not play a major fundraising role in Palin's gubernatorial
campaign, but post-election donations to her inaugural committee came from four
mining companies, including Northern Dynasty, the Pebble Mine co-developer.
The money was spent on inaugural balls and on travel by the governor and her
family for events. The amounts were not disclosed.
Palin also reported receiving $1,000 in gifts -- an Aleut woven basket, a sea
otter headband, a Tlingit rattle and an Athabascan chief necklace -- at an inaugural
reception thrown by the Alaska Native Heritage Center. Executives of several
of Chamberlain's clients serve on the center's board and many were in attendance
when the gifts were presented to the governor.
Research editor Alice Crites contributed to this report.