Word: wallach
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...memo suggesting, in effect, that a crime should be committed? Yet reports surfaced last week that such a note had been sent to Edwin Meese in 1985, shortly after he became the nation's top law enforcement officer. The suggestion allegedly came from E. Robert Wallach, a Meese friend and his former personal attorney. The purported proposal: that a bribe be paid to an Israeli official, perhaps Prime Minister Shimon Peres or his Labor Party, to ensure that Israel would not sabotage a proposed pipeline that would carry Iraqi oil through Jordan to the Red Sea, bypassing the perilous Persian...
...California-based Bechtel Group has confirmed that it actively sought the billion-dollar construction job, which was to have been privately financed. Bechtel sources say Wallach was involved in the deal as legal counsel for Bruce Rappaport, a Geneva-based international oilman, who was to handle the pipeline oil sales. Citing his closeness to Meese, Wallach contacted several Administration officials to see if money earmarked for Israel by Congress could be used to insure the pipeline against an Israeli attack. The project was abandoned when proposed lenders asked for guarantees of repayment even if the line was damaged...
...latest of 15 people accused in the long-running affair are E. Robert Wallach, a Meese friend of 30 years and former personal lawyer who became a highly paid Wedtech lobbyist; W. Franklyn Chinn, a former Wedtech director who handled investments profitably for Meese in a "blind partnership" trust; and Rusty Kent London, a professional gambler and past financial consultant to Wedtech. The indictments contend that Wallach received a check for $300,000 from Wedtech in 1984, claiming falsely that the payment was for past legal advice to the company. "In fact," contended Giuliani, "the money was for future services...
Meese has publicly conceded that, at Wallach's urging, he helped Wedtech get a "fair hearing" on a $32 million Army engine contract in 1982. The Army, which had considered Wedtech unqualified for the work, agreed to award the no- bid contract to the Bronx firm after an unusual White House meeting in the office of James Jenkins, then Meese's top deputy. Jenkins later went to work for Wedtech. At the time Meese was Counsellor to the President. Giuliani stressed that the defendants are not charged with illegally influencing Meese, but were indicted for the allegedly unlawful...
Answers were lacking, McKay explained, because Wallach, Chinn and London had refused to testify before the grand jury McKay had summoned. McKay said he was suspending his investigation of Meese until the New York City prosecutions are concluded. While all three men are expected to deny the charges, last week's indictments may induce one of them to end his silence...