Naked City
T.A.B.: Probes and Countersuits
By Amy Smith, Fri., Dec. 20, 2002
In a related development on Monday, the T.A.B. countersued four legislative candidates who had filed legal claims against T.A.B. last month, alleging its undisclosed corporate-money expenditures violated state election laws, which expressly prohibit contributions from corporations. In its countersuit, T.A.B. denies wrongdoing and is seeking to recover its legal fees from the candidates -- Reps. Ann Kitchen, D-Austin, and Debra Danburg, D-Houston, and Dem candidate Danny Duncan of Commerce -- in the event it prevails. Another candidate, Austin's James Sylvester, has filed a separate lawsuit. All four defeated Democrats were targeted by T.A.B. campaign mailers. Said Kitchen: "What they did is unprecedented ... and if what they did is allowed to stand, there will effectively be no campaign finance laws in Texas to protect the public."
Attorney Cris Feldman, who represents Kitchen, Danburg, and Duncan, scoffed at the T.A.B. countersuit. "It's just a red herring to deflect illegal and secret corrosive laundering of corporate funds," he said. Meanwhile, District Attorney Ronnie Earle says his office is still reviewing the matter. "We're continuing to gather information," he said, "to determine if there's a reason to initiate a formal investigation."
In an interview last month, T.A.B. President Bill Hammond defended his group's actions, saying the mailers did not require a disclaimer because they were "educational" in nature and did not explicitly advocate the election or defeat of a candidate. In Kitchen's race against Republican Todd Baxter, T.A.B. produced two negative pieces on Kitchen and one favorable mailer on Baxter, touting him as a pro-business candidate.
Got something to say on the subject? Send a letter to the editor.