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Reply #25: You're right. He did serve, unlike most republics. And he built a national [View All]

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acmavm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-26-07 09:59 AM
Response to Reply #23
25. You're right. He did serve, unlike most republics. And he built a national
name for himself as a POW. His main claim to fame is he got caught by the enemy. Then he came back here and took that new-found fame and got into politics and promptly started selling himself to the highest bidder, in his case Charles Keating.

<snip>

The Keating Five (or Keating Five Scandal) refers to a Congressional scandal related to the collapse of most of the Savings and Loan institutions in the United States in the late 1980s.

Following the deregulation of the banking industry in the 1980s, savings and loan associations (also known as thrifts) were given the flexibility to invest their depositors' funds in commercial real estate. (Previously, they had been restricted to investing in residential real estate.) Many savings and loan associations began making risky investments. As a result, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, the federal agency that regulates the industry, tried to clamp down on the trend. In so doing, however, the FHLBB clashed with the Reagan administration, whose policy was deregulation of many industries, including the thrift industry. The administration declined to submit budgets to Congress that would request more funding for the FHLBB's regulatory efforts.

In 1989, the Lincoln Savings and Loan Association of Irvine, Calif., collapsed. Lincoln's chairman, Charles H. Keating Jr., was faulted for the thrift's failure. Keating, however, told the House Banking Committee that the FHLBB and its former chief Edwin J. Gray were pursuing a vendetta against him. Gray testified that several U.S. senators had approached him and requested that he ease off on the Lincoln investigation. It came out that these senators had been beneficiaries of $1.3 million (collective total) in campaign contributions from Keating.

This allegation set off a series of investigations by the California government, the United States Department of Justice, and the Senate Ethics Committee. The ethics committee's investigation focused on five senators: Alan MacG. Cranston (D-Calif.); Dennis W. DeConcini (D-Ariz.); John H. Glenn Jr. (D-Ohio); John McCain (R-Ariz.); and Donald W. Riegle Jr. (D-Mich), who became known as the Keating Five.

-MORE-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keating_Five






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