Man in the Middle
As a corruption probe heats up on Capitol Hill, the spotlight falls on a California defense contractor with some powerful friends.
By Mark Hosenball, Jamie Reno and Evan Thomas
Newsweek
June 5, 2006 issue - During World War II, the Royal Hawaiian, a grand pink palace on Waikiki Beach, was reserved mainly for officers and men in the U.S. Navy's Submarine Service. It was understood that the sailors who took the greatest risks—about a quarter of the submariners never came back—deserved to be pampered while they waited to go back out on war patrols. More recently, the most frequent guest in the Royal Hawaiian's tony King Kamehameha Suite was a man with close ties to the military who also took risks, though of a different kind.
Brent Wilkes has flown in a private Gulfstream jet, lived in a huge house (once occupied by former San Diego Chargers quarterback Stan Humphries) in a gated community, smoked expensive cigars on the best golf courses and sponsored good works and charities, like the "Tribute to Heroes Gala," which raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for a children's hospital and a military charity called the Air Warrior Courage Foundation.
What paved the road to riches and beneficence for Wilkes? Once a lowly CPA in southern California, Wilkes became a fabulously successful defense contractor. He carefully cultivated friends in high places, personally handing out some $800,000 in campaign contributions, not counting the donations of a political action committee controlled by his company. He was a Republican "Pioneer," which means he raised at least $100,000 for the GOP. And he has long been known for showering favors on congressmen and national-security officials, playing poker with them at fancy Washington hotels and flying them in a jet he partly owned.
There is nothing unusual or illegal about a defense contractor with an open checkbook for campaign fund-raisers and seats to fill on a corporate jet. But federal prosecutors want to find out more about how Wilkes tapped into what may be one of Washington's sweetest post-9/11 honey pots—secret defense and intelligence contracts that are often awarded without competitive bids or oversight but with plenty of congressional meddling. Wilkes appears to be at the center of a Washington scandal that has the potential to shake Capitol Hill and the Pentagon.
Wilkes has protested his innocence, and indeed, his friends say he appears cheerful and confident he will be vindicated. But his lawyers have confirmed that he is the man identified as "Co-conspirator No. 1" in the charges against former congressman Randy (Duke) Cunningham, the former Navy air ace who pleaded guilty to taking bribes. In one prosecution document, "Co-conspirator No. 1" agreed to give Cunningham $525,000 in return for $6 million in government contracts. Wilkes is also a close friend of one of the more colorful characters to fall from a top government job, Kyle (Dusty) Foggo, the former executive director of the CIA who resigned three weeks ago, just before his house and office were raided by federal agents. According to The San Diego Union-Tribune, high-school classmates Wilkes and Foggo served as best men at each other's weddings, named their sons after each other and shared a wine locker at Washington's Capital Grille restaurant, a favorite lobbyists' hangout.....
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13006800/site/newsweek/page/2/