From the Sun-Times:
Feds probe Rezko's Iraq contract
Want to ask jailed power chief how gov's pal got deal
December 3, 2006
BY CHRIS FUSCO, NATASHA KORECKI AND DAVE MCKINNEY Staff Reporters
Federal authorities are investigating an Iraqi power plant deal involving Antoin
"Tony" Rezko, a former top fund-raiser for Gov. Blagojevich charged
with defrauding Illinois taxpayers.
Investigators want to talk to Iraq's jailed former electricity minister, Aiham
Alsammarae, about how Rezko landed the potentially lucrative contract, a source
familiar with the probe told the Chicago Sun-Times.
Alsammarae, who holds dual U.S.-Iraqi citizenship and has a house in Oak Brook,
helped Rezko get the deal, another source said.
Rezko and others in the venture were to own the plant and sell electricity back
to the Iraqis, but the Iraqi government still was to pay a substantial portion
of construction costs, that source added.
The contract, negotiated in 2004, no longer is in effect. It is unknown how much
money, if any, Rezko made.
Alsammarae, 55, attended the Illinois Institute of Technology with Rezko in the
late 1970s and early 1980s and went on to own an engineering firm in Downers Grove.
In 2003, Alsammarae returned to his native Iraq to lead efforts to help rebuild
its war-torn power grid. By January 2005, Rezko's Rezmar Corp. had secured its
contract to build a 200- to 300-megawatt plant in the northern Iraqi city of Chamchamal.
Since then, Alsammarae has been arrested and convicted of corruption by Iraq's
Commission on Public Integrity. He and his family have vehemently denied that
he has done anything wrong and fear he'll be killed if he remains in Iraqi custody,
according to news reports.
Rezko, 51, was indicted in October on fraud charges allegedly tied to his influence
within the Blagojevich administration. Among other things, the feds are accusing
Rezko of bilking Illinois taxpayers out of $250,000 through an alleged kickback
scheme that involved a state pension fund. Blagojevich has not been accused of
wrongdoing and has denied he knew anything about what Rezko allegedly was doing.
The Iraq deal is of interest to authorities here because Rezko and Alsammarae
know each other and each is facing corruption charges. Attempts to reach Alsammarae's
family and Rezko's lawyer Friday were unsuccessful.
Iraqi convicted of corruption
Authorities have yet to talk to Alsammarae, who left his Iraqi Cabinet post in
early 2005 but remained active in Iraqi politics before being arrested in August,
the source familiar with the probe said.
An Iraqi newspaper reported in October that the charges against Alsammarae stem
from "fake contracts and financial corruption" during his tenure as
electricity minister. The Associated Press reported that Alsammarae stood accused
of contracting irregularities and "misappropriating millions of dollars."
The U.S. State Department declined to discuss specifics of Alsammarae's case,
other than to confirm Alsammarae is in Iraqi custody after being convicted in
October by the Central Criminal Court of Iraq.
A spokesman for the Iraqi Embassy in Washington, D.C., declined to comment, and
attempts to reach the commission that convicted Alsammarae were unsuccessful.
During a Sun-Times interview in summer 2005, Rezko's point man on the power plant,
former Peoples Energy executive Michael Rumman, said Rezko used his "formidable
overseas network of business relationships" to join energy consulting companies
and win the contract.
$200 million project
Rumman already had been to Jordan, where "most of the negotiations and deal
structures are done." He had hoped to begin construction on the Chamchamal
plant in January of this year.
Up to 30 companies were to be involved in the $200 million project, Rumman said.
"It's a tremendous opportunity to get in early on the rebuilding of Iraq,"
Rumman said. "As you know, much of the instability is that the average person's
life hasn't been improved, with electricity being one of the major challenges.
The urgency to get this and other plants built is overwhelming."
When reached again Tuesday, Rumman declined to discuss the plant or Alsammarae.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers confirmed that the contract for the Chamchamal
project no longer is in effect.
From Oak Brook to Iraqi Cabinet to prison
Since leaving Oak Brook in 2003 to become Iraq's minister of electricity, Aiham
Alsammarae has seen his fortunes rise and fall.
• • September 2004: Electrical power systems improve from pre-war
days, the New York Times reports, but renewed violence wipes out those gains.
• • June 2005: Now out of the Iraqi Cabinet, Alsammarae, a Sunni,
announces he's forming a group to bridge the political gap between Sunni insurgents
and Iraq's Shiite-led government. He claims to have talked to insurgent groups.
• • February 2006: One of the groups Alsammarae said he'd talked to
takes credit for trying to kill him in a roadside bomb attack in Baghdad. He's
OK, but two bodyguards in his convoy are wounded.
• • August 2006: Alsammarae turns himself in to fight corruption charges.
His family says he's detained for political reasons.
• • October 2006: Iraqi news outlets report that U.S. forces are trying
to help Alsammarae escape Iraqi custody. The U.S. State Department declines to
comment.
SOURCE: News reports