Group Sues To Get White House Logs
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

WASHINGTON – A public-interest group has sued the Secret Service for access to White House visitor logs that the group says would show how often lobbyist Jack Abramoff met with President Bush and his staff.
Judicial Watch filed suit in U.S. District Court in Washington under the federal Freedom of Information Act, claiming that the Secret Service failed to meet a February 21 deadline for releasing the records or indicating how much more time it would need.
Secret Service spokesman Tom Mazur said yesterday that the agency was unaware of the lawsuit. He had no other comment.
Abramoff pleaded guilty in January to federal charges stemming from his lobbying practices and pledged to cooperate with investigators.
The White House has refused to say how many times Abramoff, who raised $100,000 for Mr. Bush’s re-election, has been to see the president or his aides. Mr. Bush’s spokesman has said Abramoff was admitted to the White House complex for “a few staff-level meetings” and Hanukkah receptions in 2001 and 2002.
The president has said he does not know Abramoff personally.
The White House logs would answer a basic question about the extent of Abramoff’s ties to the White House, Judicial Watch president Tom Fitton said. The records “may show 30 visits by Jack Abramoff to the White House, or they may show three visits.”
“The point is we need to get all of the facts on the table about this admitted felon’s contacts with White House officials,” Mr. Fitton said. The lawsuit was filed last week.
One photograph has been made public, its authenticity acknowledged by the White House, that shows Mr. Bush and Abramoff. In the 2001 photo, Mr. Bush is shaking hands with the leader of an Indian tribe that was an Abramoff client. The lobbyist is in the background.
In an e-mail Abramoff sent to a magazine editor, he said he had brief conversations with Mr. Bush almost a dozen times and the president knew him well enough to make joking references to Abramoff’s family.
Lobbying records obtained by the AP show his lobbying team met nearly 200 times with administration officials during the first 10 months of Mr. Bush’s presidency on behalf of one of his clients, the Northern Mariana Islands.