Frank Pallone

June 23, 2009 - 12:54pm

Pallone invites Vitale and Webber to debate health care in DC

State Sen. Joseph Vitale (D-Woodbridge) and Assemblyman/Republican State Chairman Jay Webber (R-Morris Plains) will debate health care in Washington, DC tomorrow.

The two will engage on the issue at the House’s Subcommittee on Health legislative hearing tomorrow at 1pm.  The subcommittee is chaired by New Jersey Rep. Frank Pallone (D-Long Branch)., who invited the two legislators.

“We've done a lot to improve and enhance health care at the state level in New Jersey so a reasoned debate on the issue could be informative," said Pallone, a leader in Congress on health reform. "The states can only do so much but we can still learn from them as we pursue reforms to the nation's health system."

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June 19, 2009 - 4:04pm

Pallone and Pascrell hope Christie will testify about the 'unknown' and 'unanswered'

U.S. Reps. Bill Pascrell (D-Paterson) and Frank Pallone (D-Long Branch) today issued a statement indicating that former U.S. Attorney Chris Christie’s testimony next Thursday is long overdue.

“We welcome Mr. Christie’s willingness to finally answer for his decisions and his actions," said Pascrell.   "His use of DPAs has been covered in near secrecy with the only information indirect and incomplete. The partial disclosures have only triggered more questions. Mr. Christie is the only one who can provide the answers because he appears to have executed the agreements unilaterally with no guidelines and no standards of accountability."

Pallone and Pascrell have legislation pending that was inspired by Christie’s hiring of former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft for a lucrative federal monitoring contract.

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June 10, 2009 - 9:43am

Christie considering invitation to testify in DC

Former U.S. Attorney and current Republican gubernatorial candidate Chris Christie is considering an invitation to testify before the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Commercial and Administrative Law on June 25.  

The committee originally scheduled the hearing and invited Christie for May 19, but put it off at the urging of Republican members, who argued that its timing could impact the GOP gubernatorial primary.  

The hearing’s focus will be on legislation co-authored by U.S. Reps. Frank Pallone (D-Long Branch) and Bill Pascrell (D-Paterson) that creates guidelines for how deferred prosecution agreements (DPAs) are awarded.  The political ramifications are obvious, however, as the legislation was inspired by Christie’s awarding of a lucrative federal monitoring contract to his former boss, ex-U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft. 

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May 11, 2009 - 3:42pm

DeCroce slams Corzine on failure to curb no-bid contracts

Assembly Minority Leader Alex DeCroce (R-Parsippany) says a recent Gannett New Jersey report that 40% of tax dollars spent by government contracts were approved without formal competitive bids shows that Gov. Jon Corzine’s 2005 campaign pledge to reform no-bid contracts is a sham.

“No bid contracts are an open invitation to pay-to-play, something Corzine pretends to care about but has done nothing to stop permanently in all its incarnations and at every level of government,” said DeCroce. “No-bid contracts imply secrecy. Open competitive bidding is the most honest and transparent way to award government contracts. In a state that is a poster child for corruption, it is also the only way  to both regain the public’s trust and wisely spend tax dollars at a time when so many people are struggling financially?"

DeCroce also criticized two New Jersey Democrats who have sponsored legislation to reform the current process used to award federal monitor contracts in deferred prosecution agreements.

“Isn’t it strange that Corzine and his former colleagues in Washington – Congressmen Frank Pallone and Bill Pascrell – love to talk reform and total transparency in government but are invisible when it comes to cleaning up the corrupt mess in their own back yards.

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May 11, 2009 - 3:42pm
PRESS RELEASE

CORZINE REFUSAL TO CLAMP DOWN ON NO BID CONTRACTS DEMONSTRATES HIS DISREGARD FOR SAVING TAX DOLLARS

Another Broken Corzine Promise:
Nearly 40 Percent of All Government Contracts Approved Without Bids

 

            Assembly Republican Leader Alex DeCroce says disclosures that nearly 40 percent of all taxpayer dollars spent by government contracts in New Jersey were approved without formal competitive bids despite Democrat Jon Corzine’s 2005 promise to slash no-bid contracts demonstrates the governor’s “total insensitivity to the desperate need to save taxpayers money.”

 

            “No bid contracts are an open invitation to pay-to-play, something Corzine pretends to care about but has done nothing to stop permanently in all its incarnations and at every level of government,” asserted DeCroce, R-Morris and Passaic.

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May 11, 2009 - 2:50pm

Christie: House hearings part of Dem bid to influence GOP primary

Christopher Christie says that congressional hearings scheduled for next week on federal monitors and deferred prosecution agreements (DPAs) are part of a calculated, multi-front effort to distract him from his Republican Primary and to give rival Steve Lonegan a better leg-up to win the Republican nomination for Governor.

Christie wouldn't say whether he'd first need to see a subpoena before appearing to testify in the matter of DPAs, the subject of the hearings scheduled as a direct result of controversial federal monitors Christie appointed when he served as U.S. Attorney.

"I haven't gotten any formal invitation to go and testify," Christie said on a conference call with reporters this afternoon. "I learned of the hearing in a press release from (U.S. Rep. Frank) Pallone and (U.S. Rep. Bill) Pascrell," who have sponsored legislation to reform the way the feds apportion federal monitoring contracts as part of DPAs.

"It's another part of a concerted Democratic effort two weeks before a Republican Primary," Christie said of the hearings. "When and if I receive an invitation, I will consider it in light of my schedule."

Pointing to a commitment by the Democratic Governor's Association (DGA) to spend money now targeting presumptive GOP gubernatorial frontrunner Christie and prosecutor-targeted legislation at the state level, Christie said the Democrats are trying to use the press and the levers of government to influence an election rather than undertaking the hard work of government.

"It's the front group to ensure Steve Lonegan is the Republican nominee or the ridiculous legislation introduced by Dick Codey (designed to curtail the political ambitions of prosecutors at the state and county levels) using government funds to negatively influence the Republican Primary," Christie explained. "This is political caddies carrying water and carrying clubs for the governor.

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May 11, 2009 - 11:51am

Christie asked to testify at House subcommittee hearing next week on DPA's

Getty Images Photo
House Judiciary Subcommittee on Commercial and Administrative Law has asked former U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie to testify at their hearing next week on deferred prosecution agreements and federal monitiors

GOP gubernatorial candidate Christopher Christie has been asked to testify at a May 19 congressional hearing on legislation to reform deferred prosecution agreements and the selection of federal monitors.

The House Judiciary Subcommittee on Commercial and Administrative Law will consider a bill sponsored by two New Jersey Democrats after Christie, a former U.S. Attorney, awarded lucrative federal monitor contracts to former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft and to David Kelley, a former federal prosecutor in New York.

"The use of DPA's has multiplied many times over in recent years as a replacement for criminal prosecutions," said U.S. Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-Paterson). "But there are no rules, no guidelines, no standards and no accountability." 

U.S. Rep. Frank Pallone (D-Long Branch) says the subcommittee will hear the findings of the Government Accounting Office (GAO), the non-partisan the investigative arm of Congress.  The GAO launched their investigation two months ago at the request of the Senate and House Judiciary chairmen.

"Questions and criticisms have been swirling around DPA's and the monitoring contracts and now we will start to get some answers," said Pallone. "If those who issued and received DPA contracts continue to stonewall, maybe the GAO investigation will provide the information we are looking for."

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May 9, 2009 - 3:45pm

With Christie engaged in GOP gubernatorial primary, legal brains consider DPAs

Defense Attorney Ted Wells (center) was among the panelists.

MANHATTAN – Days before a House Judiciary Subcommittee launches hearings on the subject, legal experts at an event hosted by New York University’s School of Law considered whether sufficient checks and balances govern the process by which federal U.S. Attorneys select federal monitors to oversee deferred prosecution agreements (DPAs) of corporations.

They also assessed in general the role of politics in prosecution, both at the state and federal level.

“No one should be exercising power without appropriate constraints,” said Michelle Hirshman, a former Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York - but how the government would implement depoliticizing changes to federal monitoring contracts remains a question mark as Congressional lawmakers prepare for hearings.

The multi-paneled discussion unfolded against the backdrop of a gubernatorial bid on the other side of the Hudson River by former U.S. Attorney Chris Christie, who during his tenure as New Jersey’s top cop appointed former Attorney General John Ashcroft to a no-bid federal monitoring job potentially worth up to $52 million.

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May 9, 2009 - 3:40pm

Pascrell intensifies DPA reform rhetoric at NYU - not interested in LG job

U.S. Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-Paterson) at NYU on Friday.

MANHATTAN – U.S. Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-Paterson) straightened the backs of New York’s legal community yesterday and created a ripple of discomfort when he railed against deferred prosecution agreements (DPAs) and government appointment of federal monitors, forcing the event's organizer out of his chair and into mild-mannered damage control mode.

Pointing to the DPAs administered by the government in fraud and alleged fraud cases perpetuated by Bristol-Myers Squibb, AIG, Zimmer Holdings, the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ) and others – 112 deferred prosecution agreements since 1993 - Pascrell said the process as it currently exists not only diminishes consumer confidence, but breaks down the confidence the average person has in the judicial and prosecutorial system.

Pascrell called the engineers of Medicare fraud at Zimmer Holdings “the real ax murderers of our time,” and charged a weakened U.S. Department of Justice with using deferred prosecution agreements instead of administering real punishment out of a general sense of fear of “dismantling corporations. God forbid that should happen.”

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May 4, 2009 - 3:03pm
INSIDE EDGE

Pallone, Pascrell to speak at symposium on regulation on prosecutors

U.S. Reps. Frank Pallone (D-Long Branch) and Bill Pascrell (D-Paterson) will speak at a New York University Law School conference on the regulation by federal prosecutors on Friday afternoon.  Their remarks will precede a panel discussion called "Monitoring and Compliance Oversight: When Should Monitors Be Used? How Should Monitors Be Selected? Who Monitors The Monitors?" The two New Jersey Congressmen have introduced legislation to regulate the Justice Department's use of deferred prosecution agreements (DPAs) -- legislation that the two Democrats began pursuing after revelations that GOP gubernatorial candidate Christopher Christie gave the firm of his former boss, John Ashcroft, a monitoring contract with $27 to $52 million when he was U.S. Attorney.

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