About a month ago, Tom DeLay’s lawyer went public with a claim that Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle offered DeLay a plea bargain deal whereby the lawmaker could plead guilty to a misdemeanor and save his job as House majority leader, but DeLay and his legal team rejected the offer.
The disclosure didn’t really make a lot of sense at the time. Part of DeLay’s political defense insisted that Earle is on some kind of partisan vendetta and was desperate to force DeLay from his leadership post. If Earle offered DeLay a deal, and a misdemeanor plea could have helped him keep his job, why didn’t DeLay just take it and end this mess?
The Washington Post fleshed out an explanation in a helpful front-page article today. Apparently, DeLay’s lawyers signaled they wanted a plea bargain — because DeLay incriminated himself pretty seriously during an August meeting with Earle.
At that session, DeLay acknowledged that in 2002 he was informed about and expressed his support for transfers of $190,000 in mostly corporate funds from his Texas political action committee to an arm of the Republican National Committee in Washington and then back to Texas, according to the sources, who spoke on the condition that they not be named. […]
DeLay said he was also generally aware of a plan to shift money between Texas and Washington. It called for pulling together $190,000, sending it up to Washington and getting the same amount sent back to Texas for state election campaigns.
According to matching accounts provided separately by the sources, DeLay was asked whether such a deal happened and responded yes. Asked if he knew beforehand that the deal was going to happen, DeLay said yes. Asked how he knew, DeLay said that his longtime political adviser, Ellis, came into his office, told him it was planned and asked DeLay what he thought. DeLay told Earle that he recalled saying, “Fine.”
From that point on, DeLay had a real problem on his hands. For all his public denials about his involvement in the money-laundering scheme, here was DeLay admitting to a prosecutor about his role and understanding of the transactions, effectively making him part of the conspiracy to circumvent election law.
The WaPo has all the details of the process. It certainly answers a lot of questions.