Powell: Stevens’ reputation ‘sterling’

McClatchy Tribune

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Washington —- Colin Powell, the retired Army general and former secretary of state, characterized Sen. Ted Stevens in court Friday as a “trusted individual” and a man with a “sterling” reputation.

“He was someone whose word you could rely on,” said Powell, who self-deprecatingly described himself as the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff who retired and then “dabbled a bit in diplomacy.”

Stevens, on trial for lying about gifts on financial disclosure forms, has the right during the defense portion of the trial to ask character witnesses to speak on behalf of his “truthfulness and veracity.” The first such character witness, Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii) spoke Thursday. Three others are set to testify on Stevens’ behalf, but the highest-profile witness, by far, was Powell.

The former secretary of state said he had known Stevens for 25 years, mostly in the senator’s role as the top defense appropriator on the Senate Appropriations Committee. In Stevens, “I had a guy who would tell me when I was off base, he would tell me when I had no clothes on, figuratively, that is, and would tell me when I was right and go for it,” Powell said. “He’s a guy who, as we said in the infantry, we would take on a long patrol.”

Stevens, 84, faces charges of failing to disclose more than $250,000 in gifts between 1999 and 2006. Most of that total is related to a renovation project that doubled the size of Stevens’ home in Girdwood, Alaska, with much of the work allegedly done for free by an oil-field service company run by Stevens’ friend, Bill Allen.

Jurors also heard a morning’s worth of testimony from people who worked on Stevens’ home and were paid by Stevens and his family, or were aware of gifts he had received.

Another defense witness, the former chairman of a nonprofit in Alaska, testified that he was directed by a close friend of Stevens’ to “create a paper trail” that would show a husky puppy given to the senator was worth one-fourth what the friend paid for it.

Ronald Rainey, a retired utility worker from Soldotna, Alaska, was called by Stevens’ defense to discredit the government’s claim that the blue-eyed husky was a $1,000 dog —- a value far in excess of the $285 gift limit in effect for the Senate that year.

Rainey testified that the Kenai River Sportfishing Association gave the dog to Stevens, not the man who bid $1,000 for it at the group’s annual charity auction. The bidder was Bob Penney, an Anchorage real estate developer, the founder of the association and Stevens’ good friend.

But if Penney bought the dog with his $1,000 bid, why did Stevens report it in his 2003 Senate disclosure as a gift from the association with a value of $250?

According to Rainey, Penney bid up the value of the dog. When the auction hammer came down, he was the last bidder.

“It was a joke,” Rainey said. “We knew he got stuck with something he didn’t want.”

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