AUSTIN, Texas, Sept. 28, 2005

House Leader Tom DeLay Indicted

GOP Leader, Two Associates Charged In Campaign Finance Probe

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    Web Exclusive: Jim Stewart reports on a Texas grand jury's indictment of House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas. DeLay is accused of entering into a criminal political fundraising conspiracy.

  • House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas

    House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas  (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

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    House majority leader Tom DeLay's actions raise questions.

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(CBS/AP)  "The problem for DeLay and the Republican leadership, apart from the obvious one, is that these sorts of investigations, these sorts of criminal cases, tend to take on lives of their own. They tend to have unintended consequences once people start testifying under oath and start getting pressure to make deals with prosecutors," said CBS News legal analyst Andrew Cohen.

"The story, in other words, doesn't end with this indictment."

The grand jury action is expected to have immediate consequences in the House, where DeLay is largely responsible for winning passage of the Republican legislative program.

DeLay has served in Congress for 21 years, the last three as House Republican leader, reports CBS News Correspondent Bob Fuss. He is famous for enforcing party discipline, leading to his nickname "the Hammer".

Democrats have kept up a crescendo of criticism of DeLay's ethics, citing three times last year that the House ethics committee admonished DeLay for his conduct.

"The criminal indictment of Majority Leader Tom Delay is the latest example that Republicans in Congress are plagued by a culture of corruption at the expense of the American people," said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

As a sign of loyalty to DeLay after the grand jury returned indictments against three of his associates, House Republicans last November repealed a rule requiring any of their leaders to step aside if indicted. The rule was reinstituted in January after lawmakers returned to Washington from the holidays fearing the repeal might create a backlash from voters.

DeLay is the center of an ethics swirl in Washington. The 11-term congressman was admonished last year by the House ethics committee on three separate issues and is the center of a political storm this year over lobbyists paying his and other lawmakers' tabs for expensive travel abroad.

Wednesday's indictment stems from a plan DeLay helped set in motion in 2001 to help Republicans win control of the Texas House in the 2002 elections for the first time since Reconstruction.

A state political action committee he created, Texans for a Republican Majority, was indicted earlier this month on charges of accepting corporate contributions for use in state legislative races. Texas law prohibits corporate money from being used to advocate the election or defeat of candidates; it is allowed only for administrative expenses.

With GOP control of the Texas legislature, DeLay then engineered a redistricting plan that enabled the GOP take six Texas seats in the U.S. House away from Democrats — including one lawmaker switching parties — in 2004 and build its majority in Congress.

DeLay is the third member of Congress to be indicted since 1996. Former Rep. William Janklow, R-S.D., was convicted of vehicular homicide and sentenced to 100 days in prison after his car struck and killed a motorcyclist in 2003. Former Rep. James Traficant, D-Ohio, was sentenced to eight years in prison after being convicted on charges from a 2001 indictment accusing him of racketeering and accepting bribes.


©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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