Signatures Restaurant
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Signatures Restaurant is the Washington D.C. restaurant opened by Jack Abramoff at 801 Pennsylvania Avenue NW in 2002, mere steps from the United States Navy Memorial. Expensive and lavishly appointed with expensive memorabilia, Villeroy & Boch chargers and Christofle flatware, Signatures was used by Abramoff in coordination with his skyboxes and foreign trips to spend money primarily given by Indian tribes on politicians. During 17 months between 2002 and 2003 Signatures gave away $180,000 of food and drinks.[1]
Signatures rivaled the Capital Grille, opened in 1994, as the premier high-end GOP restaurant in town. It was more successful than Abramoff's other Washington D.C. food ventures: Archives Restaurant and Stacks Delicatessen, both kosher eateries.
[edit] Abramoff's scandalous dealings
Abramoff billed his tribal clients hundreds of thousands of dollars for meals at Signatures. Billing, campaign finance records, and restaurant records show, for example, that the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians paid Greenberg Traurig over $5,600, and that the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians paid as much as $20,000 for dozens of luncheon and dinner events a month.
Abramoff's preferred table was Table 40, where Tom DeLay, Dana Rohrabacher, Bob Ney, and John Doolittle were his regular guests, getting their meals comped. Rohrabacher ate as Abramoff's guest at least monthly, claiming the friendship exemption to House ethics rules. Bob Ney paid Signatures about $1,900 for meals and events between 2002 and 2004 in addition to many comped meals. Restaurant records show that Team Abramoff members Neil Volz and Tony Rudy (with Tom Hammond) organized $1,500 (minimum) dinners for their respective former bosses, Bob Ney and Tom DeLay, in April 2002, though campaign finance records show no payment. Although representatives Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) and Frank A. LoBiondo (R-N.J.) and former senators John Breaux (D-La.), Don Nickles (R) and Tim Hutchinson (R) were also on an Abramoff list of people to be comped, Blunt, LoBiondo, and Breaux deny ever receiving free meals.
Over the period of January 2002 to May 2003 Abramoff and his investors put more than $3 million into Signatures, spending 7 percent of revenues on comped food and drink, well above the industry standard.
[edit] Who's who and featured memorabilia
The official owner of Signatures was Livsar Enterprises, with Rodney Lane acting as the CEO. The registered agent was lawyer Yale Ginsburg; lawyer Jay Kaplan led the Signatures restaurant group. According to emails sent by Abramoff in 2001, Capitol Campaign Strategies transferred money to Livsar, which he planned to have under the control of his wife Pamela.
The original chefs were executive chef Michael Rosen and sous-chef, or under chef, Jeff Ramsey. As of 2006, the executive chef is Morou Ouattara. The main dining room seats 104 (50 seats at the bar), and about 50 on the patio. The private dining rooms seat 15 and 25 people. Amenities included rentable wine lockers and an in-house humidor.
The restaurant features the rare document collections of Stan Klos and Edward Bomsey, as well as other political memorabilia. The documents on display feature, not surprisingly, famous autographs. Most of the items displayed were also for sale. Some of the memorabilia featured included a rocking chair used by John F. Kennedy ($495,000), a signed replica of Gerald Ford's pardon of Richard Nixon (sold for $5,000), and signed portraits, letters, and photos of Czar Nicholas, Winston Churchill, Gen. George Patton, Rocky Marciano, Harry Houdini, Thomas Edison and Meyer Lansky ($5,000-$10,000).
[edit] External links and references
- Austin Bonner. "A Seat at Jack Abramoff's Table", TPMCafe, August 4, 2005.
- Albert Eisele. "Signatures: A special place to dine with history", The Hill, May 8, 2002.
- Glen Justice. "For Lobbyist, a Seat of Power Came With a Plate", New York Times, July 6, 2005.
- Susan Schmidt and Jeffrey H. Birnbaum. "Tribal Money Linked to GOP Fundraising: Skybox Events Were Not Always Reported to FEC", Washington Post, December 26, 2004.