Rep. Maxine Waters to Face Reporters Friday to Address Ethics Charges

Rep. Maxine Waters D-Calif., will talk to media about alleged ethics violations.

ByABC News
August 12, 2010, 4:54 PM

2010-08-12— -- After a week of staying off the radar and away from television cameras and reporters camped outside her office, ABC News confirms that Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., will address ethics charges with reporters on Capitol Hill Friday morning at 10 a.m.

Waters will be joined by her chief of staff Mikael Moore, who is also her grandson. Waters is expected to read a prepared statement in front of cameras, followed by a presentation conducted by Moore refuting the statement of alleged violations issued by the Ethics Committee earlier this month.

After the 32-year-old Moore's presentation concludes, television cameras will be asked to leave for an on-the-record, but off-camera Q & A session with both Waters and Moore. Waters had considered holding the meeting with reporters earlier in the week, but those plans were put on hold after embattled Rep. Charles Rangel, Democrat of New York, went to the House floor Tuesday to deliver an impassioned speech defending himself against his own 13 alleged ethics violations.

The ethics charges stem from a meeting that Waters' congressional office requested with then-Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson at the start of the financial crisis in September 2008. Waters and Paulson did not attend the meeting, but senior Treasury officials and members of the National Bankers Association (NBA), a trade organization representing over 100 minority-owned firms, did.

At that meeting and in follow-up conversations, an ethics report found that "the discussion centered on a single bank – OneUnited," where Waters' husband Sidney Williams was a board member from 2004 to 2008. In fact, Kevin L. Cohee, the chief executive of OneUnited, was the top official representing the NBA at the meeting. Waters and her husband reported owning $352,089.64 worth of stock at OneUnited in June 2008 on financial disclosure forms. By the end of September of that year, the value of the stock had plummeted to $175,000. What remained was salvaged thanks to a portion of the $700 billion Wall Street bailout.

According to the ethics committee's statement of alleged violations against Waters, OneUnited, which requested $50 million in federal aid and ultimately obtained more than $12 million in TARP funds – would have likely failed without intervention from Waters' office.

The ethics report determined that Waters' stock would have been rendered worthless if OneUnited failed, thus the violations "constitute compensation accruing to the beneficial interest of [Waters]," according to the committee.