Untangling a Lobbyist's Stake in a Casino Fleet
With Millions of Dollars Unaccounted for, Another Federal Investigation Targets Abramoff
By Susan Schmidt and James V. Grimaldi
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, May 1, 2005; A01
It was a gangland-style hit straight out of "Goodfellas."
A
man in a BMW was driving down a quiet side street after an evening
meeting at his Fort Lauderdale office when a car slowed to a stop in
front of him. A second car boxed the BMW in from behind, then a dark
Mustang appeared from the opposite direction. The Mustang's driver
pulled alongside and pumped three hollow-point bullets into the BMW
driver's chest.
The dead man was Konstantinos "Gus" Boulis, a
volatile 51-year-old self-made millionaire, a Greek immigrant who had
started as a dishwasher in Canada and ended up in Florida, where he
built an empire of restaurants, hotels and cruise ships used for
offshore casino gambling. Boulis's slaying, still unsolved four years
later, reverberated all the way to Washington. Months earlier he had
sold his fleet of casino ships to a partnership that included
Republican superlobbyist Jack Abramoff.
Abramoff is best known as
a target of a federal investigation in Washington into the tens of
millions in fees he and a partner collected from casino-owning Indian
tribes. But the wreckage from his brief and tumultuous time as owner of
the gambling fleet threatens to overtake his Washington legal troubles.
Not
long after Abramoff and his partners bought SunCruz Casinos in
September 2000, the venture ran aground after a fistfight between two
of the owners, allegations of mob influence, dueling lawsuits and,
finally, Boulis's death on Feb. 6, 2001. Now, Abramoff is the target of
a federal investigation into whether the casino ship deal involved bank
fraud. According to court records, the SunCruz purchase hinged on a
fake wire transfer for $23 million intended to persuade lenders to
provide financing to Abramoff's group.