ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: MONDAY, November 6, 1995                   TAG: 9511060087
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: C1   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
DATELINE: RICHMOND                                 LENGTH: Medium


GOP DECRIES OIL BROKER'S DONATION TO VA. DEMOCRATS

The Virginia Democratic Party, fighting to maintain control of the General Assembly, received $100,000 from a Middle Eastern oil broker who said he wanted to help President Clinton get re-elected.

Roger Tamraz, an Arab-born naturalized U.S. citizen, sent the money to the Democratic National Committee, which forwarded it to the state party as Tuesday's legislative elections approach.

Republicans could take control of the assembly with a net gain of three seats in the Senate and four in the House of Delegates.

Tamraz sent $25,000 out of his own pocket and $75,000 in the name of his oil company, Tamoil Inc. The donations were listed in campaign finance reports filed with the state.

The contributions have raised questions because Tamoil not only is the name of a Tamraz-owned business recently incorporated in the United States, it also is the name of a company he once owned and sold to Libya that is banned from doing business in this country.

Republican Gov. George Allen, whose political action committee has been fiercely criticized by Democrats for accepting $125,000 from a meatpacking company under state investigation for pollution violations, questioned his opponents' fund raising.

Allen spokesman Ken Stroupe said it was ``disturbing'' that the Democrats would take money from ``an international oil merchant who admits to having previous ties to the Libyan government.

``Why would this figure want to help Bill Clinton by bankrolling an eleventh-hour negative campaign ... and what, if anything, did he expect in return?''

Republican U.S. Sen. John Warner and Rep. Thomas J. Bliley, R-Richmond, joined the fray Sunday, calling for a Treasury Department investigation of the gift.

``Was there not a responsibility on the part of the Democrat State Party to carefully examine such a large gift from a non-resident of Virginia with so many foreign involvements?'' Warner said.

Virginia Democratic leaders said they had never heard of Tamraz before the DNC referred him to them. ``He just said he supports Democrats and wants to help Democrats,'' said party spokeswoman Gail Nardi.

The Tamoil that Tamraz sold in 1986 is a prominent Libyan-controlled network of oil refineries prohibited from doing business with the United States under longstanding sanctions against Moammar Gadhafi's regime.

Tamraz said, however, that the Tamoil that contributed to the Democrats last month has no current affiliation with the Libyans. The separate, U.S.-based company he started earlier this year is registered in Delaware, according to state records there.

Tamraz said he approached the DNC hoping to help Clinton's forthcoming campaign and was directed instead to the Virginia party. He said he has no business interests in Virginia.

``I told the DNC I wanted to see Clinton come back and I could help,'' he said. ``They said [Virginia] is sort of a weak point for them, and they'd like help for this place.''

Tamraz, 55, was born in Egypt and lists a Park Avenue apartment in New York as his home.

``I feel very much indebted to this country, and I'd like to be as active as I can,'' he said. ``I think the Democrats, from my point of view, are doing a good job.''

Keywords:
POLITICS



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