Investigation
The Debate-Tape Mystery Continues to Unspool
By James Carney and John F. Dickerson, with reporting by
Elaine Shannon/ Washington and Hilary Hylton/Austin
Why has the FBI focused so intensely on Maverick Media in its
investigation of the pinched Bush debate-prep materials? At
first it was because Maverick's owner, MARK MCKINNON, is a
former Democrat who serves as Governor Bush's top media adviser.
Also because Yvette lozano, the Maverick employee who was
captured by a post-office surveillance camera mailing a package
on the same day the videotape and briefing book were mailed, is
also a former Democrat. But Bush aides believe the real reason
FBI investigators have continued to focus on McKinnon, Lozano
and the production house is because the briefing book that was
sent to Gore pal TOM DOWNEY in Washington was a copy of the one
that belonged to McKinnon. Although the FBI has told him he is
not a target of the investigation, McKinnon, like Lozano, has
hired a lawyer. The FBI has subpoenaed Maverick for documents.
Why do the feds think McKinnon's is the smoking binder when at
least half a dozen senior Bush campaign officials had debate
briefing books? A short document that only McKinnon may have had
access to was also found in the material sent to Downey.
According to sources familiar with the FBI's investigation, New
Hampshire Senator JUDD GREGG, who played Gore in the Bush
campaign's mock debates, had typed out about 20 suggestions for
the Governor to consider in his debate preparations. During a
practice session, he handed the list to McKinnon, who gave the
Gregg document with its handwritten notations to Lozano, asking
her to type and then e-mail them to other top Bush officials.
The assistant did so and returned the list to McKinnon, who
placed it back in his debate book, which sat on a shelf in his
office. Inconspicuous, the hundred or so pages were not marked in
a way that hinted at the contents. Maverick kept the debate-prep
video, a copy of which was included in the package to Downey, in
the "tape room." "Sometimes that room's locked, sometimes it's
not," says a Bush source.
Last week STUART STEVENS, who works with McKinnon, was the final
top Bush aide who had access to the debate materials to be
interviewed by the FBI. Stevens, who has expressed the opinion
that someone with ties to the Democratic Party broke into
Maverick through the next-door office of the firm Waterworks,
spent roughly two hours answering questions and pressing his
theories. The FBI did some brief questioning next door but was
more interested in looking at the Waterworks postage machine and
taking samples from its copier. But those actions, say sources
close to the case, have more to do with Lozano's activity, which
continues to be a keen focus of FBI scrutiny.
--By James Carney and John F. Dickerson, with reporting by
Elaine Shannon/ Washington and Hilary Hylton/Austin
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