Friday, January 18, 2008

Giuliani Had Ties to Company Trying to Sell Border Technology

Dan Anderson for The New York Times

Seeking Republican support, Rudolph W. Giuliani spoke Thursday in Fort Walton Beach, Fla.

Published: January 18, 2008

On the presidential campaign trail, former Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani often promotes the installation of electronic monitoring devices at the border to stem illegal immigration, without mentioning that until a few months ago, he was partner in a company trying to market such technology.

Mr. Giuliani and his consulting company were part owners of SkyWatch L.L.C., a closely held start-up company that says it has developed a sensor capable of monitoring illegal border crossings. SkyWatch, in collaboration with Raytheon, a large military contractor, is now looking to market the technology to the federal government and elsewhere.

Mr. Giuliani’s company, Giuliani Partners, was invited to join the venture more than two years ago by Abdol Moabery, then the chief executive of SkyWatch’s parent company, who went on to help the Giuliani campaign raise money in Florida.

As part of its work, an executive of Mr. Giuliani’s company met several times with development teams at Raytheon. But the financial relationship ended in September when Giuliani Partners gave up its ownership stake in SkyWatch without compensation.

For nearly a year, Mr. Giuliani has extolled the benefits of a technological approach to border security. Among his efforts has been a radio advertisement, which went on the air in August, called “Fence,” in which he spoke of the need for a “technological fence” at the border.

“You stop illegal immigration by building a fence, a physical fence and then a technological fence,” Mr. Giuliani said in the ad. “You then hire enough border patrol so they can respond in a timely way.”

But neither in the ad, nor in other campaign settings where the issue has come up, has Mr. Giuliani mentioned his involvement with a company developing this technological fence.

No one has suggested that Mr. Giuliani adopted his position because of his relationship with SkyWatch. He has continued to promote the concept since his relationship with the company ended, including during recent campaign discussions. A spokeswoman for his campaign said Mr. Giuliani’s longstanding support for a technological fence was not related to his involvement with SkyWatch. “It’s one part of Rudy’s comprehensive plan to end illegal immigration because it makes sense and is good policy,” the spokeswoman, Maria Comella, said.

Last month, SkyWatch and Raytheon announced that the sensor, capable of monitoring more than 400 square miles from atop a tower, was available for sale. Industry analysts say the technology has a lucrative future, including a possible role in a multibillion-dollar federal program to help secure the nation’s borders.

Gary Reese, the manager of SkyWatch, said the company ended its involvement with Giuliani Partners when it became clear the consulting company could not meet its contractual obligations. He said Giuliani Partners had essentially bartered for a 12.5 percent share of SkyWatch by committing to develop business and marketing plans and to raise $7 million in capital. But the companies amicably parted ways when those commitments were not reached, Mr. Reese said.

Mr. Giuliani’s company was not paid for the work it performed, other than to receive a share of the company, which it has since relinquished, Mr. Reese said.

Pasquale J. D’Amuro, the Giuliani Partners executive who oversaw the project, explained the split by saying that he had found the technology promising but did not feel it had progressed to a point where he could promote it to potential investors.

Mr. Giuliani declined to be interviewed for this article. In response to a question last summer, he told an interviewer for The New Yorker that his role with the project would not give it any advantage in securing a federal contract were he to become president.

Dennis F. Thompson, a professor at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government who has written extensively on political ethics, said Mr. Giuliani should have mentioned his ties to SkyWatch when promoting the fence concept in his campaign.

“We should know as citizens when a candidate makes a proposal of this sort who stands to benefit,” Professor Thompson said. “If the candidate himself is one of the beneficiaries, we want to take that into account.”

Professor Thompson said the potential conflict is more acute when the candidate is an active partner in a closely held company, as opposed to a shareholder in a public corporation.

Mr. Giuliani disclosed his ownership interest in SkyWatch last May in a federal financial disclosure form that candidates must file. The listing does not specify the products SkyWatch is developing. For the three other companies in which Mr. Giuliani’s company held an ownership stake, the form describes the specific products or services they offer.

The value of the SkyWatch holding is not specified on the form, and is lumped in with the total value of Mr. Giuliani’s consulting work and other businesses.

Candidates for president often take measures with their investments to avoid an appearance of conflict of interest. Last June, for example, Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton sold off the assets of a blind trust she owned, including shares of Raytheon stock.

Reducing illegal immigration has been a touchstone issue in the race for the Republican Party’s presidential nomination, and Mr. Giuliani has often been accused by other candidates of having run “a sanctuary city” as mayor of New York.

A major element of his own position on the issue involves creating technological fences to block illegal immigrants at the border. On Feb. 5, 2007, the day he filed his statement of candidacy papers, Mr. Giuliani pushed the idea during a television appearance on the Fox News program “Hannity & Colmes.”

“I support security at the borders,” Mr. Giuliani said. “I do think that with the fence, the fence honestly has to be a technological fence.”

According to SkyWatch, the new sensor, called the Eagle-300, can continuously monitor at 360 degrees, even while zooming in to examine multiple targets. Existing sensors lose the ability to monitor everything else when they focus on a single object, creating gaps in the field of view, according to the company.

The Department of Homeland Security expects to spend at least $7.6 billion on its Secure Border Initiative through 2011 and has picked Boeing to develop a plan that includes technological fence applications.

Mr. Reese said SkyWatch has pitched its technology to Boeing, the federal government and other countries.

John Slye, an analyst of federal markets for Input, a Virginia-based consulting company, said he knew of no other company using such technology. He called the SkyWatch product a “quantum leap.”

“I think you can easily say within the government side you’re looking at the potential market of tens of millions of dollars,” he said.

Last January, Raytheon signed on to build the Eagle-300 for SkyWatch on a fast track.

Mr. D’Amuro said he, but not Mr. Giuliani, had attended meetings with Raytheon. He said neither of them had any contact with the federal government on the project.

Mr. Moabery, a former New Yorker, runs G A Telesis, a Florida commercial aviation leasing and finance company. He left SkyWatch in December 2006. Mr. Moabery remains a shareholder in its parent company, Mr. Reese said.

The Giuliani campaign declined to say how much money Mr. Moabery has brought into the campaign. Mr. Moabery held a fund-raiser at his Florida home last March, which Mr. Giuliani attended. G A Telesis executives and their spouses have given the Giuliani campaign $20,200, according to federal filings.

“My enthusiasm and support of RG’s campaign results from my having lived in NY during his tenure as mayor,” Mr. Moabery wrote in an e-mail message on Thursday, in response to questions about his backing of Mr. Giuliani. “I felt he did a fantastic job.”

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