THE Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXIV, No. 38-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, July 11, 1974 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Sen. Gurney indicted for perjury, bribery Charged with accepting kickbacks JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)-Sen. 'Ed- ward Gurney (R-Fla.) was indicted by a federal grand jury yesterday on bribery, conspiracy and perjury charges. He was accused of taking part in a- scheme to collect $233,000 in kickbacks from hous- ing contractors. He was the first sitting U.S. senator to be indicted in 50 years. SIX OTHER persons were indicated on conspiracy charges along with the 60- year-old Gurney, a member of the Senate Watergate Committee and a can- didate for re-election. Gurney issued a statement in Wash- ington saying, "I maintain my absolute innocence of any wrongdoing. I have an abiding faith in the American- system of justice and firmly believe that I will be proved innocent of any wrongdoing. I have an abiding faith in the American system of justice and firmly believe that I will be proved innocent of any wrong- doing in this affair." The indictment, handed down here and announced by the Justice Department in Washington, said that the charges stem- med from an effort to raise funds in exchange for influencing the use of government housing and mortage money. The senator also was accused of par- ticipating in covering up the scheme, defrauding the government and lying to the grand jury, THE SECRETARY of the Senate said the last sitting senator to be indicted was Burton Wheeler of Montana, who was accused of influence-peddling with the Interior Department in 1924. Indicted with Gurney were his former administrative assistant, James Groot of Washington; Joseph Bastien, the for- mer head of Gurney's Winter Park, Fla., field office; two Florida Republican party officials and two officials in the Florida offices of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Forty-two other persons were named as unindicted co-conspirators. GURNEY IS charged with one count of conspiracy, one count of bribery, one count of receiving unlawful compensation and four counts of making false declara- tions to a grand jury. If convicted on all counts, he faces a maximum 42 years in jail. The indictment listed 115 overt acts as part of the conspiracy and said $233,160 was paid by the unindicted coconspira- tors either to a Gurney aide or to organ- izations linked to the senator... The scheme allegedly was hatched at a January 1971 meeting at Gurney's home in Winter Park. At that meeting, the indictment said, Gurney, Groot, Bas- tien and the two Florida. party officials, Earl Crittenden and George Anderson, discussed a fundraising operation and decided to hire Larry Williams to carry it out. S See SEN., Page- 8 If he kissed you once.. . will he kiss you again? Audrey Johnson learns the hard way what happens when you ask a leopard to kiss you. Johnson and her 4-month-old leop- ard cub, Bwana, are part of the Diamond Rodeo and Wild West Show which was appearing in Atlantic City, N.J. Chpaquiddick memory lingers on in Edgartown EDGARTON, Mass. WA) - Five years ago, a handful of officials in a peaceful resort town became national celebri- ties when a young woman died in a car driven by Sen. Edward Kennedy. Debate continues over the accident at Dike Bridge on .Chappaquiddick Island. The argument centers on what the acci- dent means for Kennedy's political fu- ture. BULLETIN As of press time last night nego- tiations were still continuing be- tween city officials and representa- tives of American Federation of State, County and Municipal Em- ployes Local 369 in a last minute attempt to avoid a strike by city employes. THE PROSECUTORS, police, witness- es and other participants who have slip- ped back into obscurity say the July 18, 1969 accident in which Mary Jo Kope- chine died still affects them, too. These people still bristle over the glaring attentioi given the easy-going pattern of small town justice in the days after the accident. They fear that it will begin again if Kennedy runs for presi- dent. "You're always aware of it," said Les- lie Leland, a druggist who was foreman of the grand jury that investigated the accident, "WHEN KENNEDY announces he's running for office, this thing is going to be opened up all over again." he went on. "They're going to tear it to pieces, word by word. I don't look forward to that. It will go on and on and on." A grand jury later looked into the case briefly, but it reached no conclu- sions, and there was no other court ac- tion. The police chief who charged Ken- nedy with leaving the scene of an ac- cident, the part-time prosecutor who won a conviction, the district attorney who initiated an inquest - all say the son- sational case played a part in determin- ing their futures. Accordinig to Kennedy's testimony, the car plunged off the bridge into a tidal pool. Kennedy escaped, but Kope- chne did not. The senator said he dived unsuccessfully to try to save her, then walked back to the cottage and got two friends who also tried to recover Kope- chne. By that time, the ferry had stopped running, and Kennedy swam across Ed- gartown Harbor to the inn where he was staying.