James W. (Jim) Ellis, (fl. 2000) is an American Republican Party political activist.
He is the former executive director of Tom DeLay's political action committee Americans for a Republican Majority Political Action Committee (ARMPAC), and is one of the two political associates who were indicted with DeLay on September 28, 2005, in "an alleged scheme to use corporate political donations illegally to support candidates in state elections."
Ellis and John Colyandro, who "also faces 13 counts of unlawful acceptance of a corporate political contribution," "already faced charges of money laundering in the case." They were indicted September 13, 2005, "on additional felony charges of violating Texas election law and criminal conspiracy to violate election law for their role in the 2002 legislative races."
"The money laundering charges stem from $190,000 in corporate funds that were sent" to the Republican National Committee, "which then spent the same amount on seven candidates for the Texas Legislature."
In 2000 Jim Ellis, along with Tom DeLay, Ed Buckham and others, was named in a Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) lawsuit by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. Ellis was running Americans for Economic Growth (AEG), which received $300,000 in "soft money" from the National Republican Congressional Committee funneled via Ed Buckham's U.S. Family Network non-profit in 1999. AEG spent $300,000 in radio ads attacking Democrats. When the suit was settled, the NRCC agreed to pay a $280,000 civil fine.
In 2005, Ellis worked for lobbying firm Alexander Strategy Group alongside Buckham and Tony Rudy. The firm was shut down in 2006 after the federal investigation into the actions of convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff.
Famous quotes containing the word ellis:
“I always seem to have a vague feeling that he is a Satan among musicians, a fallen angel in the darkness who is perpetually seeking to fight his way back to happiness.”
—Havelock Ellis (18591939)