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Report to Congressional Committees: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

April 2009: 

2008 Lobbying Disclosure: 

Observations on Lobbyists' Compliance with Disclosure Requirements: 

GAO-09-487: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-09-487, a report to congressional committees. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The Honest Leadership and Open Government Act (HLOGA) of 2007 amended 
the Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 by doubling the frequency of 
lobbyists’ reporting and increasing criminal and civil penalties. This 
is GAO’s second report in response to the Act’s requirement for GAO to 
annually (1) determine the extent to which lobbyists can demonstrate 
compliance with the Act by providing support for information on their 
registrations and reports, (2) describe challenges identified by 
lobbyists to complying with the Act, and (3) describe the resources and 
authorities available to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of 
Columbia’s efforts to enforce the Act. For this report, GAO placed 
increased emphasis on written documentation to support disclosure 
reports. GAO reviewed a random sample of 100 lobbyist disclosure 
reports filed during the first three quarters of calendar year 2008. 
GAO also selected a random sample of 100 reports of federal political 
contributions, filed for the first time, for mid-calendar-year 2008. 
This methodology allowed GAO to generalize the sample results to the 
populations of 40,169 lobbying activity disclosure reports and 6,048 
reports with contributions filed. GAO met with lobbyists regarding 
their filings and with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of 
Columbia regarding resources, authorities, and efforts to focus 
resources on lobbyists who fail to comply with the Act. 

What GAO Found: 

While there are no specific requirements for lobbyists to create or 
maintain documentation related to disclosure reports they file under 
HLOGA, GAO’s review showed that lobbyists were generally able to 
provide documentation, although in varying degrees, to support items in 
their disclosure reports. 

For income and expenses, two key elements of the disclosure reports, 
lobbyists could provide written documentation for an estimated 99 
percent of the reports. However, in approximately 14 percent of cases, 
the documentation provided either was incomplete or contradicted the 
reported amount of income or expense. In addition to income and 
expenses, GAO reviewed five other data elements in the disclosure 
reports, and lobbyists who were required to report on these elements 
could provide documented support for all items in an estimated 35 
percent of the reports. As of March 18, 2009, lobbyists had amended 12 
disclosure reports included in GAO’s sample to make corrections on one 
or more data elements. 

For political contribution reports, filed for the first time in 2008, 
GAO estimates that 65 percent of the reports could be supported by FEC 
data or documentation provided by lobbyists. An estimated 16 percent of 
the reports contained erroneous entries or failed to disclose required 
contributions. 

The majority of lobbyists who newly registered with the Secretary of 
the Senate and Clerk of the House in the first three quarters of 2008 
filed required disclosure reports for the period. However, for about 13 
percent of the registrants, GAO could not identify a corresponding 
report on file for their lobbying activity, likely because either a 
report was not filed or reports that were filed contained information, 
such as client names, that did not match. 

Similar to GAO’s findings in the first review of lobbying disclosure, 
most lobbyists felt that existing guidance for filing required 
registrations and reports was sufficient. However, GAO’s review of 
documentation and lobbyists’ statements indicates some opportunities to 
strengthen lobbyists’ understanding of the requirements. Some small 
firms and sole proprietors indicated they did not understand the 
requirement for both firms and individual lobbyists to file reports on 
financial contributions. GAO continues to believe, as noted in its 
first report, that the lobbying community could benefit from creating 
an organization to focus on sharing best practices, providing training, 
and reporting on opportunities to minimize potential confusion.
 
In response to an earlier GAO recommendation, in April 2009 the U.S. 
Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia (the Office) plans to 
put in place a system to better track, analyze, and report on its 
enforcement activities. The Office also has assigned an additional 
staff member to assist with lobbying compliance issues. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO makes no new recommendations in this report. 

View GAO-09-487 or key components. For more information, contact George 
Stalcup at (202) 512-6806 or stalcupg@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

Supporting Documentation Varied Based on Reporting Requirements: 

Some Lobbyists May Not Have Fully Understood the Reporting 
Requirements: 

U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia Is Making Progress 
on Its Approach to Focusing Resources on Lobbyists Who Fail to Comply: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

Appendix II: List of Registrants and Clients for Sampled Lobbying 
Disclosure Reports: 

Appendix III: Full List of Sampled Lobbying Contribution Reports: 

Appendix IV: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Lobbying Referrals Received from Secretary of the Senate for 
the 2006 and 2007 Reporting Period and U.S. Attorney's Office 
Compliance Letters Sent as a Result: 

Table 2: Lobbying Referrals Received from the Clerk of the House for 
2006 and 2007 Reporting Period and U.S. Attorney's Office Compliance 
Letters Sent as a Result: 

Table 3: Names of Registrants and Clients Selected in Random Sample of 
Lobbying Disclosure Reports Filed in the First Three Quarters of 2008: 

Table 4: Names of Lobbyists and Lobbying Firms Selected in Random 
Sample of Lobbying Contribution Reports Filed Mid-Year 2008: 

Abbreviations: 

DOJ: Department of Justice: 

FEC: Federal Elections Commission: 

FECA: Federal Election Campaign Act: 

HLOGA: Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007: 

PAC: political action committee: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office:
Washington, DC 20548: 

April 1, 2009: 

Congressional Committees: 

Questions regarding the influence of special interests in the formation 
of government policy have led to a move toward more transparency and 
accountability with regard to the lobbying community. The Honest 
Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007 (HLOGA), signed into law on 
September 14, 2007, amends the Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 (the 
Act), by doubling the frequency of lobbyists' reporting from 
semiannually to quarterly, increasing civil penalties, and adding 
criminal penalties. The law also requires GAO to use a random sample to 
annually determine the extent to which lobbyists are able to provide 
support for information contained in their reports and registrations, 
provide recommendations related to improving compliance by lobbyists 
with the Act, and report on resources and authorities available to the 
Department of Justice (DOJ) for effective enforcement of the Act. GAO's 
initial report covered registrations and reports filed during the first 
calendar quarter of 2008. Subsequent GAO reports, including this one, 
are to be submitted annually by the beginning of April and will include 
a review of registrations and reports filed during the preceding 
calendar year. 

Protecting the integrity of governmental processes and procedures from 
corruption and undue influence is vital to upholding the principles and 
public trusts of the U.S. government. Lobbying regulations began with 
the Federal Regulation of Lobbying Act of 1946,[Footnote 1] which 
required lobbyists to register with the Secretary of the Senate and the 
Clerk of the House of Representatives (Clerk of the House), disclose 
the identities of their clients, report the receipts and expenses 
involved, and describe the nature of the legislative objectives that 
were pursued for each client. Lobbying was interpreted under the 1946 
Act as direct communication with a member of Congress in an attempt to 
influence the passage or defeat of any proposed or pending legislation. 
[Footnote 2] Congress replaced this law with the Lobbying Disclosure 
Act of 1995.[Footnote 3] The Act expanded the definition of lobbying to 
include communications with covered employees in both the legislative 
and executive branch regarding legislation, regulations, policies, or 
the nomination or confirmation of a person for a position subject to 
confirmation by the Senate. The Act required lobbyists to file 
registrations with the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the 
House and to report semiannually on their lobbying activities, which 
include both lobbying contacts and work done in preparation for 
lobbying contacts. In 2007, HLOGA amended the Act by requiring more 
frequent filings and lowering thresholds for disclosures, increasing 
penalties for noncompliance, and requiring new semiannual reports 
detailing certain political contributions. The sense of Congress as 
stated in HLOGA was that the lobbying community should propose 
organizations to develop standards for the profession and provide 
training. HLOGA became effective in January 2008. 

Consistent with the audit and report requirements of HLOGA,[Footnote 4] 
our objectives were to: 

* determine the extent to which lobbyists can demonstrate compliance by 
providing support for information on registrations and reports filed in 
response to requirements of the amended Lobbying Disclosure Act; 

* identify the challenges lobbyists cite in complying with the Act and 
suggestions for improving compliance; and: 

* describe the resources and authorities available to effectively 
enforce the Act including the efforts by the U.S. Attorney's Office for 
the District of Columbia to implement a structured approach to focus 
limited resources on lobbyists who continually fail to comply with the 
Act as recommended in GAO's prior report. 

To respond to the requirements of the Act, we: 

* Selected a random sample of 100 quarterly lobbying activity 
disclosure reports (commonly referred to as the LD-2 report) filed by 
lobbyists during the first, second, and third quarters of calendar year 
2008. The randomly sampled reports were selected from the publicly 
downloadable database maintained by the Secretary of the Senate. 

* Contacted each lobbyist in our sample by sending a letter describing 
our review and asking them to provide supporting documentation for key 
elements of the disclosure report including the amount of money 
received for lobbying activities, the houses of Congress or federal 
agencies lobbied, prior covered positions held by lobbyists, and 
whether the lobbyists filed a report of federal political 
contributions. Two lobbying firms in our sample, Duetto Group, LLC and 
Snack Food Association, declined to meet with us following our initial 
letter, sent in January 2009, and multiple follow-up contacts in 
February and March 2009. In those follow-up contacts, we pointed out to 
both firms that in light of their unwillingness to meet, we would be 
identifying their firms' names to Congress, as provided for in HLOGA. 
Both acknowledged their understanding of this. Following the March 13, 
2009, completion of our audit work, we were contacted by a 
representative from each firm indicating they had reconsidered and 
would be available to meet. We advised each firm that because our audit 
had been completed and in light of our mandated April 1 reporting date, 
the results of any such meeting could not be reflected in our analysis. 
[Footnote 5] 

* Selected a random sample of 100 semiannual reports of federal 
political contributions (commonly referred to as the LD-203 report) 
filed for the mid-year of calendar year 2008, January through June. The 
randomly sampled reports were selected from the publicly downloadable 
contributions database maintained by the Secretary of the Senate. 

* Compared the lobbying reports selected from the Secretary of the 
Senate's database to the information on contributions filed with the 
Federal Election Commission and maintained in its publicly accessible 
database. In instances where an entry in the lobbying report could not 
be confirmed by the FEC database, either because the data did not match 
or the contribution would not be disclosed to the FEC, we contacted 
lobbyists and asked them to provide documentation and, if necessary, 
information to clarify differences we observed. 

* Compared registrations newly filed in the first, second, and third 
quarters of calendar year 2008 to corresponding first, second, and 
third quarter disclosure activity reports on file with the Clerk of the 
House of Representatives (for quarter 1) and the Secretary of the 
Senate (for quarters 2 and 3) to determine if the requirement for 
registrants to report was met. 

To identify challenges and potential improvements to compliance, we 
obtained views from lobbyists included in our sample of reports on any 
challenges to compliance and how the challenges might be addressed. 

To determine the status of U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of 
Columbia's efforts to implement a structured approach to focus limited 
resources on lobbyists who continually fail to comply with the Act as 
recommended in GAO's prior report, we interviewed U.S. Attorney's 
office officials and obtained information on the systems used to 
collect and maintain data needed to assist in enforcing compliance with 
the Act. 

Importantly, in keeping with the statute, our objectives did not 
include identifying lobbyist organizations that failed to register and 
report in accordance with HLOGA requirements, or whether, for those 
lobbyists that did register and report, the lobbying activity disclosed 
represented the full extent of lobbying activities that took place. 

We conducted this performance audit from December 2008 through March 
2009 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. For more 
details on our methodology, please see appendix I. 

Background: 

Lobbying registrations and reports are required under the Lobbying 
Disclosure Act of 1995 (the Act) as amended by the Honest Leadership 
and Open Government Act of 2007 (HLOGA) to disclose the identities of 
people attempting to influence the government, the subject matters of 
their attempts, and the amounts of money they spend to accomplish their 
goals.[Footnote 6] The Act requires that lobbyists register with the 
Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the House and file periodic 
reports disclosing their activities. The Act was amended by HLOGA to 
make those reports due quarterly (they had previously been due 
semiannually).[Footnote 7] HLOGA requires lobbyists to disclose whether 
they held an official covered position[Footnote 8] in the past 20 years 
(rather than the 2 years the Act had previously required), whether the 
client is a state or local government, and whether any members of a 
coalition or association actively participated in the lobbying 
activities. Under HLOGA, lobbyists are required to file these 
registrations and reports electronically with the Secretary of the 
Senate and the Clerk of the House through a single entry point (as 
opposed to separately with the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of 
the House as was done prior to HLOGA). The Act, as amended by HLOGA, 
also provides that registrations and reports must be available in 
downloadable searchable databases from the Secretary of the Senate and 
the Clerk of the House. 

The Act defines "lobbyists" and "lobbying activities" and imposes 
requirements on the reporting of those activities. Under the Act, a 
lobbyist can be an individual, a lobbying firm, or an organization that 
has employees lobbying on its own behalf, depending on the 
circumstances. Lobbyists are required to file a registration with the 
Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the House for each client on 
whose behalf a lobbying contact is made if a minimum dollar threshold 
is passed.[Footnote 9] The registration must list the name of the 
organization, lobbying firm, or self-employed individual who is 
lobbying on that client's behalf. In addition, the registration and 
subsequent reports must list the individuals who acted as lobbyists on 
behalf of the client during the reporting period. For reporting 
purposes, a lobbyist is defined as a person who has made two or more 
lobbying contacts[Footnote 10] and whose lobbying activities represent 
at least 20 percent of the time that he or she spends on behalf of the 
client during any quarter. Registrations and reports must also state 
whether any lobbyist served as a covered executive branch or 
legislative branch official in the previous 20 years. The Act defines a 
covered executive branch official as the President, Vice President, an 
officer or employee, or any other individual functioning in the 
capacity of such an officer or employee, of the Executive Office of the 
President, an employee serving in levels I-V of the Executive Schedule, 
members of the uniformed services whose pay grade is at or above O-7, 
and any officer or employee serving in a position of a confidential, 
policy-determining, policy-making, or policy-advocating character. The 
Act defines a covered legislative branch official as a Member of 
Congress, an elected officer of either house of Congress, or any 
employee of a Member, a committee of either House of Congress, the 
leadership staff of either House of Congress, a joint committee of 
Congress, or a working group or caucus organized to provide legislative 
services or other assistance to Members. 

The registration and subsequent quarterly reports must also disclose 
the name of and further information about the client including a 
general description of its business or activities. The lobbyist is also 
required to disclose any foreign entities with interest in the client. 
The lobbyist must report if the client is a state or local government. 
When the client is a coalition or association, the lobbyist must 
identify any constituent organization that contributes more than $5,000 
for lobbying in a quarter and actively participates in the planning, 
supervision, or control of lobbying activities.[Footnote 11] The 
registration and subsequent reports may either list each organization 
or make the list available on the coalition or association's Web site 
and disclose the Web address in the report. 

Lobbying registrations and reports must include lobbying activity 
details such as the general issue area and the specific lobbying 
issues. The lobbyist must also disclose which federal agencies and 
house(s) of Congress the lobbyist contacted on behalf of the client 
during the reporting period. 

Finally, the registrant must report the amount of money that was spent 
on lobbying for the client during the reporting period. The lobbying 
income or expenses disclosed on the reports are to be rounded to the 
nearest $10,000. A lobbying firm, or any other organization that is 
hired to lobby on behalf of an entity other than itself, must report 
the amount of income related to lobbying activities received from the 
client during the quarter. An organization that has employees who lobby 
on its behalf must report the expenses incurred in relation to lobbying 
activities during the quarter. Organizations may use one of three 
accounting methods to determine their expenses: the Act's definitions 
of lobbying expenses; the Internal Revenue Code definitions for non- 
deductible business expenses; or, if they are a 501(c) non-profit 
organization, the definitions under the relevant sections of the 
Internal Revenue Code. 

HLOGA also added a new reporting requirement for lobbyists, a 
semiannual report on "certain contributions", which is commonly known 
as the contributions report or by its form name, the LD-203 report. 
These reports are required to be filed 30 days after the end of a 
semiannual period by each organization registered to lobby and by each 
individual listed as a lobbyist on an organization's lobbying reports. 
These reports were due for the first time on July 30, 2008. The 
lobbyist or organization that files a contributions report must list 
the name of each federal candidate or officeholder, leadership PAC, or 
political party committee to which the filer made contributions equal 
to or exceeding $200 in the aggregate during the semiannual period. The 
filer must also report contributions made to Presidential library 
foundations and Presidential inaugural committees. In addition, the 
filer must report funds contributed to pay the cost of an event to 
honor or recognize a covered official, funds paid to an entity named 
for or controlled by a covered official, and contributions to a person 
or entity in recognition of an official or to pay the costs of a 
meeting or other event held by or in the name of a covered official. 
Finally, the contributions report requires a filer to certify that the 
filer has read and is familiar with the gift and travel rules of the 
Senate and House and that the filer has not provided, requested, or 
directed a gift or travel to a Member or an officer or employee of 
Congress that would violate those rules. All individual lobbyists and 
organizations must file a contributions report each period and certify 
compliance with the gift and travel rules, even if they have no 
contributions to report. 

Supporting Documentation Varied Based on Reporting Requirements: 

While no specific requirements exist for lobbyists to create or 
maintain documentation, GAO's review showed that lobbyists could 
provide documentation to varying degrees for the reporting elements in 
their disclosure reports. For example, documentation was more readily 
available for two key reporting elements, lobbyists' income or 
expenses, than for other elements such as the entities they reported 
lobbying. We estimate that lobbyists could provide some form of written 
documentation for income or expenses for approximately 99 percent of 
disclosure reports for the first three quarters of 2008. All of the 
lobbyists we contacted from our sample of reports that reported income 
and all except one lobbyist who reported lobbying expenses showed us 
some type of documentation for the dollar amount reported. The most 
common form of documentation provided was invoices (64 percent), 
followed by contracts (25 percent).[Footnote 12] The lobbyist who did 
not provide documentation for his reported expenses told us that 
because staff in his organization are involved in both lobbying and non-
lobbying activities, his organization's reported lobbying expenses were 
based on estimates of staff salaries attributable to lobbying activity 
and documentation to support these estimates did not exist. 

Although documentation for lobbyists' income or expenses existed, some 
reports contained information that differed from documentation provided 
or statements lobbyists made about their lobbying activity. In 
approximately 14 percent of reports for which documentation was 
provided (14 of 97 reports), lobbyists reported income or expense 
amounts that were different from the amounts supported by the 
documentation they provided. The documentation showed a higher amount 
of income or expenses than was reported for about half of these reports 
and a lower amount for the other half. Documentation showed that 6 of 
the 14 reports contained errors with respect to reports of income or 
expenses,[Footnote 13] while the remaining 8 reports contained 
differences that could be explained verbally by lobbyists but not 
documented--primarily because the lobbyists could not provide 
documentation for their estimates (6 of the 8). Based on these data, we 
estimate that approximately 6 percent of all disclosure reports 
erroneously report the amount of income or expenses for lobbying 
activity. 

Income or expenses are among several reporting elements lobbyists are 
required to list in their disclosure reports. Overall, lobbyists could 
provide documentation for all seven reporting elements we reviewed 
[Footnote 14] on about 35 percent of the disclosure reports (34 of 98) 
in GAO's sample. Although the Act does not specifically require 
lobbyists to maintain records or documentation to support information 
disclosed in their reports, guidance from both the Secretary of the 
Senate and Clerk of the House recommends that lobbyists retain copies 
of their filings and supporting documentation for at least 6 years 
after reports are filed. We estimate that lobbyists were unable to 
provide documentation for one or more elements on about 65 percent of 
the lobbying activity disclosure reports (64 of 98) we reviewed. 
[Footnote 15] 

As of March 18, 2009, lobbyists had amended 12 disclosure reports 
included in our sample to correct income or expenses, information on 
the entities lobbied, lobbyists listed, or other information. Eight of 
these reports were amended either after we notified the lobbyists that 
their reports were selected for our review or after the lobbyists 
participated in our review. Also, during our review lobbyists told us 
they planned to amend an additional 8 reports.[Footnote 16] The most 
common reason given for amending disclosure reports was to correct 
income or expense information (8 of 20 reports). 

Lobbyists were unable to provide documentation for all of the entities 
they reported lobbying for more than half of the disclosure reports in 
our sample. Lobbyists are required to disclose if they lobbied the 
House of Representatives, the Senate, one or more executive branch 
agencies, or a combination of these entities. However, lobbyists could 
not provide documentation to support any of the entities lobbied for 26 
percent of disclosure reports (25 of 98) in our sample. Additionally, 
lobbyists were able to provide documentation for some, but not all of 
the entities lobbied for an additional 36 percent of reports (35 of 
98). For the remaining 39 percent of reports (38 of 98), lobbyists were 
able to provide written support for all of the entities they reported 
lobbying. Based on these figures, we project that lobbyists could 
provide full support for the entities they reported lobbying in fewer 
than half of all disclosure reports, or approximately 39 percent of 
reports. Reasons for lack of documentation included no record keeping 
for phone conversations and informal face-to-face contacts and the 
inability to retrieve emails that were not archived. 

For 12 of the 98 reports we examined, lobbyists said that they could 
not support some or all of the entities they reported lobbying because 
the lobbying activity had not actually occurred. Because some lobbyists 
did not specify the reasons they could not support the entities they 
reported lobbying, we estimate that a minimum of 7 percent of all 
disclosure reports list lobbying activity that did not actually happen. 
[Footnote 17] Some lobbyists who acknowledged having over-reported the 
number of entities lobbied told us that they did so to ensure that they 
did not fail to fully report. Some lobbyists said they did not want to 
edit their reports each quarter to reflect what they perceived to be 
minor changes--such as changes in the names of individuals acting as 
lobbyists on specific issues or in lists of federal agencies lobbied. 
Rather, they chose to carry this kind of information over in their 
reports in case it should become applicable again for a future 
reporting period. 

For 38 percent of the reports (37 of 98) we reviewed, lobbyists 
reported having a system in place to track who should be listed as a 
lobbyist. For about half of these reports (20 of 37) lobbyists used 
tracking systems that were integrated with their timekeeping or billing 
systems. A few of these lobbyists told us that they had augmented their 
billing codes to better track lobbying activity to report under HLOGA 
or were concerned that their disclosure reports could be selected for 
review by GAO. For 52 percent of disclosure reports we reviewed (51 of 
98), lobbyists reported not having a system to determine who should be 
listed as a lobbyist--mostly because the lobbyists were either sole 
proprietors or worked in very small firms (34 of 51) that did not 
require a tracking system to identify who should be reported as 
lobbyists. For about 10 percent of the disclosure reports, we were 
unable to determine if the lobbyists had systems to track who should be 
listed as a lobbyist. 

We found that lobbying firms failed to appropriately disclose "official 
covered positions" previously held by individual lobbyists' on at least 
6 of the reports we reviewed.[Footnote 18] Based on this information, 
we can estimate that a minimum of 3 percent of all disclosure reports 
fail to fully disclose whether the individual lobbyists for a specific 
client held an official covered position.[Footnote 19] Covered 
positions include members of Congress and their staff, Executive Level 
and Schedule C employees in the executive branch, members of the 
uniformed services serving at grade 07 or above, and others. Lobbyists 
who registered on January 1, 2008, or later, must disclose previously 
held official covered positions for the past 20 years. Lobbyists who 
registered prior to January 1, 2008, were required to disclose official 
covered positions held in the past 2 years. We identified six lobbying 
reports where the lobbyists previously held an official position 
covered by the act that was not disclosed on the report. For four of 
these cases the lobbyists indicated they misunderstood either the 
definition of covered positions or the time frames for reporting on 
them. In the 2 other cases, the lobbyists said they realized that they 
had failed to report covered positions and plan to amend their 
disclosure reports. One lobbyist in our sample reported holding a 
covered position, but later realized that the position should not have 
been reported because it did not meet the definition of a covered 
position. 

Most Contributions Reports Could Be Supported by FEC Data or 
Documentation: 

Reports of federal campaign and other political contributions are 
required to be reported under the Act. The reports are to be filed by 
both individual lobbyists and lobbyists organizations. We estimate that 
for approximately 65 percent of the contributions reports, or 65 from 
our sample of 100 reports, lobbyists or lobbying firms could support 
all entries with documentation.[Footnote 20] Documentation includes 
data from the FEC disclosure database, canceled checks, invoices, or 
letters. In addition, we estimate that 16 percent of the reports had 
errors or omissions, or failed to disclose required contributions. For 
example, eight filers said they did not report the information we found 
in the FEC database because of an oversight. From these data, we 
estimate a minimum of 4 percent of all lobbyist contributions reports 
omit donations that should have been reported.[Footnote 21] 

We estimated that the remaining 19 percent of contributions reports had 
contributions that were not required to have been listed on the 
document, or could not be corroborated with supporting documentation. 
For example, contributions under $200, contributions to non-federal 
campaigns, and refunded contributions were not required to be included 
on the report. We also found contributions listed on the reports that 
did not appear in the FEC database. Filers were able to provide 
documentation for the majority of these contributions, including 
honorary and meeting expenses and FEC contributions that were refunded 
or had not yet been disclosed by the recipient. This documentation came 
in various forms, including receipts, acknowledgment letters, credit 
card statements, and canceled checks. 

Newly Registered Lobbyists Generally Met Reporting Requirements: 

New registrations filed in the first three quarters of 2008 were 
largely followed by disclosure reports for the filing period as 
required. To determine whether new registrants were meeting the 
requirement to file, we matched newly filed registrations in the first, 
second and third quarters of 2008 from the House and Senate Lobbyist 
Disclosure Databases to their corresponding quarter disclosure reports 
using an electronic matching algorithm that allowed for misspelling and 
other minor inconsistencies between the registrations and reports. Our 
analysis showed that of 4,134 new registrations we identified from the 
first three quarters, the majority (3,616) had a clearly corresponding 
disclosure report on file, indicating that the requirement for these 
lobbyists to file reports for specific clients was generally met. 
However, we could not identify corresponding reports of lobbying 
activity for 518 (approximately 13 percent) of the 4,134 new 
registrations. 

We were able to identify corresponding disclosure reports for each 
quarterly filing period. Specifically, for the first quarter of 2008, 
House disclosure data showed that approximately 93 percent of lobbyists 
newly registered filed a corresponding report. For the second and third 
quarters of 2008, we used Senate data to match registrations and 
reports. We were able to match approximately 88 percent of newly 
registered lobbyists to disclosure reports filed during the second 
quarter. We found corresponding quarterly disclosure reports for 
approximately 79 percent of newly registered lobbyists for the third 
quarter. 

The difference in the match rates between the second and third quarters 
may result partly from the Senate's processing procedures and the 
timing of our data download. Compared to the House, the Senate sets 
aside a greater proportion of cases for manual review prior to entry 
into its database, resulting in some delay in data entry. Also, the 
third quarter reports were downloaded closer to the filing deadline 
than were the second quarter reports. The additional time following the 
first and second quarter deadlines may have allowed the House and 
Senate to process a greater number of reports before our download. 

We could not identify corresponding quarter reports of lobbying 
activity for 102 (approximately 7 percent) of the 1,460 new 
registrations in the first quarter, 185 (approximately 12 percent) of 
the 1,592 new registrations in the second quarter, and 231 
(approximately 21 percent) of the 1,082 new registrations filed in the 
third quarter and available as of the date we downloaded the disclosure 
information. Staff of the Secretary of the Senate and Clerk of the 
House told us that while the newly registered lobbyists for whom we 
could not identify corresponding reports may not have filed a report, 
it is possible that they filed reports with information that did not 
fully match their registrations. For example, if a client's name did 
not precisely match the name listed on the registration for that 
client, it would be difficult to match the registrants to their 
corresponding reports. 

Some Lobbyists May Not Have Fully Understood the Reporting 
Requirements: 

Many lobbyists said that they felt the reporting requirements under the 
Act were clear. In cases where the lobbyists had questions or felt the 
requirements were not clear, lobbyists said the Secretary of the Senate 
and Clerk of the House staff were helpful in providing clarifications. 
However, statements by some lobbyists and our review of lobbyists' 
documentation to support both disclosure and contributions reports 
highlights areas where lobbyists may not clearly understand the law and 
therefore did not properly disclose required information. For example, 
some lobbyists told us: 

* They were uncertain about what is considered lobbying under the Act. 
For example, lobbyists said they were not sure whether they should 
include telephone contacts with congressional or executive branch staff 
that were social in nature, but may lead to future lobbying contact. 
Also, they were uncertain whether they should include researching 
issues that may lead to information sharing. 

* They had questions about how to determine which activities are 
lobbying activities under the Act. The Act requires identifying as a 
lobbyist any individual whose lobbying activities constitute 20 percent 
of their time in services for a client during the quarterly period. 

In addition, our review of contributions reports identified some small 
firms and sole proprietors that did not understand the requirement for 
both firms and individual lobbyists to file contributions reports. Some 
of the lobbyists, 11 out of 98, either reported only individual 
contributions or their organization's contributions. The requirement is 
for both an individual and the organization to file a contributions 
report. 

Some lobbyists told us that small differences between lobbying 
disclosure rules and Federal Campaign Finance laws could cause some 
contributions reports to be inaccurate. HLOGA requires lobbyists to 
disclose certain political contributions in amounts "equal to or 
exceeding $200." [Footnote 22] Federal Campaign Finance laws 
administered by the Federal Elections Commission (FEC) require 
candidates and political action committees (PAC) to disclose 
contributions exceeding $200. [Footnote 23] There is a possibility that 
the differing thresholds might lead a lobbyist to omit a contribution 
of exactly $200 from the report. Lobbyists and registrants who set up a 
system appropriate to their business to track the political 
contributions made do not need to rely on the information present in 
the FEC database. 

The electronic filing system for lobbying reports reduces the amount of 
time filers must spend on data entry, so that a filer does not need to 
retype names, addresses, or some other information. While this offers a 
great convenience to filers, our review showed that it also introduces 
a risk that firms may carry information over from old reports to new 
reports without properly updating the information to reflect changes to 
their lobbying activity. 

Some lobbyists also told us: 

* The deadline under HLOGA for filing disclosure reports 20 days after 
each reporting period was difficult to meet because of limitations of 
their own internal billing or record-keeping systems. Prior to HLOGA, 
the deadline for filing disclosure reports was 45 days after the end of 
each reporting period. 

* The increased frequency of reporting presented an administrative 
burden, especially in the fourth quarter because of other filing 
requirements, such as for the IRS. 

* The lobbying activity does not generally change significantly from 
quarter to quarter and therefore the benefits of quarterly reporting 
are small. 

Some lobbyists told us they took added steps to help ensure their 
compliance with the requirements of HLOGA, including: 

* Attending training seminars and workshops offered by other lobbying 
organizations, law firms, and membership organizations in the lobbying 
community to enhance understanding of the lobbying disclosure 
requirements; 

* conducting internal training sessions for staff and hiring outside 
counsel to assist with understanding the requirements; and: 

* developing new or augmented existing record keeping systems to track 
the amount of time spent lobbying. 

Although some lobbyists took added steps to help ensure compliance with 
the requirements of HLOGA, some still may not have fully understood the 
reporting requirements. In our last report on lobbying disclosure, we 
stated that we believe that the lobbying community could benefit from 
creating an organization to: 

* share examples of best practices of the types of records maintained 
to support filings and use this information gathered over an initial 
period to formulate minimum standards for recordkeeping; 

* provide training for the lobbying community on reporting and 
disclosure requirements, intended to help the community comply with the 
Act; and: 

* report annually to the Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the 
House on opportunities to clarify existing guidance and ways to 
minimize sources of potential confusion for the lobbying community. 

Given the fact that some lobbyists again indicated to us that they did 
not fully understand some of the reporting requirements, we continue to 
believe that the lobbying community could benefit from creating an 
organization to focus on sharing best practices, providing training, 
and reporting on opportunities to minimize potential confusion. 

U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia Is Making Progress 
on Its Approach to Focusing Resources on Lobbyists Who Fail to Comply: 

The U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia (the Office) is 
responsible for the enforcement of the Act. The Office fulfills its 
responsibilities, administratively, by researching and responding to 
referrals made from the Secretary of the Senate and Clerk of the House 
of non-complying lobbyists by sending additional non-compliance notices 
to the lobbyists, requesting that the lobbyists file reports or correct 
reported information. The Office also has the authority to pursue a 
civil or criminal case for non-compliance. 

In response to our earlier recommendation, officials from the Office 
are developing a system that they plan to put in place in April 2009 to 
address issues we raised in our prior report regarding the tracking, 
analysis, and reporting of enforcement activities for lobbyists who the 
Secretary of the Senate and the Clerk of the House refer to them for 
failure to comply. Our prior report recommended that the Office 
complete efforts to develop a structured approach that would require 
the Office to track referrals when they are made, record reasons for 
referrals, record the actions taken to resolve them, and assess the 
results of actions taken. 

Officials told us that because the number of referrals is expected to 
increase as a result of the enactment of HLOGA, the new system will be 
an important tool to assist them in tracking and analyzing individual 
referrals, enforcement actions, and letters that have been sent. The 
system the Office currently uses was not designed to capture the data 
necessary for tracking and analysis of Lobbying Disclosure Act 
referrals. The current system provides general tracking of federal 
civil and criminal litigation cases and requires the Office to 
supplement the system with manual record keeping for lobbying 
compliance matters. The Office considered this approach to be a 
temporary measure to address the large increase in the number of 
lobbying disclosure referrals from the Secretary of the Senate and 
Clerk of the House in 2006 when these offices began transmitting 
referrals electronically. 

The new system is intended to track and record enforcement activities, 
record the status and disposition of lobbyists' cases, provide 
automated alerts to ensure timely follow-up and monitoring, provide the 
ability to track those who continually fail to comply with the Act, and 
use data and statistical reporting of trends and effectiveness of 
enforcement activities. Officials from the Office said the system is 
designed to respond to recommendations made in our prior report to 
provide a more structured approach for assigning resources and 
providing a better focus of lobbying disclosure compliance enforcement 
efforts. 

The Office, along with its Information Technology Applications 
Division, has completed development and testing of the system and is 
currently modifying the system to address issues raised during testing. 
Most of the staff who will use the system have received training, were 
involved in system testing, and have provided input on the small 
changes needed to ensure the system will meet the Office's 
requirements. Office officials stated that they plan to complete the 
modifications, re-test the system, and make the system available to 
users in April 2009--in time for the next group of referrals that 
officials expect to receive from the Secretary of the Senate and Clerk 
of the House. The Office plans to continue the process of cleaning up 
information in the current system and begin loading data on past 
referrals into the new system after it becomes operational. 

Although the new system is not yet operational, the Office is still 
making progress through other efforts in focusing on lobbyists who 
continually fail to comply. For example, officials were able to 
manually identify six lobbyists whose names appeared frequently in the 
referrals, and the officials sent them letters that were more targeted 
toward repeat non-filers. In addition, the Office has recently met with 
the Secretary of the Senate and Clerk of the House to increase 
compatibility with the Office's system by identifying a preferred 
format for referrals. The Secretary of the Senate and Clerk of the 
House send referrals separately and format differences can make 
downloading the information into the Office's system more difficult. 
The Office plans to continue formatting discussions with the Secretary 
of the Senate and Clerk of the House after the system becomes 
operational. 

The Office has received referrals from both the Secretary of the Senate 
and Clerk of the House for the 2006 reporting period. In addition, the 
Office has received referrals for the mid-year reporting period from 
the Secretary of the Senate, while the Clerk of the House's mid-year 
2007 referrals have not been sent. Extended periods of time occur 
between the filing period and the date referrals are made because the 
Secretary of the Senate and Clerk of the House send referrals after 
they have reviewed their respective database for missing or erroneous 
reports, twice contacted lobbyists by letter to inform them of the need 
to remedy an error or file a missing report, and allowed 60 days for 
lobbyists to respond to each letter. 

Tables 1 and 2 show the number of referrals received from the Secretary 
of the Senate and the Clerk of the House as well as the number of 
letters the Office sent to lobbyists as a result of these referrals. 
According to the Office, the number of referrals from the Secretary of 
the Senate is larger than from the Clerk of the House because of 
differences in their referral procedures. 

Table 1: Lobbying Referrals Received from Secretary of the Senate for 
the 2006 and 2007 Reporting Period and U.S. Attorney's Office 
Compliance Letters Sent as a Result: 

Reporting period (calendar year): Mid Year 2006; 
Number of referrals received from the Secretary of the Senate: 441; 
Date referral received: 09/06/07; 
Number of compliance letters sent by the U.S. Attorney's Office: 312; 
Date compliance letters sent: 12/15/07. 

Reporting period (calendar year): Year End 2006;
Number of referrals received from the Secretary of the Senate: 331; 
Date referral received: 04/10/08; 
Number of compliance letters sent by the U.S. Attorney's Office: 229; 
Date compliance letters sent: 08/20/08. 

Reporting period (calendar year): Mid Year 2007; 
Number of referrals received from the Secretary of the Senate: 242; 
Date referral received: 12/19/08; 
Number of compliance letters sent by the U.S. Attorney's Office: 190; 
Date compliance letters sent: 01/09/09. 

Source: U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia. 

[End of table] 

Table 2: Lobbying Referrals Received from the Clerk of the House for 
2006 and 2007 Reporting Period and U.S. Attorney's Office Compliance 
Letters Sent as a Result: 

Reporting period: (calendar year): Mid Year 2006; 
Number of referrals received from the Clerk of the House: 8; 
Date referral received: 11/07/08; 
Number of compliance letters sent by the U.S. Attorney's Office: 5; 
Date letters sent: 01/06/09. 

Reporting period: (calendar year): Year End 2006; 
Number of referrals received from the Clerk of the House: 34; 
Date referral received: 11/07/08; 
Number of compliance letters sent by the U.S. Attorney's Office: 32; 
Date letters sent: 01/09/09. 

Source: U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia. 

[End of table] 

Because there is a time lapse between when the Secretary of the Senate 
and the Clerk of the House send the first contact letter and when they 
make referrals to the U.S. Attorney's Office, lobbyists have often 
responded to the contact letter from the Secretary of the Senate and 
Clerk of the House after referrals have been received by the Office. As 
a result, the Office reviews the Secretary of the Senate and Clerk of 
the House databases to determine if that lobbyist has already resolved 
the compliance issue before sending out its own letters. In addition, 
the Office attempts to verify the lobbyist's address where letters were 
returned or no response was received. 

Resources are assigned to lobbying compliance issues based on competing 
priorities within the Office. Since September 2008, the Office has 
assigned an additional staff member to assist with lobbying compliance 
issues. Currently, a total of six staff, including a deputy chief, 
civil enforcement investigator, paralegal, support staff manager, and 
two docket information input clerks are dedicated on a part-time basis 
to lobbying disclosure compliance enforcement activities. In addition 
to the six staff dedicated to lobbying compliance enforcement, three 
attorneys from the affirmative civil enforcement division may become 
involved in enforcement efforts, as needed. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided a draft statement of the facts contained in this report to 
the Department of Justice (DOJ) for review and comment. We met with the 
Assistant U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, who on behalf of 
the DOJ, provided us with technical comments, which we incorporated as 
appropriate, but did not otherwise comment on the report. 

We are sending copies of this report to the Attorney General, Secretary 
of the U.S. Senate, Clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives, and 
other interested congressional committees and members. Copies of this 
report will be made available to others upon request. In addition, this 
report is available at no charge on the GAO Web site at [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov]. 

Please contact George Stalcup at (202) 512-6806 or stalcupg@gao.gov if 
you or your staffs have any questions about this report. Contact points 
for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be 
found on the last page of this report. GAO staff who made major 
contributions to this report are listed in appendix IV. 

Signed by: 

George Stalcup: 
Director, Strategic Issues: 

List of Addressees: 

The Honorable Harry M. Reid: 
Majority Leader: 
The Honorable Mitch McConnell: 
Minority Leader: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Steny H. Hoyer: 
Majority Leader: 
The Honorable John A. Boehner: 
Minority Leader: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Joseph I. Lieberman: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Susan M. Collins: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Patrick J. Leahy: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Arlen Specter: 
Ranking Member Committee on Judiciary: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Charles E. Schumer: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Robert F. Bennett: 
Ranking Member Committee on Rules and Administration: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Edolphus Towns: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Darrell Issa: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Oversight and Government Reform: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable John Conyers, Jr. 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Lamar Smith: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Judiciary: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Robert A. Brady: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Daniel E. Lungren: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on House Administration: 
House of Representatives: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

Consistent with the requirements of the Honest Leadership and Open 
Government Act (HLOGA), our objectives were to: 

* determine the extent to which lobbyists can demonstrate compliance by 
providing support for information on registrations and reports filed in 
response to requirements of the amended Lobbying Disclosure Act (the 
Act); 

* identify the challenges lobbyists cite in complying with the Act and 
suggestions for improving compliance; and: 

* describe the resources and authorities available to effectively 
enforce the Act including the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District 
of Columbia's efforts to focus resources on lobbyists who continually 
fail to comply with the Act. 

To respond to the requirements of HLOGA, we used information in 
disclosure databases maintained by the Secretary of the Senate and the 
Clerk of the House of Representatives. To assess whether these 
disclosure data were sufficiently reliable for the purposes of this 
report, we reviewed relevant documentation and spoke to officials 
responsible for maintaining the data. Although registrations and 
reports are filed through a single Web portal, each chamber 
subsequently receives copies of the data and follows different data 
cleaning, processing, and editing procedures before storing the data in 
either individual files (in the House) or databases (in the Senate). 
Currently, there is no means of reconciling discrepancies between the 
two databases that result from chamber differences in data processing. 
For example, Senate staff told us that it sets aside a greater 
proportion of registration and report submissions than the House for 
manual review before entering the information into the database, and as 
a result, the Senate database would be slightly less current than the 
House database on any given day pending review and clearance. 
Nevertheless, we do not have reason to believe that the content of the 
two systems would vary substantially. While we determined that the both 
the House and Senate disclosure data were sufficiently reliable for 
identifying a sample of LD-2 disclosure reports and for assessing 
whether newly filed registrants also filed required reports, we chose 
to use data from the Secretary of the Senate for sampling LD-2 reports 
from the first three quarters of 2008 and mid-year LD-203 contributions 
reports, and for matching second and third quarter registrations with 
reports. Our analysis of the proportion of first quarter registrations 
that filed corresponding reports used data from the Clerk of the House 
of Representatives and is described in detail in our previous report. 
We did not evaluate the Offices of the Secretary of the Senate or the 
Clerk of the House--both of which have key roles in the lobbying 
disclosure process--although we met with officials from each office, 
and they provided us with general background information at our 
request. 

To assess the extent to which lobbyists could provide evidence of their 
compliance with reporting requirements, we examined a systematic random 
sample of 100 LD-2 reports. We excluded "no activity" reports and drew 
our sample from 40,169 activity reports filed for the first three 
quarters available in the public Senate database, as of our final 
download date of October 28, 2008. Our sample is based on a systematic 
random selection, and it is only one of a large number of samples that 
we might have drawn. We sorted firms by the number of LD-2 reports they 
filed and then drew a systematic sample of LD-2 reports to ensure that 
our sample contained reports from all sizes of firms. Because each 
sample could have provided different estimates, we express our 
confidence in the precision of our particular sample's results as a 95 
percent confidence interval. This is the interval that would contain 
the actual population value for 95 percent of the samples that we could 
have drawn. All percentage estimates in this report have 95 percent 
confidence intervals of within plus or minus 10.4 percentage points of 
the estimate itself, unless otherwise noted. When estimating compliance 
with certain of the elements we examined, we base our estimate on a one-
sided 95 percent confidence interval to generate a conservative 
estimate of either the minimum or maximum percentage of reports in the 
population exhibiting the characteristic. 

We contacted each lobbyist in our sample and asked them to provide 
support for key elements in their reports, including: 

* the amount of income reported for lobbying activities; 

* the amount of expenses reported on lobbying activities; 

* the names of lobbyists who had held covered official positions; 

* the houses of Congress and federal agencies that they lobbied; 

* the names of foreign entities with interest in the client; 

* the names of individuals no longer acting as a lobbyist for the 
client; and: 

* the names of any member organizations of a coalition or association 
that actively participated in lobbying activities on behalf of the 
client. 

In addition, we determined if each individual lobbyist listed on the LD-
2 report had filed a semiannual LD-203 contribution disclosure report. 

Our work to examine lobbyists' compliance was limited to reviewing 
documentation provided by the lobbyists and, where available, 
information from publicly available databases. In instances where 
documentation or information from databases was not available, we asked 
lobbyists to provide oral explanations and have identified those 
instances in our report. Neither the law nor guidance currently 
specifies any documentation requirements in relation to information 
reported under the Act. 

Prior to interviewing lobbyists about each LD-2 report in our sample, 
we conducted an open-source search to determine whether each lobbyist 
listed on the report appeared to have held a covered position required 
to be disclosed. For lobbyists registered prior to January 1, 2008, 
covered positions held within 2 years of the date of the report must be 
disclosed; this period was extended to 20 years for lobbyists who 
registered on or after January 1, 2008. Lobbyists are only required to 
disclose covered positions on their first LD-2 report for a specific 
client, and consequently those who held a reportable covered position 
may have disclosed the information on an LD-2 report filed prior to the 
report we examined as part of our random sample. To identify likely 
covered positions, we examined lobbying firms' Web sites and conducted 
an extensive open-source search of Leadership Directories, Who's Who in 
American Politics, Carroll's, US Newspapers through Nexis, and Google, 
for lobbyists' names and variations on their names. We then asked 
lobbying entities about each lobbyist we had identified, to determine 
whether the LD-2 report appropriately disclosed covered positions or 
whether there was some other acceptable reason for the omission (such 
as having disclosed the position on an earlier LD-2 report). Despite 
our rigorous search protocol, it is possible that our search failed to 
identify omitted reports of covered positions. Thus, our estimate of 
the proportion of reports with lobbyists who failed to appropriately 
disclose a covered position is a lower bound estimate of the minimum 
proportion of reports that failed to report such positions. 

In addition to examining the content of LD-2 disclosure reports, we 
confirmed whether mid-year LD-203 contribution reports had been filed 
for each firm and lobbyist listed on the LD-2 reports in our random 
sample. Although this review represents a random selection of lobbyists 
and firms, it is not a direct probability sample of firms filing LD-2 
reports or lobbyists listed on LD-2 reports. As such, we did not 
estimate the likelihood that LD-203 contribution reports were 
appropriately filed for the population of firms or lobbyists listed on 
LD-2 reports. 

In our previous report, we used data filed with the Clerk of the House 
of Representatives to match newly filed registrations with 
corresponding disclosure reports for the first quarter of 2008. Using 
direct matching and text and pattern matching procedures, we were able 
to identify matching disclosure reports for 1,358 of the 1,460, or 93 
percent, of the newly filed registrations. To determine if the Act's 
requirement for registrants to file a report in the quarter of 
registration was met during the second and third quarters of 2008, we 
matched registrations in the Senate's lobbying disclosure databases as 
of our download date to second and third quarter report filings using 
data and text matching procedures. We first matched reports and 
registrations using both the registrant and client identification 
numbers. For reports we could not match by identification numbers, we 
also attempted to match reports and registrations by client and 
registrant name, allowing for variations in the names to accommodate 
minor misspellings or typos. We identified corresponding quarterly 
reports for 1,407 of 1,592 (88 percent) of registrations filed during 
the second quarter, and for 851 of 1,082 (79 percent) of new third 
quarter registrations. We could not readily identify matches in the 
report database for the remaining registrations using electronic means. 
The difference in the match rate between the second and third quarters 
may result partly from Senate processing procedures and the timing of 
our data download. The Senate sets aside a greater proportion of cases 
for manual review prior to entry into its database, resulting in some 
delay in data entry, which might result in a greater proportion of 
second quarter than third quarter registrations and reports having been 
processed as of the date we downloaded the data. 

To assess the accuracy of the LD-203 semiannual contribution reports, 
we first excluded reports that did not list any contributions and 
sorted remaining reports according to the number of contributions 
listed on each report. We then selected a systematic random sample of 
100 LD-203 reports from the approximately 6,048 LD-203 reports that 
contain contributions. The sample allows the team to generalize to the 
population of LD-203 reports with contributions within a 95 percent 
confidence interval of plus or minus 10.2 percentage points or less. 

To assess the accuracy of contributions listed on the LD-203 semiannual 
contributions reports, we used information in the Federal Election 
Commission's (FEC) contribution disclosure database. GAO interviewed 
staff at the FEC responsible for administering the database and 
determined that the data reliability is suitable for the purpose of 
confirming whether a FEC-reportable disclosure listed on an LD-203 had, 
in fact, been reported to the FEC. Since approximately 97 percent of 
reported contributions are identified as Federal Election Campaign Act 
(FECA) contributions, which should be reported to the FEC, the team was 
able to readily verify 93 percent of entries using the FEC database. 
The verification process required text and pattern matching procedures, 
and the team used professional judgment when assessing whether an 
individual listed is the same individual filing an LD-203. Given the 
lag time between when a lobbyist or organization might make a 
contribution and when a political action committee (PAC) or campaign 
might cash or report the contribution, some flexibility had to be built 
into the analysis when examining the dates of entries. Our methodology 
considered a pair of entries to be a "match" if the date of the FEC 
entry was no more than 2 weeks earlier or 1 month later than the date 
entered on the LD-203 report. 

For FEC-reportable contributions that could not be readily matched in 
the FEC data (perhaps as a result of a delays in a PAC or campaign's 
filing of the contribution or discrepancies between the name on the LD- 
203 and the name on the FEC filing), we contacted each lobbyist to ask 
for documentation of the contribution. In several cases, the 
contribution reported had not been processed by the campaign or had 
been refunded to the donor and therefore did not appear in a campaign's 
FEC filing. Additionally, we also asked lobbyists to document reports 
of honorary and meeting expenses that were not reported to the FEC. 
Lobbyists were able to provide supplementary documentation for most 
honorary and meeting expenses, as well as the majority of other 
contributions we asked about, in the form of invoices, acknowledgment 
letters, and canceled checks or other financial records. 

We obtained views from lobbyists included in our sample of reports on 
any challenges to compliance and how the challenges might be addressed. 
To describe the process used in referring cases to the U.S. Attorney's 
Office for the District of Columbia and to provide information on the 
resources and authorities used by the Office in its role in enforcing 
compliance with HLOGA, we interviewed officials from the Office, 
obtained information from those involved in the referral process, and 
obtained data on the number of cases referred, pending, and resolved. 

Our objectives did not include identifying lobbyists who failed to 
register and report in accordance with HLOGA requirements, or whether 
for those lobbyists that did register and report, all lobbying activity 
was disclosed. We conducted this performance audit from December 2008 
through March 2009 in accordance with generally accepted government 
auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform 
the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a 
reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit 
objectives. We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: List of Registrants and Clients for Sampled Lobbying 
Disclosure Reports: 

We used each report's filing identification number to select our random 
sample of lobbying disclosure reports. Each identification number is 
linked to a unique pair of registrant and client names. 

Table 3: Names of Registrants and Clients Selected in Random Sample of 
Lobbying Disclosure Reports Filed in the First Three Quarters of 2008: 

Registrant Name: AgVantage LLC; 
Client Name: Nature Conservancy. 

Registrant Name: Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld; 
Client Name: Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company. 

Registrant Name: Alcade & Fay; 
Client Name: Seminole County, FL. 

Registrant Name: Allergan, Inc.; 
Client Name: Allergan, Inc. 

Registrant Name: American Association of State Colleges and 
Universities; 
Client Name: American Association of State Colleges and Universities. 

Registrant Name: American Bankers Insurance Association; 
Client Name: American Bankers Insurance Association. 

Registrant Name: American Symphony Orchestra League; 
Client Name: American Symphony Orchestra League - DBA League of 
American Orchestras. 

Registrant Name: B&D Consulting; 
Client Name: City of Fort Wayne. 

Registrant Name: Barbour Griffith & Rogers, LLC d/b/a BGR Holding; 
Client Name: Agudath Israel of America. 

Registrant Name: Barnes and Thornburg, LLP; 
Client Name: Cook County, IL. 

Registrant Name: Bingham McCutchen, LLP; 
Client Name: Asbestos Study Group. 

Registrant Name: Blank Rome Government Relations; 
Client Name: Sound Transit. 

Registrant Name: BlueWater Strategies LLC; 
Client Name: Verizon Communications. 

Registrant Name: Borski Associates; 
Client Name: Arsenal Associates. 

Registrant Name: Camille Bonta; 
Client Name: Sanofi-Aventis U.S., Inc. 

Registrant Name: Cardinal Point Partners; 
Client Name: Alion Science and Technology. 

Registrant Name: Carmen Group, Inc.; 
Client Name: City of St. Helena. 

Registrant Name: Cassidy and Associates; 
Client Name: Eaglepicher Technologies, LLC. 

Registrant Name: Cauthen Forbes & Williams; 
Client Name: Merck. 

Registrant Name: CJ Strategies; 
Client Name: Submergence Group. 

Registrant Name: Clarendon Group; 
Client Name: Lifespan. 

Registrant Name: Clark and Weinstock; 
Client Name: Louis Dreyfus Property Group. 

Registrant Name: Cloud and Company, LLC; 
Client Name: ExxonMobil Corporation. 

Registrant Name: Committee for Education Funding; 
Client Name: Committee for Education Funding. 

Registrant Name: Cornerstone Government Affairs; 
Client Name: US Rice Producers Association. 

Registrant Name: Daryl Owen Associates, Inc.; 
Client Name: Edison Chouest Offshore/Seacor Marine. 

Registrant Name: David Peyton; 
Client Name: Vermeer Manufacturing Company. 

Registrant Name: Davis & Harman, LLP; 
Client Name: American Horse Council, Inc. 

Registrant Name: DC Associates, LLC; 
Client Name: Beck Disaster Recovery, Inc. 

Registrant Name: Denny Miller Associates; 
Client Name: Battelle Pacific Northwest. 

Registrant Name: Dickstein Shapiro LLP; 
Client Name: Cigar Association of America. 

Registrant Name: DLA Piper; 
Client Name: Sanofi Pasteur. 

Registrant Name: DTB Associates, LLP; 
Client Name: City of Saint Paul Island, Alaska. 

Registrant Name: Duetto Group, LLC[A]; 
Client Name: NUMBERSUSA. 

Registrant Name: Dutko Worldwide, LLC; 
Client Name: Math for America. 

Registrant Name: Edmund Graber; 
Client Name: Illinois Public Transit Association. 

Registrant Name: Elmendorf Strategies, LLC; 
Client Name: Ford Motor Company. 

Registrant Name: ENS Resources, Inc.; 
Client Name: City of Sacramento, Dept. of Utilities. 

Registrant Name: Ervin Technical Associates, Inc.; 
Client Name: Kuchera Industries. 

Registrant Name: Federal Policy Group; 
Client Name: Electrolux. 

Registrant Name: Fennel Consulting, LLC; 
Client Name: National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association. 

Registrant Name: Fierce, Isakowitz & Blalock; 
Client Name: Yum! Brands. 

Registrant Name: Financial Industry Regulatory Authority 
(FINRA)(formerly known as NASD); 
Client Name: Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA)(formerly 
known as NASD). 

Registrant Name: Fleishman-Hillard Government Relations; 
Client Name: Imation. 

Registrant Name: Frazee Associates; 
Client Name: Truste. 

Registrant Name: George B. Patrick; 
Client Name: The Rhoads Group. 

Registrant Name: Glover Park Group, LLC; 
Client Name: Regence. 

Registrant Name: Halliburton Company; 
Client Name: Halliburton. 

Registrant Name: HC Associates, Inc.; 
Client Name: American's Health Insurance Plans. 

Registrant Name: Holland & Knight, LLP; 
Client Name: City of Charlotte. 

Registrant Name: Independent Electrical Contractors, Inc.; 
Client Name: Independent Electrical Contractors, Inc. 

Registrant Name: Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, Inc.; 
Client Name: Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, Inc. 

Registrant Name: Jack Ferguson Assoc. Inc; 
Client Name: AT&T. 

Registrant Name: Jim Hansen & Associates; 
Client Name: Marion Energy, Inc. 

Registrant Name: J M Burkman & Associates; 
Client Name: All Day Solar. 

Registrant Name: K&L Gates; 
Client Name: NCL Corporation. 

Registrant Name: Kadesh & Associates; 
Client Name: Genentech. 

Registrant Name: King and Spalding, LLP; 
Client Name: John Maneely Co. 

Registrant Name: Kinghorn Hilbert & Associates; 
Client Name: Vforge. 

Registrant Name: Law Offices of Kevin G. Curtin; 
Client Name: Verizon. 

Registrant Name: Marlowe & Company; 
Client Name: Grand Strand Coastal Alliance (Myrtle Beach, NC). 

Registrant Name: mCapitol Management; 
Client Name: City of North Vernon, Indiana. 

Registrant Name: McCann Capitol Advocates; 
Client Name: Chicago Transit Authority. 

Registrant Name: McDermott, Will, and Emery; 
Client Name: California Cling Peach Board. 

Registrant Name: McKenna, Long & Aldridge; 
Client Name: Research in Motion. 

Registrant Name: Monument Policy Group, LLC; 
Client Name: Travel Business Roundtable. 

Registrant Name: Morhard & Associates; 
Client Name: DRS Technologies, Inc. 

Registrant Name: National Association of Veterans' Research and 
Education Foundations; 
Client Name: National Association of Veterans' Research and Education 
Foundations. 

Registrant Name: National Water Resources Association; 
Client Name: National Water Resources Association. 

Registrant Name: NATV Group, LLC; 
Client Name: National Indian Gaming Association. 

Registrant Name: O'Brien DC; 
Client Name: California Association of Nurseries and Garden Centers. 

Registrant Name: Patton Boggs LLP; 
Client Name: Hillside Capital Incorporated. 

Registrant Name: PMA Group; 
Client Name: Unisys Corporation. 

Registrant Name: Podesta Group, Inc.; 
Client Name: Cherokee Nation. 

Registrant Name: Polk Consulting, LLC; 
Client Name: Sisters of Mercy Health System. 

Registrant Name: Potomac Counsel; 
Client Name: Boys & Girls Clubs of America. 

Registrant Name: Public Strategies, Inc.; 
Client Name: Rosetta Stone, Ltd. 

Registrant Name: Quinn Gillespie & Associates; 
Client Name: Tyson Foods, Inc. 

Registrant Name: Ricchetti, Inc.; 
Client Name: Sanofi Aventis US, Inc. 

Registrant Name: Russ Reid Company; 
Client Name: National Grid. 

Registrant Name: Ryan Phillips Utrecht and McKennon; 
Client Name: Freddie Mac. 

Registrant Name: Sirote and Permutt PC; 
Client Name: American Family Business Institute. 

Registrant Name: Snack Food Association[A]; 
Client Name: Snack Food Association. 

Registrant Name: Stevens & Lee; 
Client Name: Susquehanna Health System. 

Registrant Name: Strategic Marketing Innovations; 
Client Name: Advanced Composites Group. 

Registrant Name: The Joseph Group, LLC; 
Client Name: ICO Global Communications. 

Registrant Name: The Livingston Group; 
Client Name: Merscorp, Inc. 

Registrant Name: The Loeffler Group; 
Client Name: Texas Association for Home Care. 

Registrant Name: The Pennsylvania Avenue Group; 
Client Name: University of North Carolina Chapel Hill Foundation. 

Registrant Name: The Rhoads Group; 
Client Name: University of Pittsburgh, School of Health and 
Rehabilitation Sciences. 

Registrant Name: The Wessel Group; 
Client Name: United Steelworkers. 

Registrant Name: Triadvocates; 
Client Name: City of Surprise. 

Registrant Name: US Oil & Gas Association; 
Client Name: US Oil & Gas Association. 

Registrant Name: Van Ness Feldman; 
Client Name: Kvichak Marine Industries. 

Registrant Name: Van Scoyoc Associates; 
Client Name: National Association of Foster Grandparent Program 
Directors. 

Registrant Name: Van Scoyoc Associates; 
Client Name: Sacramento County Airport System. 

Registrant Name: Washington Partners, LLC; 
Client Name: Afterschool Alliance. 

Registrant Name: Williams & Jensen, PLLC; 
Client Name: Gryphon Holdings. 

Registrant Name: Winning Strategies Washington; 
Client Name: Spinal Muscular Atrophy Association. 

Registrant Name: World Shipping Council; 
Client Name: World Shipping Council. 

Source: Lobbying disclosure database of the Secretary of the Senate, 
first three quarters, calendar year 2008. 

[A] Two Lobbyists declined our request to meet and provide 
documentation during our review, which ended March 12, 2009. After that 
date, representatives from the Duetto Group and Snack Food Association 
contacted us about a meeting. We were able to meet with the Duetto 
Group representative on March 24, 2009, but, as we advised Duetto 
Group, the results from that meeting are not included in our analysis. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Full List of Sampled Lobbying Contribution Reports: 

Table 4: Names of Lobbyists and Lobbying Firms Selected in Random 
Sample of Lobbying Contribution Reports Filed Mid-Year 2008: 

Lobbyist Name/Lobbying Firm Name: 

American Association of Port Authorities. 

American College of Physician Services, Inc. 

American Frozen Food Institute. 

American Home Furnishings Alliance. 

Associated General Contractors Of America. 

Beckstrom, Brad. 

Berry Thompson, Marilyn Ann. 

Blumer, Patti. 

Boisclair, Jon L. 

Bridgestone Americas Holding, Inc. 

Buscher, John. 

Campbell, Jean. 

CARE Action Now, Inc. 

Carlson, Donald G. 

Carr, Mark. 

Caterpillar Inc. 

Chaney, Carolyn Cushman. 

Ciocci, Linda Church. 

CONSOL Energy Inc. 

Corrigan, Joseph. 

Cortinas-Garcia, Juan. 

Dayanim, Behnam. 

Dixson, Herbert Lee Jr. 

Dominion. 

Elliott, Lesley. 

Elmore, Diane. 

Financial Services Roundtable. 

Fluharty, John[A]. 

General Atomics. 

Giuli, Steven. 

Goldstein, Ellen. 

Goodrich Corporation. 

Grant Consulting Group. 

Green, Kaylene. 

Griffin, Janet. 

Gullion, Christy. 

Guzzetti, Arthur Louis. 

H&R Block, Inc. 

Hanson, Michael. 

Hayden, Lou. 

Haywood, Julian A. 

Hecht Spencer & Associates, Inc. 

Hilbert, John W. III. 

Howard, Paul A. II. 

Hunter, Justin R. 

Jacobson, Michael. 

Johnson Controls, Inc. 

Kastner, Michael. 

Kentz, Andrew W. 

Kranbuhl, Page. 

Kutler, Alison. 

Langton Associates. 

Lasoff, Laurence 'Larry'. 

Lehman, Kathryn H. 

Lehman, Trent R. 

Ludgin, Peter Adam. 

Lugar, David. 

MacAndrews South Corporation (Formerly MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings, 
Inc.) 

Mandigo, Glenton Thomas. 

Mattel, Inc. 

McMakin, Ben Lee. 

Meaux Washington Group. 

Metz, Patrick T. 

Miller/Wenhold Capitol Strategies, LLC. 

Moler, Elizabeth A. 

Nicely, Matthew R. 

O'Hanlon, G John. 

Olson, Richard Wayne. 

OSI Restaurant Partners, LLC. 

Pavlovic, Dejan. 

Petrich, Jeffrey Paul. 

Poleto, David. 

Policyworks. 

Primosch, Bill. 

Puget Sound Energy. 

Quinn, Jack. 

Raffaniello & Associates, LLC. 

Range, James D[.B]. 

Rhines, Judith. 

Richard Cockrum[C]. 

Rodriguez, Estuardo Valdemar. 

Romans, Lawrence J. 

Rossbach, Jason. 

Royer, Robert Stewart. 

Sapirstein, Eric. 

SGI Federal. 

Smith, Patricia P. 

Stirling Strategic Services, LLC. 

Terri Lodge[C]. 

Texas Cattle Feeders Association. 

The Cook Group, Inc. 

The Mike Waite Company, Inc. 

The Regence Group. 

Thibau, Janelle C. 

Thomasson, Patsy Lee. 

Tooze, Colin. 

Unilever United States, Inc. 

Valente, Thomas Silvio. 

Venetoulis, Lynn Morrison. 

White, Sam. 

Source: Lobbying contributions database of the Secretary of the Senate, 
mid-year reports for calendar year 2008. 

[A] Unable to contact lobbyist. 

[B] Lobbyist is deceased. 

[C] Contributions report filed by a sole proprietor for the 
organization. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

George Stalcup, 202-512-6806, or stalcupg@gao.gov: 

Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contacts named above, Robert J. Cramer, Associate 
General Counsel; William M. Reinsberg, Assistant Director; Shirley A. 
Jones, Assistant General Counsel; Katrina D. Taylor, Analyst-in-Charge; 
Colleen M. Candrl; Ellen T. Grady; Dean P. Gudicello; Anna Maria Ortiz; 
Melanie H. Papasian; Sabrina C. Streagle; and Gregory H. Wilmoth made 
key contributions to this report. 

Assisting with lobbyist's file reviews and interviews were Bion N. 
Bliss, Jessica Bryant-Bertail, Laura M. Choi, Lauren S. Fassler, Amy C. 
Friedlander, Eric D. Gorman, Jacquelyn N. Hamilton, Pamela N. Harris, 
Jenny Hwang, Crisitian V. Ion, Lawrence M. Korb, Edward C. Leslie, 
Jeffrey McDermott, Jeffrey M. Niblack, Anthony R. Patterson, Cheryl M. 
Peterson, Valerie Pfeiffer, Margaret E. Phelps Ranen, Crystal Robinson, 
and Andrew J. Stephens. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Pub. L. 79-601, tit. III, 60 Stat. 839 (1946). 

[2] See United States v. Harriss, 347 U.S. 612, 619 (1954). 

[3] Pub. L. 104-65, 109 Stat. 691 (1995). 

[4] P.L. 110-81, §213, 121 Stat. at 750, codified at 2 U.S.C. §1614 
note. 

[5] We were able to meet with a representative from the Duetto Group on 
March 24, 2009 after our audit work for this report was completed. 

[6] Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995, Pub. L. 104-65, 109 Stat. 691, as 
amended by Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007, Pub. L. 
110-81, 121 Stat. 735 (Sept. 14, 2007) codified at 2 U.S.C. §§1601- 
1607. 

[7] 2 U.S.C. §1604. 

[8] A covered position/official is defined as an elected Member of 
either house of Congress, an employee of a Member or a committee, or 
certain high-level positions in the Executive branch. 2 U.S.C. §1602. 

[9] A lobbying firm needs to register if the firm's total income from 
the lobbying client exceeds or is expected to exceed $2,500 in a 
quarterly reporting period. An organization that employs internal 
lobbyists must register if the organization's lobbying expenses exceed 
or are expected to exceed $10,000 in a quarterly period and at least 
one employee meets the statutory definition of a lobbyist. 

[10] A lobbying contact is an oral or written communication to a 
covered executive or legislative branch official made on behalf of a 
client attempting to influence legislation or executive programs or 
policies. 

[11] HLOGA increased the level of required disclosure. Previously under 
the Act coalitions and associations were only required to list members 
who "in whole or in major part plan, supervise, or control such 
lobbying activities." 

[12] Some lobbyists provided both types of documentation. 

[13] Two of the six reports contained errors because of mistakes in 
rounding and involved amounts less than $1,000. The Act requires that 
lobbyist round to the nearest $10,000. 

[14] The seven elements we reviewed are income, expenses, entities 
lobbied, lobbyists who had held covered official positions, foreign 
entities with interest in the client, individuals no longer lobbying 
for the client, and member organizations of a coalition or association 
that lobbied on behalf of the client. 

[15] Lobbyists for 2 of the 100 reports in our sample, declined to meet 
with us or provide documentation to support the information in their 
disclosure reports during our review, which ended March 13, 2009. We 
therefore base our estimates on information provided by lobbyists for 
the remaining 98 reports in our sample. These 98 reports represent 
clients from 97 distinct lobbying firms. Unless otherwise noted, all 
percentage estimates in this report have 95% confidence intervals of 
plus or minus 10.4 percentage points of the estimate. 

[16] As of March 18, 2009, these reports had not been amended. 

[17] Because we cannot be certain that the reports of entities lobbied 
that could not be supported by documentation were all due to 
overreporting, we base our estimate on only those lobbyists that 
admitted overreporting, using a one-sided 95 percent confidence 
interval to generate a conservative estimate of a minimum proportion of 
reports containing overreports of entities lobbied. 

[18] Prior to each review, we used open source search techniques to 
identify lobbyists on each report who may have held a covered position. 
Our search, which is discussed in more detail in appendix I, may not 
have identified all cases in which a lobbyist held a position that the 
Act requires disclosing. 

[19] We base our estimate of the minimum on a one-sided 95 percent 
confidence interval. 

[20] We were unable to confirm contribution information for 2 of our 
original sample of 100 contributions filers, in one case because the 
filer was deceased, and in the other case the filer is out of the 
country and no longer works for the organization. Unless otherwise 
noted, all percentage estimates for lobbyist contributions reports have 
95 percent confidence intervals between plus or minus 10.2 percentage 
points or less of the estimate. 

[21] Because we cannot be certain that our search of FEC data 
identified all instances of the omission of a contribution that should 
have been reported, we estimate the minimum percentage of reports that 
omit one or more contributions using a one-sided 95 percent confidence 
interval. 

[22] 2 U.S.C. 1604(d)(1)(D). 

[23] 2 U.S.C. 434(b)(3)(A). 

[End of section] 

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